I installed JUST the Cinnamon desktop and as far as I can tell that doesn't
install any extra programs, for instance the default browser is still
abrowser and there are no programs available other than the standard Trisquel
6 ones in the menu.
El 08/02/13 11:24, Jason Self escribió:
This is an appropriate use of the trademark
Actually, Mozilla's trademark policy goes too far:
http://jxself.org/mozilla_trademark.shtml
http://www.mozilla.org/foundation/trademarks/policy.html
[...]
In addition, if you compile a modified version, as
System resources wise, I still get better performance with MATE, but MATE is
a fork of Gnome 2 and I am technically using older versions of Gnome
applications that are name differently. For example, Eye of Mate instead of
Eye of Gnome and Caja instead of Nautilus.
With Cinnamon, I am using
It's only possible to upgrade an installation of a STS (short-term support)
version of Ubuntu (therefore Trisquel also) to the very next version, be it
STS or LTS (long-term support). (LTS installations can be upgraded either to
the very next STS version or to the next LTS, launched every 2
No links appeared, Chris.
Jodiendo, I would boot the system with a Trisquel LiveCD and test the
wireless; if it doesn't work, which is most probable, then I would teach my
(your) friend about what many companies do in order to have control of the
market: restrict the consumer/user's
Most here may not agree with my response but I would suggest, for someone who
is new to the GNU Linux environment, to get them a distro that will give them
the least problems when it comes to compatibility with hardware. I did this
with my friends and family as I gave them Ubuntu
Those issues would be solved if he moved from a LTS to LTS release so 6 will
be 12.04 and 7 will be 14.04. At the pace right now, the Trisquel releases
will always be 4-6 months behind the Ubuntu release.
But this is Ruben's distribution and his rules and we are just users waiting
for
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Le 13-02-08 10:24 PM, ch...@thinkpenguin.com a écrit :
Besides the USB G adapter option there is also a mini pci card option most
likely. You can
replace the card inside the laptop. It looks like it should be an easy
thing to do. There appears to
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Le 13-02-09 12:37 PM, r...@ronbravo.com a écrit :
Most here may not agree with my response but I would suggest, for someone who
is new to the GNU Linux
environment, to get them a distro that will give them the least problems
when it comes to
Sorry guys, been working extra long hours on the field.
Here is the latest news, as of today.
After explaining, the lack of full cooperation, That certain companies
consider those drivers and firmware to be theirs, and sometimes there is no
support TO THE GNU/linux COMMUNITY: hes reply
I second this.
Including nonfree drivers and firmware does not result in the least amount of
problems; it results in the most amount of problems being hidden. Eventually
the nonfree software will fail, and when it does, the person you introduced
GNU/Linux to will be frustrated and assume
Not wanting to spend money because the computer is old. Sounds like my mom.
If you're feeling charitable, you could offer to buy something for him, but
that might not be something you can do.
Try mentioning this: if a new component is bought, it can be used on future
laptops and other
So compiling a modified version is trivial without branding.
Indeed, but to quote Brett:
Unfortunately, such a restriction in a trademark license does make the
software nonfree. As we've said in the past, a requirement that you
rename the software when you modify it is fine -- but a
I've heard others advocate a similar strategy involving a multi-step
strategy of moving people to free software. The problem I find with
this is that everyone then spends all of their time on step one (being
more free than they were in step zero) and no one moves on to step two
(fully free.) We
I am currently using Trisquel 6.0 x86 with Gnome and I installed Gtk-Gnutella
from the package manager. The version available in the package manager is out
of date and out of date versions of Gtk-Gnutella are unusable, so I
downloaded the newest version from the Gtk-Gnutella website and
Ronbravo and MAGIC FAB
Thanks for your suggestion, all are valid.
I'm going to stick to my game plan on persuade him to purchase and sharing
the cost for a card or an adapter, that will ease the pain. I think he is
getting a sweet deal from me, sort of speak.
While typing, on my
Christ
If I'm successful in persuading him, once I purchase what ever adapter we
choose. Don't forget to toss a mouse pad in the package just for libre
purposes. LOL
Onpong
Excellent suggestions.
You just gave me more ammunition to reinforce my comments.Are you sure
you are a Lawyer? lol
Thank You
JXself
Exactly, If I'm successful I believe I graduated from Step one.
So, in your own interpretation, what is Step 2?
Be my Polaris star on this one, just guide me.
Hey, I could pin point with accuracy the Polaris star at night, If you need
help.
During my Army days, One of the
The problem with randomly installing GNU/Linux is the hardware in general
isn't well supported. It'll work today although not tomorrow. There really
isn't a problem with Ubuntu on hardware which is better supported from an
ease of use perspective.
Getting people to move away from a
He is sticking to the current path because either way you go there will be
upset users. Which I think is a fair answer. I think at some future date
there is going to be a better answer. However for the time being it is what
it is.
I guess you could go upstream for a fishing expedition.
http://packages.ubuntu.com/search?searchon=namessuite=allsection=allkeywords=libfontconfig1
This specific package has no obvious licensing problems. Generally speaking
packages marked 'restricted' and 'multiverse' are proprietary. More
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Le 13-02-09 01:48 PM, davidvarg...@mac.com a écrit :
Dammit, I just order a card for myself, I wish I could bought him one...I got
no more money to spare,
until the end of the month.
I have an idea:
I will try to persuade him to purchase a new
One more.
Church Of Emacs?
Dell has offered Ubuntu based laptops in the past and not really advertised
them much and recently they came out with new XPS models that run the latest
Ubuntu. I don't know how well they are selling, but it was good to some that
a big vendor supported GNU/Linux in some way.
I then read
Dell isn't taking GNU/Linux anywhere. Dell is at best using GNU/Linux for
publicity and/or to make baseless threats toward Microsoft to coerce better
deals. They are certainly no threat to Microsoft though. Microsoft has all
the major companies under its tight grip. If there was any threat
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