Re: Upgrading from Ubuntu 8.10 to Ubuntu Studio 8.10

2009-02-14 Thread aYo Binitie
On 2/14/09, aYo Binitie ayobini...@googlemail.com wrote: On 2/14/09, Cory K. coryis...@ubuntu.com wrote: sandie wrote: Henry W. Peters wrote: Hi, Finally got a DSL connection. Downloaded Ubuntu Studio successfully, by all indications . Can't seem to find instructions on how to upgrade

Re: Upgrading from Ubuntu 8.10 to Ubuntu Studio 8.10

2009-02-14 Thread sandie
Cory K. wrote: sandie wrote: Henry W. Peters wrote: Hi, Finally got a DSL connection. Downloaded Ubuntu Studio successfully, by all indications . Can't seem to find instructions on how to upgrade from Ubuntu 8.10 to Ubuntu Studio 8.10... (my current non-Studio installation

Re: [Fwd: Re: Upgrading from Ubuntu 8.10 to Ubuntu Studio 8.10]

2009-02-14 Thread Billy C
On Sat, Feb 14, 2009 at 6:06 PM, Henry W. Peters hwpet...@jamadots.comwrote: Well, my deed got done... Now reporting out from Ubuntu Studio 8.10... Looks very impressive, seems quicker than Ubuntu regular... probably more work organizing, compacting, optimizing... More work to do... But for

Re: [Fwd: Re: Upgrading from Ubuntu 8.10 to Ubuntu Studio 8.10]

2009-02-14 Thread Henry W. Peters
Does this overwrite the programs I installed outside of Ubuntu S. (as it suggests)? This would be very troubling. Could there be some 'appearance' I have or have not adjusted? Henry p.s., I did a test of the CD prior to installing... it came out w/ a clean bill of health. Billy C wrote:

Re: [Fwd: Re: Upgrading from Ubuntu 8.10 to Ubuntu Studio 8.10]

2009-02-14 Thread Scott
Henry W. Peters wrote: I have one rather foolish sounding question: When one minimizes a window... where does it go to? Since there is a top frame to the desktop window, no bottom, where I am used to such windows going (to). Do the Add To Panel again. Scroll all the way to the bottom of

Re: [Fwd: Re: Upgrading from Ubuntu 8.10 to Ubuntu Studio 8.10]

2009-02-14 Thread Scott
I don't have a bottom frame... I got rid of it. I have my menu bar and windows at the top. All these kinds of settings are deep within gconf-editor or in the one of the folders named something like ~/.gnome2. You shouldn't need to use those tools to find the look you want, though. -Scott