Try running:
sudo apt update
sudo apt full-upgrade
sudo reboot
Full updates super help
Type: Posts; User: ActionParsnip; Keyword(s):
Try running:
sudo apt update
sudo apt full-upgrade
sudo reboot
Full updates super help
Awesome!
Run:
sudo apt clean
sudo apt --purge autoremove
You may also want to remove old kernels if you have multiple. I also suggest you clean data from $HOME as your /home folder in part of the...
Possibly this:
https://bugs.gentoo.org/911336
Try adding an export to set the DISPLAY value. May help
Did you SHASUM test the ISO you downloaded?
Set 64Gb. You can use the "something else" option in the installer for setting file systems up. The dual boot will be managed for you. I'm guessing your Windows OS was preinstalled or installed...
Be sure the SHASUM the ISO before you use it (or use torrents) so you know the ISO is complete and consistent
You can use commands and such, to reduce quality and therefore file size.
Something like this...
OK what is the output of
sudo lshw -C display
With that attitude you'll never learn anything
"oh its gibberish so I can't do it"
Look down the left hand side... These are numbers which you will understand. I already explained how these are...
Please mark as solved
If you run:
dmesg > ~/Desktop/boot-$(date +"%Y-%m-%d").txt
gedit ~/Desktop/boot-$(date +"%Y-%m-%d").txt
Look through the numbers on the left (This is seconds since the kernel came online)...
I thought this was for a new install? Planning partitions means you don't have to shrink anything.
Another way is to have an NTFS partition mounted to something like /data which would be seen as...
I thought this was for a new install? Planning partitions means you don't have to shrink anything. 16Gb swap will be plenty but you could probably get away with 8Gb. It's small potatoes on a 1Tb disk
A game? Singular? Then I'd say 400Gb NTFS leaving the rest unpartitioned. Then boot to Ubuntu installer. Setup an LVM for the rest, then 50Gb for /, 1xRAM for swap and the rest for /home
Just how...
OK and what is the Windows side for?
What will you be using Ubuntu for? Without this we cannot advise any kind of layout.
What are you doing on the remote system that needs the full desktop session? There may be a sleeker solution to what you want to achieve
Local apt server for updates. You can also use the servers as an SSH jumpbox so you can jump from that to any server on the LAN.
If you run:
visudo -c
Does the file check as OK? If you also run:
id foo
+1 for LTS in prod. 24.04 is being released soon. You could install it now as prerelease then you will upgrade seamlessly into the release candidate. 24.04 will be supported until 2029 (5 years). Oh...
Can you set the UID in the code, then set it using the UID? Does that work?
Does this help
https://blog.gpunktschmitz.com/posts/1083-certificate-error-when-initiating-a-rdp-session-using-remmina/
?
What are you dong on the Windows system that needs the full desktop...