I had a1T drive that has my backup on it. I used Lucky Backup but I
cannot figure out how to restore. I read the book and it is confusing.
I can't just more them over from that HD to the one that is in the
computer because they are locked. I will be dragging all future backups
as you have said. So much easier. Thank You
On 1/19/24 12:34 AM, David Christensen wrote:
On 1/18/24 20:08, Maureen L Thomas wrote:
I answered all your questions. I believe I am using wayland. I
appreciate your help.;
YW. :-)
On 1/18/24 1:12 AM, David Christensen wrote:
On 1/17/24 17:40, Maureen L Thomas wrote:
Well I did a back-up, that didn't work, but I didn't know it at the
time,
The back up failed? :-(
Do you need help with data recovery?
>
Too late for that.
Ouch.
Please get started doing some kind of backups. Simple approaches
include:
1. Connect a USB drive (flash, HDD, SSD, whatever). Hopefully, the
desktop environment will display a pop-up dialog with to mount the USB
drive file system and display it in a file manager. Then open another
file manager. Drag and drop files from your hard disk drive or solid
state drive to the USB drive to back up. Drag them the other way to
restore. It helps to create folders with year, month, day-of-month
names (e.g. 20240118) on the USB drive, so that you can back up the
same file repeatedly and retain older copies. Then put the USB drive
off-site, get another USB drive, and continue with backups. Every
month or so, swap the on-site and off-site USB drives.
2. If your computer has a CD/DVD/BD burner drive, buy a spindle of
blank discs. Look for a CD/DVD/BD burner application via your Start
menu (or whatever it is called). Burn important files to an optical
disc periodically, and as needed. Keep the burned discs off-site.
Another useful strategy is to put your operating system on one HDD/SSD
and put your data on a second HDD/SSD. When you need to re-install
your operating system, you can shut down, disconnect the data drive
SATA cable, boot installer media, and install the operating system.
When the new operating system is working, you shutdown, connect the
data disk SATA cable, boot, and configure the system to mount the data
drive.
Did you install a graphical desktop? If so, which one?
I installed Gnome for the desk top
Okay.
What backport package(s) did you require?
deb https://ftp.debian.org/debian/ bookworm-backports contrib main
non-free non-free-firmware
Okay.
I now have a system that works but I cannot find any utility to fix
the top bar the way I want it. Any hints?
If you are using Xfce, right click on a blank area of any panel and
choose Panel -> Panel Preferences. This will give you a multi-tab
app that you can use to customize all the panels.
I use Xfce and am unfamiliar with Gnome. Perhaps another reader who
uses the Gnome desktop can provide instructions for customizing the
desktop interface.
David