Hello everybody,

I started on the free software world 7 years ago. My first distro was
Debian. But in that time Debian was "complicate" for me. So, I change to
Ubuntu. I used to use them like a simple user.

A couple of month ago I decided to contribute to Free software, so I choose
Debian.

Now, with a little more experience with Linux-Based-OS like user, I feel
that Debian don't think about new user. I think that if we want to catch
more user, we have to make a more easily used OS. The First change (on my
point of view) is try to find the best order for the web-page. For me, was
a little complicate search the  non-free ISO installer (I was problem with
my WIFI device)

Regards!


El vie., 1 de dic. de 2017 a la(s) 21:34, Sven Hartge <s...@svenhartge.de>
escribió:

> The Wanderer <wande...@fastmail.fm> wrote:
> > On 2017-12-01 at 16:44, Sven Hartge wrote:
> >> Luca Capello <l...@pca.it> wrote:
> >>> On Fri, 01 Dec 2017 14:59:53 -0500, James McCoy wrote:
>
> >>>> People seem to be skipping over the fact that even after ntfs-3g
> >>>> was installed, the user only had RO access.  That's the bigger
> >>>> issue.
> >>
> >>> Exactly, which IIRC is the normal behavior if the NTFS filesystem
> >>> was not properly "closed", e.g. if Windows was hibernated (or it
> >>> uses the Fast Boot/Startup feature, thus suspend2both).
> >>
> >> Which is normal since at least Windows 7, maybe even Vista, to not
> >> shutdown completely, but only shutdown the applications and then
> >> hibernate the remaining Windows Kernel and memory to disk, leaving
> >> the filesystem unclean.
>
> > Are you sure?
>
> Not on the version specifics, to be honest.
>
> > I've been managing Windows 7 at my workplace for years now, and I've
> > never seen this "suspend in response to Shut Down" behavior there; the
> > first place I ever saw it was on a Windows 8 machine.  I'm not sure
> > I've yet seen it in our current Windows 10 pilot, either, but I also
> > haven't looked especially closely there.
>
> Maybe it happens only on Windows 7 on SSD? Or only in specific editions?
>
> But a quick web search reveals that Windows 8 was the first Windows to
> have "Fast Startup"/"Hybrid Shutdown" enabled per default and Windows 10
> has this feature enabled as well.
>
> I mostly deal, if I have to deal, with the server variant of Windows,
> which does not have this feature.
>
> But I have seen the NTFS-mount-only-as-RO problem on other peoples
> systems, when dual booting into Linux.
>
> S°
>
> --
> Sigmentation fault. Core dumped.
>
> --
Arias Emmanuel
https://www.linkedin.com/in/emmanuel-arias-437a6a8a
http://eamanu.com

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