2009/5/12 Alan Pope :
> 2009/5/12 Liam Proven :
>> The key thing is to keep your /home directory tree on a separate
>> partition. That makes re-installing much less painful and fiddly.
>>
>
> Not really. You can reinstall over the top these days and it will wipe
> everything except /home - even if
2009/5/12 Tony Pursell :
> Hi all
>
> I have upgraded all the way from Warty to Jaunty with no problems
> due to the upgrade process going wrong.
>
> Cheers
> Tony
*Boggle*
Wow! Well, I'm impressed!
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Liam Proven • Profile: http://www.linkedin.com/in/liamproven
Email: lpro...@cix.co.uk • GMail
Hi all
I have upgraded all the way from Warty to Jaunty with no problems
due to the upgrade process going wrong.
Cheers
Tony
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Thanks, Rob; while we're on the subject of automatic log-ins, does
anybody know a way of getting Evolution to unlock the GPG/PGP keyring
automatically when it starts up? By default you have to enter the
password manually each time you start the Evolution client (even if you
never actually use encry
2009/5/12 Liam Proven :
> The key thing is to keep your /home directory tree on a separate
> partition. That makes re-installing much less painful and fiddly.
>
Not really. You can reinstall over the top these days and it will wipe
everything except /home - even if it's all on one partition. This
2009/5/12 Lucy :
> 2009/5/12 Robert Longstaff :
>>> Hi -- I was just wondering, why it is that the community-at-large seems to
>>> think that it is better to reinstall to a newer version of Ubuntu rather
>>> than to run the upgrade?
>>
>> I'm personally an 'install from fresh' person, but that's
>>
Yay, I forgot all about this, until I was going through my phone just
now, and decided, ooohh, lets try it, and it worked straight away. I've
got it running on my little netbook. Its a bit slow but its definately
working. Yay.
Sorry about tha excitement, but I am really pleased, it mean
On Tue, 2009-05-12 at 11:14 +0100, Bruce Beardall wrote:
> It's certainly interesting but I won't be holding my breath until we
> see something actually being delivered. The road of Open Source Good
> Intentions is littered with failed projects.
>
> I'd like it if they succeeded but time will tel
I'm not very good with upgrades and things, so I was really pleased when
I upgraded using the upgrade tool, to find that it worked perfectly too.
I was kind of dreading it, with my past experience with messing things
up, but I was very impressed.
John.
jim.came...@buhlersortex.com wrote:
> Luc
Lucy :
> The upgrade I just did downloaded over a gig worth of data,
> but as I'm on a fast connection the entire install was
> complete in about 30-40 minutes. If I was on a slower
> connection I would probably have been better off using a cd
> instead. On the other hand, f I had less installed on
Rowan Berkeley wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I upgraded from 8.10 to 9.04 this morning, and it was absolutely
> painless. I didn't lose any of my personal data or preferences, as far
> as I can see, though it reverted my user log-in from automatic to
> manual.
>
>
That's good to hear. You should be re-enabl
Well, then I stand corrected! ;)
When I installed Ibex on my Macbook, there was loads of buggering around in
the config files to get things like the touchpad scrolling working, and
loads of sound issues, and other things which I don't recall just to hand.
Which is fair enough, as there's a hell of
2009/5/12 Robert Longstaff :
>> Hi -- I was just wondering, why it is that the community-at-large seems to
>> think that it is better to reinstall to a newer version of Ubuntu rather
>> than to run the upgrade?
>
> I'm personally an 'install from fresh' person, but that's
> just me ;)
>
> Otherwise
> Hi -- I was just wondering, why it is that the community-at-large seems to
> think that it is better to reinstall to a newer version of Ubuntu rather
> than to run the upgrade?
I'm personally an 'install from fresh' person, but that's
just me ;)
Otherwise, I heard two anecdotal stories at a rec
2009/5/12 Alan Pope :
> 2009/5/12 doug livesey :
>> Hi -- I was just wondering, why it is that the community-at-large seems to
>> think that it is better to reinstall to a newer version of Ubuntu rather
>> than to run the upgrade?
>
> What makes you think they do?
>
> Perhaps these people are used
I wouldn't say that upgrading is unreliable in Windows - a clean
install is always a better option, and technically safer, but
upgrading is also quite reliable.
James
On 12 May 2009, at 11:53, Alan Pope wrote:
> 2009/5/12 doug livesey :
>> Hi -- I was just wondering, why it is that the comm
doug livesey wrote:
> Hi -- I was just wondering, why it is that the community-at-large
> seems to think that it is better to reinstall to a newer version of
> Ubuntu rather than to run the upgrade?
> Cheers,
>Doug.
personally I think the install process is such a pleasure to use it
would be
2009/5/12 doug livesey :
> Hi -- I was just wondering, why it is that the community-at-large seems to
> think that it is better to reinstall to a newer version of Ubuntu rather
> than to run the upgrade?
What makes you think they do?
Perhaps these people are used to Windows/Fedora/Red Hat where
u
Hi -- I was just wondering, why it is that the community-at-large seems to
think that it is better to reinstall to a newer version of Ubuntu rather
than to run the upgrade?
Cheers,
Doug.
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Hi,
I upgraded from 8.10 to 9.04 this morning, and it was absolutely
painless. I didn't lose any of my personal data or preferences, as far
as I can see, though it reverted my user log-in from automatic to
manual.
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It's certainly interesting but I won't be holding my breath until we see
something actually being delivered. The road of Open Source Good Intentions
is littered with failed projects.
I'd like it if they succeeded but time will tell.
B
2009/5/12 James Milligan
> Nice
>
> Does this mean cheaper
Nice
Does this mean cheaper rates etc?
Or am I barking up the wrong tree?
James
On 12 May 2009, at 10:41, Bruce Beardall wrote:
For those who are interested, Intel & Nokia announce an open source
telephony project:
http://ofono.org/blogs/holtmann/2009/announcing-ofonoorg
Regards
Bruce
For those who are interested, Intel & Nokia announce an open source
telephony project:
http://ofono.org/blogs/holtmann/2009/announcing-ofonoorg
Regards
Bruce
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