I've downloaded and installed the basic Gnome version that fits on a CD in my Parallels virtual machine. Nice distro.Originally Posted by harrybarracuda
Click for full size - Uploaded with plasq's Skitch
I've downloaded and installed the basic Gnome version that fits on a CD in my Parallels virtual machine. Nice distro.Originally Posted by harrybarracuda
Click for full size - Uploaded with plasq's Skitch
In a nutshell, and lots of busted nuts actually... lol
I have an older Toshiba Satellite (5yrs old??) that I am trying to load Ubuntu on.
Machine is fine with the exception of the DVD CD drive is kaput.
I have tried to load using WUBI and going to the third option of not having a drive etc.
All seems ok up to a certain point where its looking for the drive, I am using a USB drive to run the disc, but the machine looks for the original drive....
The boot sequence only allows booting from HDD, FDD or CD. Otherwise my thumbdrive would suffice. No option to boot from that.
I am NOT interested in a dual boot system, intended to use the machine soley as a Linux station.
Any help would be appreciated.
E. G.
PS am a total fu wit with operating systems etc.
"If you can't stand the answer --
Don't ask the question!"
No sooner than posting the last item, the damn machine rebooted and gave me the option of windows or Ubuntu... selected and was finishing the install stuff and got the following msg...
unable to find a medium containing a live file system
looks like it still wants to use the original drive instead of the USB drive the disc is loaded on.
E. G.
EDIT: is there a way to force the machine to look at the USB drive??
You could try the Damn Small Linux boot floppy with USB support.Originally Posted by El Gibbon
http://distro.ibiblio.org/pub/linux/...floppy-usb.img
You could also try completely disabling the CD/DVD drive in the BIOS and trying wubi again.
erm.... disabling cd/dvd in bios.... how to?
Like I mentioned previously... am an idjiot at bios and such
E, G,
When the machine is starting you hit a key (normally F1 or Esc) and it will bring up a screen where various basic settings can be changed. Normally you use the arrow keys to navigate around and the F9 or F10 to save and exit or exit without saving.Originally Posted by El Gibbon
If you are not sure what you are doing then be very, very careful because it is quite easy to make it a paperweight by fiddling with BIOS settings.
If you change something and you think you have made a mistake then exit WITHOUT SAVING and start all over again.
There should be an option somewhere to completely disable the CD/DVD.
Have you tried using wubi without the usb drive attached? I thought wubi had the option to download and install ubuntu by itself?
bibo ergo sum
If you hear the thunder be happy - the lightening missed.
This time.
WUBI was with a cd (ISO)
Don't know about downloading and installing by itsedlf. Will go and have a gander.
What I need I think is a method of downloading and installing without any other device other than the HDD. Maybe wrong but can't see much else.
The ISO disc I burned goes right to the WUBI which I've tried many times.
E. G.
Wubi is a tool to install Ubuntu from within windows. It is not supposed to be burned on a disk, it is an exe file so it should download to windows and then you click and run it.Originally Posted by El Gibbon
chin land - have a look on alibaba.comOriginally Posted by Butterfly
CMOS is getting better , but not sure it is as good as CCD for fast motion yet
Down loaded a fresh version of Wubi, ran it and it looked for the drive for some reason....... locked up and stopped.
Checked my boot menu and there isn't a way to turn off access to the drive....
This is becoming a real pain in the ass. Wanted to use this machine for linux but looks like I'm doomed without an "expert" to accomplish it.
E. G.
Forgot to add that my Acer Aspire One dual boots just as advertised with my thumb drive.
E. G.
Hard to see what's wrong here. Most Netbooks don't have optical drives, so a lot of distros will boot and even run off USB drives.
But if you are saying this box is so old it won't boot from a USB, then WUBI is your best solution.
Let me get this right - you can boot up windows on this box and connect it to the 'net?
If so, go to Wubi - Ubuntu Installer for Windows and click the Download button. Don't even have your External optical Drive plugged in.
Wubi should download and execute (you might have to "run" it when it asks, I can't remember), and then it will download the other components it needs.
At no point should anything be "loaded on the USB Drive".
Ubuntu shouldn't "look for a drive", since it's installing in a safe area of your Windows drive.
So if something is looking for a drive, then it sounds like something in Windows is screwed (Office maybe - that often gets stuck looking for components on the original install disks?).
As for reinstalling, which would be one option, I can't really tell you how to do it without the original bootable optical drive.
The only thing I can think of is perhaps look at a BIOS upgrade to see if there is a later version that supports booting from USB devices.
If you can give us a model number we can have a look for you.
OK seems I've buggered up this thread somewhat.
So to clarify things.
The Net book Aspire One is fine.
The issue is with the Toshiba Satellite (19 in) with the following numbers
M45-S351 system unit
model #PSN480U-01xxxxx
I down loaded a clean (new) Wubi and tried an install. ( I am not interested in a dual boot machine, this is to use Linux only and play with it.) Selection #2, it seems to work for a few minutes and then I can here the ODD try and spin up.. rattle rattle and I get the following msg.
EDIT: Permission denied
see log file: c:\docume~1\admin~\locals~1\temp\wubi-10.04-rev189.log
The machine's ODD is flocked, I looked at the BIOS (escp.... F1), it does not allow boot from USB nor is there a place to disable the ODD.
Now Wubi seems to work up to a certain point, then I hear the drive try and start and Wubi closes/locks
Hope this helps clarify my issues.
E. G.
Last edited by El Gibbon; 27-05-2010 at 06:56 PM.
Well looks like problem solved. Ubuntu is up and running, who knows or cares how.
Tried the Wubi again this AM, failed after about 2 hours. Tried again and it went through.
Have no idea what the problem was. Maybe a communication problem with the web that caused hiccups and shut down the process.
No idea whatsoever why it was indicated by the ODD trying to start.
But success,
Thanks for the suggestions.
The communication problem (if that is what it is) were the farthest from my mind as I was using my netbook all day yesterday and didn't notice any drops or inet failures...
E. G.
Well flucked now, DL'd Wubi and on reboot the selected boot the Ubuntu option, it went thru the process of setting itself up. I just let it run until the end, and switched off and tried to reboot itself. All I have now is a no signal notice on the screen and a spinning HD. I would get marmite around to assist but I can't afford the beer to keep him running. HELP plse
There can’t be good living where there is not good drinking
I ain't got the heart to take that job away from himOriginally Posted by peterpan
I am no expert as validated by some of the posts above. I tried it many many times before I got it working.
Me thinks that ANY corruption of the files downloading causes big problems. Finally got mine working today. Worth a try anyway. Try running Wubi again.
E. G.
I'd echo that if Wubi fails, run it again. But it might be that it's had problems writing the boot records.
You should be able to easily repair Windows by booting from the Windows CD and following the simple repair procedure.
Out of interest, there's a new distribution release out that looks great for Netbooks. It combines Moblin (Intel's netbook linux) and Maemo (Nokia's platform for the N900).
It's quite web centric but has email client and media player, etc.
I'm downloading it now and I'll give it a try and report back.
MeeGo v1.0 Core Software Platform & Netbook User Experience project release | MeeGo
Very interesting!
It would seem Meego is aimed at Netbooks and Nokia tablet devices, presumably in competition with the iTampon.
It's rumoured to be coming on the Nokia 920 and Intel may start manufacturing phones and other devices.
It's got a real Moblin feel to it, and it's extremely responsive on the Atom processor.
I installed it over a dual boot PCLinuxOS/Windows 7 system, and it seamlessly replaced Linux and added Windows to the boot menu, so no problems there.
Looks a but sparse on the application front (well it is 1.0!), but it has Evolution express for email and an IM client that supports Yahoo, Facebook chat, MSN, Google Talk and lots of others. The default browser is Google Chrome.
Now I'm trying to work out what applications are available and how to get them downloaded. There's no obvious sign of an application repository, or something like Synaptic, but perhaps that's yet to come.
As I play around I'll post more.
Added:
OK I found that it has a Gadget Toolbar (wonder where they got that idea?) with 1000+ desktop widgets, which I'm ploughing through now. Has Facebook notifications, clocks, Battery meters, Wifi monitors, etc.
Added:
Impressive list of supporters:
http://forum.meego.com/showthread.php?t=46
Compatible devices:
http://wiki.meego.com/Compatible_devices_with_MeeGo
Last edited by harrybarracuda; 29-05-2010 at 02:27 AM.
nice,
tablet PC ? does HP have one ?
They talked about the HP Slate in January, and at the time commented:
I must admit, I like my Netbook, so I'm not rushing out to buy an iTampon clone from anyone.It certainly seems that 2010 will be filled with entries in the tablet PC market, though, providing users with a variety of options for flat-panel, touch-screen, Web-enabled devices to replace more cumbersome netbooks and notebooks.
It remains to be seen if the Apple "iSlate" or Microsoft "Courier" will actually materialize, but HP, Dell, Lenovo, Fusion Garage, and a plethora of other manufacturers are all lining up a diverse array of tablet PC's to release this year.
And it has excellent Netbook support, and will sync with Android, iPhone and Blackberry.
More here:
Portal:11.3 - openSUSE
And there's a new release aimed at beginners which seems to have a good selection of software included. It's called NETRUNNER 2.
Features
Storming Norman, as he is jocularly known, is a long serving expat here in the sandpit, and has a seven year old NEC laptop the size of a couple of breeze blocks, which finally had the disk go tits up on him. He had it replaced here and they stuck on Win XP with the pestering Genuine Advantage crap, so he asked me to fix it.
I asked him what he did with it, and he said "Web surfing, Hotmail, cards".
So I stuck Lubuntu on it, with Google Chrome as the browser and a ton of free solitaire games, and this over 70-year old not particularly computer savvy geezer went on his way. Next time I saw him, he told me how much faster it was and how much he likes it.
That ought to convince people that Linux is nothing to be afraid of, if nothing else does.
And it found everything OOTB as well (except for the Wifi driver, because this thing is so old it doesn't have one - but the LAN adapter worked fine).
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