Linux for your taste (sorry Naw :D) (21 Viewers)

What OS do you use?

  • Windows

  • Linux

  • Mac

  • Other


Results are only viewable after voting.

Rami

The Linuxologist
Dec 24, 2004
8,065
Martin said:
manual dependency resolution... if only we had some way to do that automatically, hm..... oh I know... gentoo :D

You either don't have the kde headers or configure can't find them. Good luck with that, have fun! Manual compilation = slackware linux, the most hardcore mainstream distro ;)
More than Gentoo??

Pheewww, I wanted to download it and check it out, I just liked the name:D
 

Buy on AliExpress.com

Rami

The Linuxologist
Dec 24, 2004
8,065
vlatko said:
because that's what the readme says. :p i tried installing from the kde control centre by clicking install theme but i don't have a theme file, i have a tar.bz2 file which it can't open. :confused:
Just too much effort for a theme....:confused:
 

Martin

Senior Member
Dec 31, 2000
56,913
Rami said:
More than Gentoo??

Pheewww, I wanted to download it and check it out, I just liked the name:D
hell yes. slackware I think is the oldest distro of all, they pride themselves on doing everything by hand.

Until very recently, Slackware didn't even come with X by default, it was an optional extra.
 

Martin

Senior Member
Dec 31, 2000
56,913
The first Slackware release, 1.00, was on July 16, 1993

whereas

Gentoo was initially created by Daniel Robbins as the Enoch Linux distribution. The goal was to create a distribution that was built from source code, tuned to the hardware, only included required programs, and decreased maintainer workload through scripting.[1] At least one version of Enoch was distributed: version 0.75, in December 1999.[2]
 

V

Senior Member
Jun 8, 2005
20,110
  • V

    V

Rami said:
Just too much effort for a theme....:confused:
i spent hours downloading dependecies, don't know why i don't give up.

Martin said:
You either don't have the kde headers or configure can't find them. Good luck with that, have fun!
you aren't very helpful, you know? you just gave me more stuff to google. :D :D
 

V

Senior Member
Jun 8, 2005
20,110
  • V

    V

Martin said:
Hey you're compiling by hand, that's pretty geeky :D
well i made it, solved all dependencies. :weee:

though i have no idea how to use that theme now, where it's installed anyway? arggh :(
 

Chxta

Onye kwe, Chi ya ekwe
Nov 1, 2004
12,088
How to use an iPod with Ubuntu:

Prerequisites
You need an iPod already formatted in Windows through iTunes, before you can proceed with this Howto. My iPod nano was already formatted with a Windows filesystem (fat32) as a factory default, but you may have one which uses the Mac filesystem.

Installing GTKPod
I'm using the program GTKPod for synchronizing my songs to the iPod. So first of all, you should install GTKPod.

If you want AAC support for GTKPod, type the following command in in the terminal:
sudo apt-get install gtkpod-aac
killall gnome-panel

without ACC support, the command would be: sudo apt-get install gtkpod
You can't have both installed at the same time.

Mounting the iPod
Now we're creating a mount point. You can skip this step, if Gnome created already one for you in the /media directory automatically.

First create the corresponding directory as a mount point for your iPod:
sudo mkdir /media/iPod

Let GEdit open the file fstab:
sudo gedit /etc/fstab

Add at the bottom:

/dev/sdc2 /media/iPod vfat nosuid,noauto,nodev,rw,umask=077,gid=1000,uid=1000,user,defaults,noatime,iocharset=utf8 0 0

Configuring GTKPod
When you go into GTKPod, go to Edit -> Preferences, Input/Output tab. I personally didn't get the auto mount/unmount thing working, so I left it unchecked.

However, the most important field in that entire preferences window is the iPod mount point field in the Input/Output tab. Fill in the mount point field with the appropriate folder (in this example /media/iPod).

Restart the program. It will automatically fill the GTKPod database with all of the songs and playlists that you have stored on your iPod prior to setting up GTKPod.

When problems occur
However, here is the rub: GTKPod seems to work randomly for different people. It will work on one synchronization, yet it will stop working for subsequent synchronizations. Others will find that it will not work, period. There's a simple solution to that, actually; just type the following command in into your console app:

sudo dosfsck -a /dev/sdc2

sdc2 being the partition where your iPod data resides. Be sure to check out /etc/mtab with gedit in order to confirm which /dev/ node is being used for your iPod.

The above command will execute dosfsck, and automatically fix any errors encountered in the vfat partition.

Have fun!
After that, GTKPod should work flawlessly without your system automatically mounting your iPod as read only. Now you can also write on your iPod and therefore synchronize your MP3 and AAC files.

http://www.ubuntux.org/how-to-use-an-ipod-with-ubuntu
 

Rami

The Linuxologist
Dec 24, 2004
8,065
Chxta said:
When problems occur
However, here is the rub: GTKPod seems to work randomly for different people. It will work on one synchronization, yet it will stop working for subsequent synchronizations. Others will find that it will not work, period. There's a simple solution to that, actually; just type the following command in into your console app:
This always has confused me with hardware, my webcam works seemingly as it wishes. It worked out of the box on edgy eft, after a reboot it doesn't a couple of days later it does...Jack also has found this problem with his hardware on Ubuntu. I don't know about other distros though...

Get Gentoo:D?
 

Rami

The Linuxologist
Dec 24, 2004
8,065
Erik-with-a-k said:
Oh ok, I thought you were implying she were. My bad:pint:
LOL

1-It wasn't me who posted the picture...
2-It wasn't me who was all drooling on the picture...

I am the one who explained the background....where exactly did I say anything that could imply anything??
 

Slagathor

Bedpan racing champion
Jul 25, 2001
22,708
Rami said:
Erik-with-a-k said:
She's not naked
From wikipedia.com. Keyword: Ubuntu.

The default appearance of the user interface in the current version is characterised by shades of brown and orange. Ubuntu has an optional package called ubuntu-calendar, which downloads a new desktop wallpaper matching the brown colour theme each month. In the past, these wallpapers featured partially nude people and were criticized as risqué. This led to the coining of nicknames such as "Linuxxx".[10]
I thought that post implied it, which it doesn't I now see. I'm sorry, I usually just briefly skim these boards :toast:
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 16)