Never did lose usage, just after a fresh installĮehm 1 lvm for home, 1 ext2 boot and 1 ext3 for root I put the thing into ad-hoc mode, and it broadcasts garbage. 050d:705a uses the rt73 driver, I believe. trying to get a wireless USB chipset working. you want to restore the windows boot loader. M1DLGpc: but when you boot ubuntu live, you can not mount the windows drive?ĭabaR, right, I have to backup the system alsoĭaber it will not let me delete it either woth the suggested commands Xfact: to backup your installation, which will then be able to run without installing on the new HD? all I want to do is a new istall of ubuntu filling the whole drive after recovering everything off first I only need to gain access to my old windoqws drive because i wont boot and was last shut down with hibernate so it's unmountable. Ta, but i lost my grub instal, and a faulty partiton has lost my ubuntu that was installed there. I thought we were to backup grub not restore it? To restart your X, type « sudo /etc/init.d/?dm restart » in a console - To fix screen resolution or other X problems: īut when i try "e" cant edit root somewhere to boot hd(0,0) Idk: The X Window System is the part of your system that's responsible for graphical output. Here's a few:, ,, - See also !sbackup and !cloningĭabaR, when i try to change my resolution, it says my monitor isnt recognized, and i only have options for 800 x 600 and 640 x 480 Xfact (disclaimer: I've never used any of these): There are many ways to back your system up. !backup | xfact (disclaimer: I've never used any of these) Lost GRUB after installing Windows? See - GRUB how-tos: - See !grub2 for Karmic onwards. M1DLGpc: grub is the default boot manager for Ubuntu releases before Karmic (9.10). Often torrent is the fastest because lots of different people can share the load, but the end result is the same in all casesĪny easy backup tool for Ubuntu? I am about to change my HDD, so asking. Meowbuntu: ftp, http or torrent are all fine. Xfact: timevault, maybe? Though I'm not sure if it can back up to another drive. srv//8/#ubuntu.txt /srv//8/#ubuntu.txt tautologism
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