Lxpd 2008 I386 Dvd.iso
Fedora 9 DVD ISO Fedora 9 DVD ISO. From: 'Martin, Gregor'. To:. Cc:. Subject: Fedora 9 DVD ISO. Date: Wed, 14 May 2008 11:11:42 -0400Hi all,der Link funktioniert nicht.6/iso/Fedora-9-i386-DVD.iso/Fedora-9-i386-DVD.isoForbiddenYou don't have permission to access/linux/fedora/linux/releases/9/Fedora/i386/iso/Fedora-9-i386-DVD.iso onthis server.Apache/1.3.26 Server at ftp.uni-bayreuth.de Port 80. Follow-Ups:.
From: Ricky Zhou.
Now to get ahold of a USA disc and work around my country’s draconian and greedy intellectual property “laws” to get this distro in as many American homes as possible.Why? Because Micro$oft’s no longer good for home computing. I don’t care if hackers waltz onto my computer and take, say, media files or game programs, but I DO care about them grabbing my financial info off of a system with security that makes the Maginot Line look like Supermax.Linux Mint will safeguard my home laptop. Window$ can be relegated to being my HTPC’s OS.
(Can’t do full HTPC with Linux in America yet on account of CableCards and digital cable, but ATI seems to be working on a solution.)Apple? So long as the distro works with iPods, iPhones, iPads and surplus G3s/G4s, Steve Jobs can go iF.^% himself.Now what to do about netbooksOh, and Clem?
We’re about ready to launch over here – we’re just waiting to hear from you! Got an old rig (AMD Athlon 64 + 1gb RAM DDR 400 + GeForce 6200 TC) with a busted PSU and CMOS batt getting a new lease of life this couple of days when I’ll get around to it.”Wubi”ed Xubuntu on the other lappy last week I like what I doodled with and people suggested Mint so I’ve been waiting for an Ubuntu 10.04 based one.Glad that it’s arrived and I just done unetbootin a USB stick ready.Gonna be my 1st serious signup to the penguin army so I’m psyched 🙂 Good job to the team and longtime community y’all rock!. Hi GuysI tried Isadora 9 yesterday.
After installing it when I tried adding panels there wudnt be any panel visible. But wen i logged out and again logged in, i had all the panels on the screen. Also after the install when the computer rebooted fine and came to login screen but after entering password and hitting enter, it doesnt log in instead shows a shows a window that says” power manager is not responding”. I get three options in that. So i wait and then it boots to the homescreen. Sometimes this window doesnt show up @ restart but other times it shows.
I am using the isadora 9 dvd with extras.If it is a bug and if there is a solution please tell me.thanks. I’d like to point out that I have not testing LM9 on my desktop yet (I am waiting for the KDE release for that). But I LM9 x64 seems to be booting faster on my laptop than lucid did on my beast of a desktop.Overall with my laptop, the experience has been awesome, I was disappointed that apparmor or SE Linux was not included by default with this distroI would like to see in future releases that security not be put as a second priority and it would be great if SE Linux would be pre installed in the release as security is extremely important to me.(paranoi woot woot). Unfortunately I am also having the same boot problems as a few other netbook users. Ie:On booting, I get the green options screen which I select the boot from live CD option. The next screen takes a long time and eventually appears as follows:Loading /casper/vmlinuzLoading /casper/initrd.lzReadyAnd that is all I get. The CD stops reading and it just sits there.Hopefully there will be an update.
Otherwise I will have to stay with Helena for another 6 months. That’s also OK by me.I hope this helps.Thanks anyway to the Mint team for all your efforts.Best Regards,Rob.
As a satisfied user of Linux Mint 7 (Gloria) and tired of doing the six month upgrade, i bypassed LM8 and decided to wait for LM9 since it is an LTS release. I have monitored the website with great eagerness for this release. I am so impressed with the Linux Mint distro that i have decided rather than download it, i will buy it from the website.
For all the hard work done on Mint by its developers, it s well worth the price in my opinion. I would also suggest that all dedicated Mint users do the same. I,like many who have posted here am also awaiting the KDE version as i am a KDE kind of guy at heart. On my main machine i run Gnome and KDE side by side because i do like to switch desktops from time to time. Also i find software performs better when used with its native desktop. So,i will be placing my order soon for LM9. Finally, i am so proud of the fact that i do not have to decide which version to choose from.
There is no Home, no Ultimate or Professional versions.Just Linux, and with this distro its Linux with that Minty Fresh Look and Feel!!. Used the new backup tool (easy but not trivial to install in Mint 8), did a completely new install, and everything is currently running great, thanks again Clem!!!As with the last release or two, this one simply would not work right with my laptop’s wifi card, which is an Intel 3945abg PRO/Wireless chipset.
Worked great with mint 3.1-6 (maybe 7, I can’t remember), but no more. I understand this is a Ubuntu problem, but for Pete’s sake, it has been known long enough and affects enough people that it should be fixed. The work-around is to install wicd and uninstall the included gnome network manager. I can do it, if I work quickly with my limited connectivity, but Mint/Ubuntu/linux newbies would certainly find this to be a deal breaker and go right back to M$. For the record, wicd works great, seems to be more flexible, and should be considered for inclusion into future releases.Attempts to install from USB flash drive failed while saving my /home partition failed miserably. They sort of worked, but things were missing and messed up.
Then, other attempts to install via USB totally screwed up my wifi, and transferred changes that I had made to my persistent USB setup, which was unexpected. I thought installing from USB would do a totally clean install, not include changes I had made to the install medium.In the end, my fifth (or sixth?) install attempt was from CD, worked fine, then I installed wicd and removed the included network manager. Now I’m happy, except that I will have to install software again.
Next time I will wait for the upgrade tool, which has worked well for me in the past.I am still 100% sold on Mint being the absolute best OS available. Install and Ubuntu-wifi issues aside, I am completely confident this release will continue to run rock solid, and it includes almost everything most of us home users need. Much better experience than any other linux distro I have tried, which includes all the major ones since 1997 or so. @GlokLaunch Startupmanager from the start menu administration change the resolution to 1280 or 768 and 24 bits color and you willget the Mint logo e slogan again. Restart the system to things take effect. Change that Mint Generic Default wallpaper to another onewith a Mint brand by 96works. Linux Mint will be completly a brandedoperating system.
I like it this way.Now my friends at my home tonight again only said: GREAtttttttttt!Running Linux Mint x64bit Edition DVD install.Congrats Clem.Keep up the good work. For anyone having problems with resolation during boot, after installing a video driver. I have posted in the tutorials/how-tos of the forum, a how-to which has link with instructions on fixing this problem.The point is: this is really UGLY solution. No matter what you say, it didn’t happen on Mint 7, it didn’t happen on Mint 8. I cannot show Mint 9 to people with such an UGLY error. I cannot even recommend it, because people will encounter this stupid error afterwards and not all of them want to fiddle around because of this stupid bug.It also doesn’t change anything on the “display brightness” applet, which doesn’t work anymore. This is a total deal braker.I hope, that when Ubuntu 10.04.1 is released (which hopefully has fixed both issues), the Linux Mint Team will make a Linux Mint 9.1 version.
I need an answer for that, because for now this release is broken.(Don’t get me wrong: I am able to fix things in Linux and also know the command line tools, but these are basics which need to WORK without issues!!!). Just finished installing mint9, I did a fresh install and I am Very Very impresses by this release, there was 2 problems that really annoyed me in the last 2 releases in that I could not get the wireless nor my sound to work on my laptop, my laptop is a HP DV6 Model the sound is intel HDA and the wireless broadcom wireless sta driver, now I can say both work excellent and I am sure an awful lot of people will be glad to hear this. The only Minor (as far as I am concerned) problem that cropped up was my mouse wouldnt work,(My laptop has 2 usb ports on each side of the laptop) I accidentally found out that if I have another utility plugged in on the same USB side as my use mouse plug is in, then the mouse does not work, as soon as I remove the item (No matter what it is) the mouse works, you can plug the utility on the other side. So now my 3 spare USB ports are effectively reduced to one spare. Can’t resist posting again, just installed the RC and applied level 1 updates on my machine with nvidia 8600 GPU. One quick and great improvement I noticed is, compiz has become snappier the animations are quick and for the “expose” (pick windows?) effect the key shortcut has been changed to an easy +W (Wish this could even show minimized windows like KDE).There was a time when I did not try out Mint since I didn’t like the logo, when I first came to know about Mint 3 on some Linux magazine. But now its very difficult to think of any other distro.Fantastic job Clem and team.
Clem I LOOOOOOOOOVEEEEEEE YOOOOOOOU 😀 the pulseaudio problem that i had on my laptop gooott fiiixed. I dont know what you did. But on ubuntu the problem is still there.
Mint 9 fixed it. Amazing release. Keeep up teh great work. In my books linux mint should be NUMBER 1. Better than anything ubuntu offered. I always go back to mint no matter what. Been using mint since mint 5.
And i love it. Software center is amazing it even includes dropbox. I did have to go out and add sources myself. HATS OFF FOR THIS GREAT RELEEASE. Truly the best linux distro out there.raj. Shutdown doesn’t work.
I’ve seen this on the recent KahelOS as well. Two lights flash on the keyboard, and the monitor is blank, but still powered up (gray, and sucking electricity). Ctrl-Alt-Del does NOT respond. A single click of the power button does NOT work.
I have to resort to holding the power button for seconds to ultimately power things down.Today I tried it again – same problem. Then I rebooted, and shut it down without logging in – it worked just fine. I rebooted, logged in, then after waiting a while, logged out (not shutdown – just log out) – same problem as when I try to shut down.This is a little worse than KahelOS, because I can log out, then shutdown with success).This is on a Dell GX100 Small Form Factor with 565MHz “coppermine” / 512MB RAMThanks, Kurt. Problem with Mint 9 i386 DVD iso in a vmware machine.I put this into a vmware player install under Vista.All is well except it will not accept a password for any operation.
So I cannot Update or add any applications as the password box does not work.For example the notifier in the bottom tray tells me there are 66 updates for download. Click to do this and the password box appears, enter the password and click OK, the box disappears but nothing happens. It appears to have been abandoned. Same for Package Manager etc.
Well, Okay its been released. It looks pretty smooth and cool. I’m still annoyed however that the mintmenu when the transparency is set to 0 disappears entirely and takes the icons with it. Its like someone said on the bug team, the icons and menu background should be on a seperate graphical layer. Its not a major world ending issue but I’m kinda surprised it made it into the final release as it seems so trivial to fix.Also the network manager, though it is definitely there is NOT detecting my three USB. Instead it shows up as a drive and a cd, just like it does in WINDOWS.Except windows can actually install it.Ubuntu 10.04 and mint 9 can’t.So the evil empire just got one over on you.Bad bad bad.Lets face it the internet connection is probably the most important element of a computer and I said of mint 7 wireless and mobile are cracked, its just wired modems that have some problems. Two out of three aint bad.Now dongles are a problem so this is is a big step back for the distro.I now join the chorus suggesting we have a purer debian base as this was a change made in Ubuntu and it was an unwelcome one.OK said my piece, I’ll be checking the security system now and I’m afraid if the changes are not to my liking I will be using mint 7 as my mainstay OS for the next 6 months.
Ok you FakeRaid fans, here is a fix that has workedStep 1 attempt to install as you normally would, that will create the mapper entriesStep 2 first attempt to install fails, close the installer programStep 3 Start install again, do not press install yet at the endStep 4 go to /dev/mapper you will see your raid partitions ending in “p1” “p2” “p5” or something similarStep 5 either rename those by removing the “p” or create symbolic links for an extra measure of safetystep 6 Now you can press install and everything should install correctly. Ok – I’ve downloaded the 32 bit DVD and tested that – works like a dream.Installed to the HDD and a further download of sufficient KDE to run the bits I need and the drivers for my printer – a Brother mfc6490cw – and it’s the biggest disaster I’ve ever seen!Applications are incredibly slow to start up., from completing a print spool to starting to print is taking over 3 minutes (what on earth is it doing?). And in general, the system feels like a supertanker in handling, when compared to a racing power boat!It’s possibly the worst experience I’ve ever had with linux – considering I’ve been using Mint since version 3 – and it’s making me think that my salvation is to go back to Mint 8 and then wait for the new release of OpenSuse 11.3 or I might just bite the bullet and go straight to OpenSuse 11.2 and have done with it!What on earth has happened?. Ok – several reboots and waiting long times for applications to startup and it’s not ‘quite’ as bad. It’s still not good – a 7 page DOC file (created in OpenOffice) took about 2 minutes to import which is surely wrong?The printing seems slightly better with plain text – but graphical documents still go into a limboI guess I’ll give it a few days yet and see if There’s a reason for the performance hit.On the other hand, from a cold start to the login is about 20-25 seconds (2,2GHz Turion X2 with 2GB Ram) – which is acceptable. A great release.
Debian I386 Iso
Ubuntu 10 just didn’t work when booting live with a persistant casper partition after doing an update. Mint Isadora solves all those issues.Agree with the fellow about the wifi drivers, seems like popular chips that are used by every man and his dog need user effort (but that’s no linux distro has ever claimed to get that right)Congratulations.
My Persistant live SD boot time has gone from 3 minutes 40 seconds to just about a minute! It’s no hard drive / SSD 10 second boot, but a vast improvement 🙂. OS/2 USer “As much as I appreciate Linux Mint 9 already being released, it saddens me, that the dire needed, not so trivial driver fix for everybody, depending on an USB WiFi adapter based on Ralink’s vastly popular RT2870 chip, didn’t make it into this release.Meaning: unless there is Ethernet access as well, those people are screwed, not being able to get online; not with the LiveCD/VD, nor after an installation.”Yeah I have a RT2870 USB wifi stick, had to resort to using ndiswrapper, haven’t found a native Linux driver that works with it yet (not even rt2800usb or rt2870sta).
The problem is that ndiswrapper bombs randomly and I have to reboot in order to get back online. Clem, Just a small point about your initial posting, you’ve got the system requirements round the wrong way.System requirements:. x86 processor (for both 32 & 64-bit versions).
x8664 compatible processor (for the 64-bit version)The 32bit CPU will only handle the 32bit versionThe 64bit CPU will handle both 32bit and 64bit versions.Just thought you might want to update this for newbies who maybe thinking of using Mint for the first time, thanks.P.S. Look forward to using the new mint distro in up and coming months, thanks & much appreciated everyone’s hard work. I am somewhat surprised to see comments relating look and terminology used – I give 10/10 for both look&feel and user friendliness – where I have serious hardware problems.There seems to be a tendency with most Linux distros in favour of “art” – I have read about some notable Linux guy calling for focus on that a few years ago like for a great global project – but for me what has been achieved with for example KDE is overkilling. On the other hand I am looking forward to the time when some other notable Linux guys call for another great global project hand in hand with hardware producers whose hardware we purchase not for a song to make their pieces of plastic and copper to be of any use on an OS of the user’s choice.As for appearance I left everything as default; not that I am very picky about it anyway, but I really appreciate attention to this kind of detail.
Since embracing Linux Mint last summer, this is my third variation. I began with Gloria, continued with Helena and, as of yesterday, am running Isadora. First impressions? Like both its predecessors, it leaves Windows (which the family still uses despite my hints) looking like an unholy mess.
It also seems to have cured the minor bugs that affected both Gloria and Helena. No matter what I tried, Gloria would not run Google Earth properly. Helena did, but had its own annoying quirk in that it would only play sound at a very low volume. Happily, Isadora has no problems with either function.
There is, however, a minor, intermittent glitsch that has affected all three versions. On booting up it goes into a loop about half the time and presents me with an endlessly flashing cursor instead of displaying the dual boot screen, requiring me to restart the machine manually. I suspect that this may be an issue with my motherboard (Asus M2N68) but I don’t really know as I am not particularly technically-minded. Also, when I first installed it, it wouldn’t shut down on demand – but it seems to have sorted that problem out for itself within a few hours because it shut down last night perfectly. My son had been on Windows in the interim period and maybe the reboot sorted it.I switched to Linux after being hit by three major Windows viruses in the space of a year (one of which was so severe that I had to replace the hard disc). All I wanted was an operating system that wasn’t wide open to attack from the bad guys, that ran quickly and reliably, that looked nice and didn’t cost Apple type money. Mint ticks every box.
I am now looking forward to Julia, or Joanna, or Juanita – or whatever she will be called – because, presumably, that issue will include Gnome Shell. Bated breath. Ok – I have to be able to use Skype as part of my business. And found that it was barely usable on Mint 9.I’ve now removed Mint 9 in favour of the old reliable – Mint 8 KDE – and skype is working fine, OpenOffice is behaving like it should and I’m just glad to have a reliable system again.I’ll wait for Mint 10 to come along in 6 months time. And think about upgrading then maybe when Ubuntu have got the bugs out of 10.10PS – this is the difference between those of us who use linux for business and those who like playing with new shiny toys. – I’m staying with my old reliable. I was using Mint7, tried to install Mint8 but encountered some problems with wireless mouse and keept using Mint7.
I tested the Mint9 RC, all malfunctions with Mint 8 disapeared and, when Mint9 was issued, I adopted it inmediately. Mint9 is a very good OS.The way I use Mint9 in different computers, for instance a desktop box and a netbook, is by adding my favourite apps to a basic Mint installation, then building my own live ‘distro’ ISO with the help of ‘remastersys backup’:and finally installing this new own distro ISO in the next computer. I use a bootable USB pendrive in which I just copy and replace the previous files of the ISO when I build a new release, then I can install it to a netbook, just booting the distro based on Mint9 with my bootable pendrive.It seems a long process, but when I need to install ‘a clon’ of the Mint based distro again, the installation process, with all my apps already installed there, take barely 5 minutes. Faster than any recovery process. Nothing to compare with any other OS.
@CaptHilts / r1bbyI initially couldn’t get sound and then I had a wonderful install of Mint 8 last night until something I installed. Possibly virtualbox – did something to the settings and now I’ve got a pitch shift on the mic input – to which I have no idea as to why – but I’m going to start taking bits off until I find out what’s going on. I suspect that it might be something to do with audio settings for VB – sound on the VM’s didn’t work until I set it to Pulse audio and then the VM’s worked and Skype didn’t!. @Patrik#263, your netbook seems to have an Intel GMA graphics card (Intel GMA 3150?), and there appear to be some problems with Ubuntu’s kernel builds (at least through 2.6.32.x versions of the kernel) for intel video cards, coming from some new feature known as Kernel Modesetting (KMS). This has been giving people with older laptops equipped with intel chips many problems in the recent months.
Ubuntu’s final Lucid release may have put in a workaround that Mint Isadora may have missed out.However, a quickfix appears to be to specify “i915.modeset=1” (and if that doesn’t work, try “i915.modeset=0”) in the kernel boot prompt options. You can get an editable boot prompt when booting Mint’s Live CD’s by pressing TAB at the very first splash screen.
Try these options first and see how that goes.If you continue to have problems getting it to fire up X properly upon booting, you may need to supply a working xorg.conf, which is tricky to do for the live CD, but it can be done: first, specify “text” as a boot parameter at the boot prompt and see if that gets you a command line. If you are getting a clean command line, that isolates the problem to X. You can then try to mount a partition that has a working xorg.conf and copy it over to the /etc/X11 folder of the Live CD environment. If that has problems, then you can use a persistent snapshot (some thing called “casper-sn.ext2”). I will post tips on the last method if you are interested.If you need further help, please post your experience with the ideas above here and/or signup for the forum and ask for help there.
I will check this thread over the next day or two to see if you have posted a response. Best of luck. Hi to all,Was waiting for 9 as I tried 8 and had issues.Dl’d the ISO from Ireland mirror, MD5 ok, wrote to cd, ok, put cd in drive and rebooted.got big green auto boot screen, then a small linuxMint logo screen with flashing dots.then a line as follows:process:327 glibwarning getpwidr failed due to unknown userid (0)Any ideas?process stopped and hard reboot back to HDDI really want to use this version, I’ve been stuck on 6 for a year now and it is getting well behind.Paul. LM9 seems slower than LM8 windows keep fading. My laptop mouse won’t scroll, wouldn’t work in LM8 either. Mouse worked in all other Linux distros I’ve tried.
LM is the best distro I’ve used, but audio inputs, mic/line in have never worked, and the mouse issue is pushing me in another direction, also screen freezing occurs and all animation effects stop, then start again. The LM menu has a lot of followers and is indeed useful, but is hard to use with touchpad. Is there a way to slow down the menu switching, even having the entire menu stay on the desktop until desktop is clicked? I use my machines for audio recoding and DV manipulation mostly, and LM hasn’t come close to meeting my standards there “out of the box”. Any suggestions for audio and firewire users of LM9, and is there a different mouse driver I can try?
Lxpd 2008 I386 Dvd.iso Mac
For most common-task computing, not many OS’ compete with LM, I just need it to work for me, and so far it hasn’t. @ Clem, the new Upgrade Tutorial,part D2 8. Thanks Everyone!
I am new to Linux and I use Ubuntu on my netbook but have been using Linux Mint on my (large home bound) laptop. I downloaded the live DVD last night and this morning I upgraded my duel boot laptop to Linux mint 9. I reinstalled right over the mint 8 version. I did not use the backup tool as I did not have a lot of stuff to back up and I wanted a clean install anyway.It was a very smooth install, I had to hook to an ethernet connection to get the wireless driver, and thats that. It took less than an hour and I am really pleased.
Congratulations and thanks again. I’m getting the following errors after update:E: initramfs-tools: subprocess installed post-installation script returned error exit status 1E: plymouth: dependency problems – leaving unconfiguredE: mountall: dependency problems – leaving unconfiguredE: plymouth-label: dependency problems – leaving unconfiguredE: plymouth-theme-ubuntu-logo: dependency problems – leaving unconfiguredE: plymouth-theme-ubuntu-text: dependency problems – leaving unconfiguredE: plymouth-x11: dependency problems – leaving unconfiguredAny solution?. Since I was going to have erase the disk for a fresh install, I figured why not first try a module upgrade.
I did the backup and then tried a module load because going from Mint7 amd64 to Mint8 amd64 went well. Not so for Mint8 amd64 to Mint9 amd64 – trashed the system. Next tried a fresh Mint9 amd64 install and after the install finished without error, the system would not boot. Loaded Ubuntu 10.04 amd64 and same thing. Looks like a Ubuntu issue that migrated to Mint also.Not happy!!
Especially since Mint8 was working well. I should have left well enough alone but I wanted to move to a LTS version. Any quick fix available for this error message after updating?E: initramfs-tools: subprocess installed post-installation script returned error exit status 1E: plymouth: dependency problems – leaving unconfiguredE: mountall: dependency problems – leaving unconfiguredE: plymouth-label: dependency problems – leaving unconfiguredE: plymouth-theme-ubuntu-logo: dependency problems – leaving unconfiguredE: plymouth-theme-ubuntu-text: dependency problems – leaving unconfiguredE: plymouth-x11: dependency problems – leaving unconfigured. Installed Isadora this weekend – installation went very well, as usual.But There are some really shocking bugs in ubuntu 10.04:– problems with printing of.pdf files – other documents print just fine.
Workaround: first do a “print preview”, then pdf-files will print immediately.– not possible to copy audio cd’s with brasero. Installad gnomebaker; this program does its job.Both problems are reported on the ubuntu forums.I can’t believe Ubuntu released an OS with 2 such basic functions not working very disappointing.Clem,Your work is really appreciated here. It’s sad your work is spoiled somewhat by crappy ubuntu releases. Hmm I tried LM9 on 3 different kinds of computers, sigh I am kinda disappointment in LM9 even for Ubuntu 10 too because Helena LM8 has not let me down with wifi cards on dell laptops, even has not let me down with ati graphic card on my sony vaio pc, swell yealet.
Look at the hoods. Hmm dell inspiron 2 gb ram 30 gb hd and the wifi will not run to connect with my wpa password, so it has wrong driver for wifi, even for dell xps it will not find and see none of driver for the wifi card!! Even its 64 bit!! Come on clem? And now go on with this sony vaio this will not reconizge ati graphic cards.
Unlike lm8 helena has gone really smooth on all 3 computers so I ll stick with LM8 man. That ubuntu 10 has bad influences on new LM9 perhaps?. After I had read the upgrade tutorial I have decided to not upgrade until after school is finished. The 8 version works great too you know.I will be testing with an live-cd after I have graduated from “Gymnasiet” (swedish people know what I’m talking about).It will be intresting to see how this laptop will handle the Isadora.Oh just for info: Lenovov X60. The 8 version works great on it but the pen-function tends to fuck up the mouse after you have used it.
Also to use the Special scroll on it you need to make an file. The negative of this is if you press the middle button to quickly while browsing on firefox it will open a new tab. I hope Isadora have adressed this issue and got a fix for using the middle button on it. (Not demanding it, just saying it).Anyways I’m eager to try out the new release. Oh yhe I forgot to mention the wireless works great too, aslong you don’t put the computer to sleep or close the lid. In that case it will dissconnect and try to reconnect when you log in again.
(D-link DWL-G112 C also suffers from this problem. Don’t know if it’s intended or not).
Centos 7 I386 Iso
Mint has been going down hill,Gloria 7 with some XFCE downloads and a little work on it was by far your best O.S.Helena is ok but it freezes up to much and Isdora’s a mass buggy, is its name, Gloria is your best.Change is not good just for change we dont need you to kick out a new os every few months if you thing it makes look up to date your wrong Ive got mint on three out of four computors.GLORIA THAT IS, PLEASE DONT STOP THE UPDATES your all we got out there.Even with the problems on 8 and 9 your better then Ubumtoe ha ha or mikey 7. I got a free computor from mikey there os 7 didnt run on A new HP. GET THE DRIVERS FOR ATI NO LINEX WILL ON ATI. Hello!Only for share the info, seems like LUBUNTU had published a new iso and it dont said beta in the file, the image is recent from may,3-2010.I downloaded it and install on a test partition, and this thing make ubuntu like a LIGHTNING!!! My machine is a old Toshiba P35 with P4-3.2Ghz and is awesome the speed diference in my old machine, and also seems pretty stable (since the Lucid current status).I wonder that would be incredible a MiNT 9 version based on this for a wonderfull extremely fast version of the already GREAT MiNT 9 system.Below is the link of the ISO:and the info of Lubuntu development current state is easy to find by google.Hope that may help if could be possible a new flavor of our Incredible MiNT!Best Regards to all!. Linux Desktop has finally arrived!I keep checking back to linux every year or so (for the last 7 years) to see how far it has come. Well, I just installed Mint 9 on my wife’s dell laptop as a vista replacement and it is fantastic!
to 60 bpm (.We achieved 25 bpm with half-time grooves at 50 bpm – many DAWs don’t go this low for project settings). Focused Range of Tempos: Ultra slow tempos from 25 BPM. Metal drum samples wav.
Responsive, good software for most common applications (messenger, office, email, internet browsing, music, video). Mint does a great job of getting around having to stuff around with getting dvd’s working etc. Everything worked on first install, mouse pad, speakers, battery indicator, wifithis has always been an issue with linuxgetting the bits and pieces working, but now it seems most issues are resolved.The best thing is the os doesn’t get in the way of using the software, where vista, dell tools and norton do. So annoying in windows getting constant popups asking you to do something you are not quite sure what. Only thing is you do get a popup asking to enter password for keyring and administrator password from time to time. Not sure if there is a way around this (eg permanently add a permission for a task).Great job guys,Phil.
Hello!I would like to ask, if someone could please help and advice.I would like to make my MiNT 9 installtion to run about LXDE like Lubuntu version desktop lean and fast response, so I am wonder which could be the best option to do this:Option A: Fresh new install of MiNT 9 in HD partition and THEN add the repo of Lubuntu 10.04, and install the Lubuntu 10.04 Desktop packages. Ok – after a fews faffing around – trying to get a stable install that can run my apps without hanging every few minutes I’ve decided to call it a day and I’ve gone back to Mandriva. It’s solid and does what I want and it’s KDE.i’m going to keep an eye on Mint – because I think it’s got the potential to be excellent.
But I’m not going to install it again until after the next version comes out and that will be on a VM until I see whether the base Ubuntu is fit for purpose!I’m fairly sure that a lot of the problems that people have found with Mint 9 are due to Ubuntu – and I find it unbelievable that it was an LTS release in such a poor condition.Looking forward to cautiously trying the next version. Or the one after that.Comments are closed.Theme: Flat 1.7.11.