Mailing List Archive
tlug.jp Mailing List tlug archive tlug Mailing List Archive
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] Ubuntu 10.04 - kernel update snafu
- Date: Thu, 19 Jun 2014 00:29:33 +0900
- From: "Stephen J. Turnbull" <stephen@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] Ubuntu 10.04 - kernel update snafu
- References: <CABHGxq578Vh4zFgTRRc2JKtWz=ua74J5bdJULNQeTzyeD6hkxQ@mail.gmail.com> <53A1726F.5030500@imaginatorium.org>
Brian Chandler writes: > First aside: If after reading a bit, you want to scream - "You are > doing it wrong, you should be using Debian", or similar, please > do. If you have enough yen (in either sense, beer can always be converted to yen by not buying it if you have enough yen in the other sense), I find that running all my favorite *nix software under X in the Xquartz server, and using Mac OS X as my window/session manager, beats the tar out of anything I've seen on a Linux desktop. Dunno if your translation software will work in that environment. On the other hand, there does seem to be a Mac version. > This appears to be the polar opposite of all modern interface > "design". Youse gets whats youse pays for. Linux companies cannot afford to catch up to 35 years of HCI research (ie, going back to the Lisa) in 5 years, but they can hire "artistic" wannabes. Sad, isn't it? > How do I escape this madness? Step 1. Buy beer for 10. Step 2. Install Debian "Bare Metal" or RH "Scorched Earth" distribution. This consists of something like a recent kernel, an appropriate initramfs, a tree full of kernel modules, and staticly-linked executables of bash (or zsh) and dpkg (or rpm). Step 3. Find willing wizard, or at least some old-timer who isn't afraid of dpkg/rpm-level package management. Step 4. Buy pizza for 2, and enough wet-wipes to keep fingers clean nevertheless. Step 5. Feed wizard pizza and beer, and bitch bitterly about the stuff he's installing. Make him get it right for you. Step 6. Repeat steps 4 and 5 four more times. (Aren't you glad you bought beer for 10 like I told you?) Step 7. Tell the tale at next TLUG meeting. I'm not entirely serious, but if you can find somebody who's familiar with the structure of Linux reality to help you do this stuff, you'll be a lot happier with the results and (perhaps surprisingly) I bet you'll learn more useful things than you would hacking on your own. Hey, TLUG! We really ought to get back in the habit of installfests. Now that we always have good net connections, it's even possible to do most of the necessary work on a tower box in somebody's home from the (assuming they know how to set up sshd reasonably securely). > In the course of this major upheaval I did at least learn something. My > hard disk seems to have two partitions, so I was able to keep the Ubuntu > 10.04 partition, and by connecting a PS2 keyboard (won't work from a USB > one), Interesting. > I can press any/all of Esc, Del, F12, to select an older version > of the 10.04 kernel, which then seems to run fine. (Fine-ish. I don't > *like* Ubuntu, particularly, but I can manage with it. I dream that one > day I might meet something new that I actually like.) How would I go > about deleting the latest version, so the automatic boot might even go > to the working 10.04? If as you say 10.04 is installed on a different partition, then possibly all you need to do is change the default boot command (which specifies kernel and root partition) in grub.conf (which lives in /boot/grub/grub.conf on my non-Ubuntu systems, one is Debian though so probably Ubuntu is the same). If that file doesn't make sense to you, feel free to post it here (it's not very security sensitive). > My immediate problem is that I am involved in a largish translation > project, of some school arithmetic materials. And this is supposed to be > done in Memsource. So I downloaded a file called "Mem_something.run", > and after a bit of fiddle executed the version said to be for Ubuntu 12 > (listed here: > http://wiki.memsource.com/wiki/MemSource_Editor_Installation ). Despite > being 15MB, it simply does nothing. Can you be more specific about what kind of nothing it does? For example, how long does it take to do nothing? Does it produce any output or error messages when doing nothing? Did you click it to make it do nothing, or did you run it in a terminal where it did nothing? Try "ls -l Mem*". If that doesn't give you a line with r-xr-x-rx near the beginning (some of the dashes might be "w" instead, but you need the "x"s), you need to make the file executable: "chmod +x Mem*". Other than that I don't have any suggestions. > perhaps that's not relevant here, except to note that the programs I > have most difficulty getting to work in Linux are ones I don't want to > use really. That's something we can all relate to, I suspect. > Since there is a Memsource version for Ubu 10 and 12, I chose 12, > thinking it closer to Mint 17. But should I think Old Better? It can't hurt to try the other version, unless you're paying for connectivity by the byte.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: [tlug] Ubuntu 10.04 - kernel update snafu
- From: Brian Chandler
- Re: [tlug] Ubuntu 10.04 - kernel update snafu
- From: Kalin KOZHUHAROV
- Re: [tlug] Ubuntu 10.04 - kernel update snafu
- From: Travis Cardwell
- References:
- [tlug] Ubuntu 10.04 - kernel update snafu
- From: Jim Breen
- Re: [tlug] Ubuntu 10.04 - kernel update snafu
- From: Brian Chandler
Home | Main Index | Thread Index
- Prev by Date: Re: [tlug] Ubuntu 10.04 - kernel update snafu
- Next by Date: Re: [tlug] Ubuntu 10.04 - kernel update snafu
- Previous by thread: Re: [tlug] Ubuntu 10.04 - kernel update snafu
- Next by thread: Re: [tlug] Ubuntu 10.04 - kernel update snafu
- Index(es):
Home Page Mailing List Linux and Japan TLUG Members Links