Re: notes regarding a new installation

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On 2/18/20 5:18 AM, Dave Phillips wrote:
On 2/17/20 10:41 AM, Dave Phillips wrote:
Greetings !

After many (too many ?) years using Fedora 23 I decided/admitted a system upgrade was long overdue. I chose Ubuntu 18.04 simply because I recently installed it on a Toshiba Satellite laptop - a fun story itself - and am satisfied with the results, especially after installing some Ubuntu Studio components. Anyway, that machine is now a smooth-running gun, so I figured, "Why not put Ubuntu on the desktop iron ?". And so begins the tale...

I may have struck a nerve.

Addressing certain points:

1. Nope, I'm not a normal user. According to some, I'm not even a normal person.

But you play one on TV! ;)

2. Admittedly, the actual use of a Linux system - or any other - isn't necessarily problematic so long as the user is in fact simply running programs, without concern for system configuration and administration. Yes, my 10-year old grandson also "uses" my Linux machines, which is to say that he knows how to start Minecraft and run a browser.

My daughter started using computers when she was 2. She's now 35. Don't ask her to fix anything on any kind of computer - she's an artist! She married a geeky IT guy, so he takes care of their computers.

3. My tale had really only one problem with Linux, i.e. the creation/configuration of the installation media, and that problem was due to a motherboard issue with the media creation software. Using different (more up to date?) software resolved that issue.

I get Unetbootin from their site. But my new laptop has a 4K display and the Unetbootin GUI is so tiny as be nearly unusable. Thanks for the reminder about using dd.

I think one thing Unetbootin can do is convert a CDROM-only ISO into a bootable USB. Maybe that's what throws some motherboards? But I've used it on about 13 different motherboards here (including 5 or 6 different laptops) without any problems. One of the laptops was even a Toshiba. There was time when Toshibas were recommended as good Linux machines because their boards were "bog standard" with nothing exotic about them. Don't know if that's still true or not. I went with Dell XPS because Dell has support for Linux on them.

I'm still working on a few minor problems with Ubuntu, nothing serious. I think the audio configuration can be improved a bit, but performance is certainly adequate now.

Best regards to all, thanks for all the replies.

And thank you for your musics!

--
David W. Jones
gnome@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
authenticity, honesty, community
http://dancingtreefrog.com
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