Neil Greenwood wrote:
> Here's the link I mentioned originally:
> What a link-fest!
>
> Dw i'n dysgu cymraeg. Mae fy merched i byddwch yn mynd i'r ysgol
> gymraeg. So I'd like to be able to understand them!
>
> Hwyl,
> Neil.
>
Neil >>> Thanks for all the links. It'll take me a while to work
On 14/05/07, I C McNab <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Neil Greenwood wrote:
> > One thing you could look at is using LVM, which can resize the
> > partitions later. It's probably not the best thing to try if you're
> > new to Linux, especially to use for the / partition.
> >
> > The other thing you c
Neil Greenwood wrote:
> One thing you could look at is using LVM, which can resize the
> partitions later. It's probably not the best thing to try if you're
> new to Linux, especially to use for the / partition.
>
> The other thing you can do is leave some empty space at the moment, in
> case you
On 12/05/07, I C McNab <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Alec Wright wrote:
> > I recommend 15-20GB for / (my / is 15GB on a 250GB), 1-3GB for swap
> > (just to be safe... i have 3GB on my 250GB) and make the rest /home
> >
> > But 20GB and 3GB are a bit excessive; you could easily get away with
> > 10G
Alec Wright wrote:
> I recommend 15-20GB for / (my / is 15GB on a 250GB), 1-3GB for swap
> (just to be safe... i have 3GB on my 250GB) and make the rest /home
>
> But 20GB and 3GB are a bit excessive; you could easily get away with
> 10GB and 1GB (or even less!)
>
> Heres my partition table in c
On Sat, 2007-05-12 at 07:12 +0100, I C McNab wrote:
> I'm about to install Fiesty on a new 500Gb drive (to boot first in a
> dual boot set up with XP on a 160Gb drive in same box).
>
> I'm going to keep things simple: partitions for /, /home, and /swap,
> following advice in this thread.
>
> B
Thomas Steffen wrote:
> On 4/30/07, Stephen Garton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> 2. How much space do I _need_ for /?
>
> A normal installation of Ubuntu (most of Ubuntu, Kubuntu, some of edubuntu,
> development tools, TeX and some simulation software) tends to come out at
> 5GB for me. You can g
On Monday, 30.04.2007 at 08:39 +0100, Kris Marsh wrote:
> 1. The recommended amount of swap used to be 2*main memory. I
> generally don't bother with this, as I think 2GB of swap is a waste
> for 1GB main memory. However, if you want to use hibernate and such,
> then you will need to at least matc
On 4/30/07, Stephen Garton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
The questions I am looking for answers for are:
1. Do I need 2Gb of Swap? (I Have 1GB RAM)
No, absolutely not. The old recommendation was twice as much as RAM, but
that is based on different assumptions. Unless you want to do something ver
Kris Marsh wrote:
> 3. As you've noticed, you can't resize a currently mounted partition.
> What you need is some sort of live CD for gparted. Check the gparted
> website ;-)
Or just boot the Ubuntu install CD (the desktop version). It has gparted
already installed.
Regards,
Tony.
--
Tony Arn
On 4/30/07, Stephen Garton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Morning All,
>
> I'm after some recommended reading, If I might enquire. First background:
>
> Current Set-up (Laptop): 80Gb HD split into 2Gb Swap, 12Gb /, and the
> remaining 60Gb (all of w
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Morning All,
I'm after some recommended reading, If I might enquire. First background:
Current Set-up (Laptop): 80Gb HD split into 2Gb Swap, 12Gb /, and the
remaining 60Gb (all of what is available) as /home.
The questions I am looking for answers f
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