Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Sean Miller
On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 7:22 AM, Rowan Berkeley
rowan.berke...@googlemail.com wrote:
 I gotta tell you, this is worse than I thought. I set the update manager
 to exclude proprietary device drivers (restricted) and allowed it to
 download and install everything else, and it again totally screwed up
 the machine, knocking out among other things the high-resolution
 display, so I had to re-install the whole of ubuntu from the restore
 disc all over again.

I will repeat my previous advice -- forget restore disc, install
from 8.10 instead.

It's a more recent version of Ubuntu, should detect all your hardware
fine and when 9.04 comes out you will be able to simply let it update.

Why is it that you're so reluctant to do this?

Surely if it fails you can THEN use the restore disc method?

But it shouldn't fail... not in my experience...

Sean

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Harry Rickards
Or, alternatively try the Jaunty (9.04) beta when it comes out on the  
21st of March, if you aren't afraid of testing new things. Among other  
things it should probably have improved hardware support.

Harry
Quoting Sean Miller s...@seanmiller.net:

 On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 7:22 AM, Rowan Berkeley
 rowan.berke...@googlemail.com wrote:
 I gotta tell you, this is worse than I thought. I set the update manager
 to exclude proprietary device drivers (restricted) and allowed it to
 download and install everything else, and it again totally screwed up
 the machine, knocking out among other things the high-resolution
 display, so I had to re-install the whole of ubuntu from the restore
 disc all over again.

 I will repeat my previous advice -- forget restore disc, install
 from 8.10 instead.

 It's a more recent version of Ubuntu, should detect all your hardware
 fine and when 9.04 comes out you will be able to simply let it update.

 Why is it that you're so reluctant to do this?

 Surely if it fails you can THEN use the restore disc method?

 But it shouldn't fail... not in my experience...

 Sean

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Rowan Berkeley
I'm getting less reluctant all the time! 

On Mon, 2009-03-09 at 07:36 +, Sean Miller wrote:
 On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 7:22 AM, Rowan Berkeley
 rowan.berke...@googlemail.com wrote:
  I gotta tell you, this is worse than I thought. I set the update manager
  to exclude proprietary device drivers (restricted) and allowed it to
  download and install everything else, and it again totally screwed up
  the machine, knocking out among other things the high-resolution
  display, so I had to re-install the whole of ubuntu from the restore
  disc all over again.
 
 I will repeat my previous advice -- forget restore disc, install
 from 8.10 instead.
 
 It's a more recent version of Ubuntu, should detect all your hardware
 fine and when 9.04 comes out you will be able to simply let it update.
 
 Why is it that you're so reluctant to do this?
 
 Surely if it fails you can THEN use the restore disc method?
 
 But it shouldn't fail... not in my experience...
 
 Sean
 


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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Chris Bannister (ubuntu mialing lists)
On 09/03/09 07:22, Rowan Berkeley wrote:
 I gotta tell you, this is worse than I thought. I set the update manager
 to exclude proprietary device drivers (restricted) and allowed it to
 download and install everything else, and it again totally screwed up
 the machine, knocking out among other things the high-resolution
 display, so I had to re-install the whole of ubuntu from the restore
 disc all over again.

I'm guessing you have an nvidia or ati graphics card? Both of these can 
use proprietary drivers to enable 3d acceleration (and advanced 2d 
acceleration on newer NV cards).  Easiest way to fix it would be to 
install the drivers again (System  Administration  Hardware Drivers) 
rather than a complete restore / reinstall.

It should also be possible to reconfigure X to use the appropriate FOSS 
driver if you want.  (sudo dpkg-reconfigure xserver-xorg)


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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Alan Pope
2009/3/9 Rowan Berkeley rowan.berke...@googlemail.com:
 I gotta tell you, this is worse than I thought. I set the update manager
 to exclude proprietary device drivers (restricted) and allowed it to

That wasn't wise.

I'd recommend learning what things are before randomly unclicking them :)

 download and install everything else, and it again totally screwed up
 the machine, knocking out among other things the high-resolution
 display, so I had to re-install the whole of ubuntu from the restore
 disc all over again.


You didn't _have_ to, it was completely fixable with just a couple of
commands. Knowing what they are is of course the issue, and I'd
suggest not getting into that situation in the first place.

Cheers,
Al.

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Alan Pope
2009/3/9 Sean Miller s...@seanmiller.net:
 I will repeat my previous advice -- forget restore disc, install
 from 8.10 instead.


That wouldn't help in this case. If he was running 8.10 vanilla and
unticked 'restricted' he'd end up in pretty much the same place. It's
not the install disc, it's the user that's at fault in this case.

Cheers,
Al.

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Rowan Berkeley
I think Sean's approach is a lot more sensible for someone in my
position than yours, Al: especially because he included the magic words,
It should detect all your hardware fine.

On Mon, 2009-03-09 at 07:36 +, Sean Miller wrote:
 On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 7:22 AM, Rowan Berkeley
 rowan.berke...@googlemail.com wrote:
  I gotta tell you, this is worse than I thought. I set the update manager
  to exclude proprietary device drivers (restricted) and allowed it to
  download and install everything else, and it again totally screwed up
  the machine, knocking out among other things the high-resolution
  display, so I had to re-install the whole of ubuntu from the restore
  disc all over again.
 
 I will repeat my previous advice -- forget restore disc, install
 from 8.10 instead.
 
 It's a more recent version of Ubuntu, should detect all your hardware
 fine and when 9.04 comes out you will be able to simply let it update.
 
 Why is it that you're so reluctant to do this?
 
 Surely if it fails you can THEN use the restore disc method?
 
 But it shouldn't fail... not in my experience...
 
 Sean
 


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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Alan Pope
2009/3/9 Sean Miller s...@seanmiller.net:
 Ah, hadn't spotted that... true...

 still am of the opinion, though,
 that if he's still at the stage where he can re-install (or restore
 or whatever) without losing things he'd do better with a more
 up-to-date, and vanilla, install.


Sure, and I can understand that advice, completely.

 Half this problem seems, to me at least, to be to do with Rowan having
 lost confidence in the whole setup of his machine.


I think Rowan is focussing on the non-free non-standard elements on
his machine. Fact is the non-free non-standard bits are what is making
it work. Remove those and it breaks. Update everything else, and not
that bit and it breaks. That's it in a nutshell.

 Installing 8.10 and finding his machine works like magic may restore
 some of that.


It may well do. It could be worth Rowans time to get the ISO for
vanilla 8.10 and install it (given he's reinstalled from the recovery
cd) to see if everything just works as you assert it should (and as
indeed it _should_). However, the fact still remains that he'll likely
lose any support from LC.

Cheers,
Al.

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Alan Pope
2009/3/9 Rowan Berkeley rowan.berke...@googlemail.com:
 I think Sean's approach is a lot more sensible for someone in my
 position than yours, Al: especially because he included the magic words,
 It should detect all your hardware fine.


_should_

Good luck. Let us know if it does, and if it doesn't I'm sure we can help.

_however_ the solution _even_ if you are on 8.10 _may_ well still
involve downloading some source code and manually compiling it.

Don't think that running the latest version is some kind of panacea of
magic workingness. It might be, but experience tells me it often isnt.

Cheers,
Al.

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Rowan Berkeley
If I was running a consistent and up to date version of the OS, the
situation wouldn't arise in which I would be tempted to uncheck the
drivers updates option.

On Mon, 2009-03-09 at 09:19 +, Sean Miller wrote:
 On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 9:16 AM, Alan Pope a...@popey.com wrote:
  2009/3/9 Sean Miller s...@seanmiller.net:
  I will repeat my previous advice -- forget restore disc, install
  from 8.10 instead.
 
 
  That wouldn't help in this case. If he was running 8.10 vanilla and
  unticked 'restricted' he'd end up in pretty much the same place. It's
  not the install disc, it's the user that's at fault in this case.
 
 Ah, hadn't spotted that... true... still am of the opinion, though,
 that if he's still at the stage where he can re-install (or restore
 or whatever) without losing things he'd do better with a more
 up-to-date, and vanilla, install.
 
 Half this problem seems, to me at least, to be to do with Rowan having
 lost confidence in the whole setup of his machine.
 
 Installing 8.10 and finding his machine works like magic may restore
 some of that.
 
 Sean
 


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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Sean Miller
On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 9:26 AM, Alan Pope a...@popey.com wrote:
 indeed it _should_). However, the fact still remains that he'll likely
 lose any support from LC.

Is that a bad thing?  If you take that to its logical conclusion then
he'll never be able to upgrade anything in his life, which would be a
shame... stuck with a Spring 2008 version for the rest of the
machine's useful life...

And he's supported here and, should he be a member, on the other
Ubuntu lists so I can't really see what a great loss that'd be...

Sean

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Alan Pope
2009/3/9 Sean Miller s...@seanmiller.net:
  If you take that to its logical conclusion then
 he'll never be able to upgrade anything in his life, which would be a
 shame... stuck with a Spring 2008 version for the rest of the
 machine's useful life...


Not true. You can't possibly know what extra versions LC will support
in the future. I'm merely speaking about his current device
supportability.

 And he's supported here and, should he be a member, on the other
 Ubuntu lists so I can't really see what a great loss that'd be...


Sure, I was merely pointing it out so that he is aware that we might
compromise it, it's his decision at the end of the day.

Anyway, we're going round in circles. Enough now.

Cheers,
Al.

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Sean Miller
On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 9:28 AM, Alan Pope a...@popey.com wrote:
 Good luck. Let us know if it does, and if it doesn't I'm sure we can help.

 _however_ the solution _even_ if you are on 8.10 _may_ well still
 involve downloading some source code and manually compiling it.

 Don't think that running the latest version is some kind of panacea of
 magic workingness. It might be, but experience tells me it often isnt.

I think the point is that if it does not work he can always do his
restore again from the vendor CD... there's no huge risk... it it
works it works and if it doesn't it doesn't... but odds are if there
is an issue that issue will have been present, or will be present, on
his existing version.

Bit of a suck it and see, but I would be interested to know the outcome.

Sean

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Rowan Berkeley
If all LinuxCertified did was buy a batch of snazzy Korean executive
laptops, with Windows Vista already installed on them, and then install
out-of-date and un-updatable versions of ubuntu on them, then tweak them
to make it work as long as they weren't updated, then I would be better
off without their support, and with the support of people in my own
area who are familiar with the up-to-date versions of ubuntu, and can
probably find any tweaks that may be necessary. I think all three of us
are converging on that view.

On Mon, 2009-03-09 at 09:30 +, Sean Miller wrote:
 On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 9:26 AM, Alan Pope a...@popey.com wrote:
  indeed it _should_). However, the fact still remains that he'll likely
  lose any support from LC.
 
 Is that a bad thing?  If you take that to its logical conclusion then
 he'll never be able to upgrade anything in his life, which would be a
 shame... stuck with a Spring 2008 version for the rest of the
 machine's useful life...
 
 And he's supported here and, should he be a member, on the other
 Ubuntu lists so I can't really see what a great loss that'd be...
 
 Sean
 


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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Rowan Berkeley
I wouldn't mind installing 8.10, and then I could run all the updates as
and when they appear, and enjoy all the cutting edge improvements. But
it's true that I do not know whether the non-default interface driver
was necessitated by the particular interface card used by Compal, the
manufacturer of the machine, in which case my problem would re-appear
even on 8.10, wouldn't it?

I didn't try running the kernel re-install disc, because then I would
have had to find all the essential applications somehow, including the
one needed to find them online, i.e., the Internet browser, it seems to
me, whereas I would hope that a complete new install of 8.10 would
include a browser. To be stuck without a browser and without an
installable version on disc ready in advance would be fatal, wouldn't
it?

Mon, 2009-03-09 at 11:29 +, Tony Travis wrote:
 Rowan Berkeley wrote:
  If all LinuxCertified did was buy a batch of snazzy Korean executive
  laptops, with Windows Vista already installed on them, and then install
  out-of-date and un-updatable versions of ubuntu on them, then tweak them
  to make it work as long as they weren't updated, then I would be better
  off without their support, and with the support of people in my own
  area who are familiar with the up-to-date versions of ubuntu, and can
  probably find any tweaks that may be necessary. I think all three of us
  are converging on that view.
 
 Hello, Rowan.
 
 Hang on a bit! - Ubuntu 8.04 LTS is not out-of-date, it's a LONG TERM 
 SUPPORT release and there is no reason why you should not continue to 
 use it if that's what LC support, and you don't want to install 8.10 
 yourself.
 
 Did you try my advice of booting the kernel originally supplied by LC?
 
 I don't think the 'restricted' drivers are the problem, it's the fact 
 that LC installed a non-standard kernel module for your NIC. However, 
 this should not be a problem if you boot from the kernel they supplied.
 
 People on this list should know better than to start talking to you 
 about different releases of Ubuntu as if that will solve your problem 
 without making it clear that it's the version of the kernel in these 
 releases that will solve your problem because they have an updated 
 realtek NIC driver in them - Like the one LC compiled for you!
 
 The negativity of this thread is contrary to the spirit of Ubuntu. let's 
 be a bit more positive in our advice to Rowan and help him to understand 
 why his Ubuntu 8.04 is broken. Then, he can make an informed decision 
 about where to go from there. Criticising LC for installing 8.04 LTS is 
 not constructive and flies in the face of Canonical's LTS strategy.
 
 Bye,
 
   Tony.
 
 p.s. I'm using 8.04 LTS on my laptop and will continue to do so ;-)
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Rowan Berkeley
Hello, Michael,

That's very nice of you to offer. You wouldn't want to come round here
though, this place is unbelievably horrible, believe me. It has serious
rising damp and galloping fungus mould all over the walls, and I am in
dispute with my landlords about it even as we speak, with the assistance
of the borough Environmental Health Officer, who agrees that I should be
rehoused ASAP. I would find it much easier to come to wherever is
convenient to you, sciatica or no sciatica. I didn't want to come to the
Bug Jam because it would have involved a lot of standing around, but a
one-to-one in reasonable comfort is no problem. My personal email is
rowan dot berkeley at googlemail dot com, so drop me a message off-list
to set up a place and time convenient to you.

Thanks again, I really appreciate this offer,
Rowan
 

On Mon, 2009-03-09 at 11:35 +, Michael G Fletcher wrote:
 On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 9:45 AM, Rowan Berkeley
 rowan.berke...@googlemail.com wrote:
  If all LinuxCertified did was buy a batch of snazzy Korean executive
  laptops, with Windows Vista already installed on them, and then install
  out-of-date and un-updatable versions of ubuntu on them, then tweak them
  to make it work as long as they weren't updated, then I would be better
  off without their support, and with the support of people in my own
  area who are familiar with the up-to-date versions of ubuntu, and can
  probably find any tweaks that may be necessary. I think all three of us
  are converging on that view.
 
 
 Hi Rowan
 
 I live in London and think it might be time that we organised to meet
 up and try sort out some of your problems.
 
 I didn't offer hands on help the first time you asked because I know
 nothing of DKMS.  I'd be willing to come around to your place and see
 what we can do... either going with a vanilla install of 8.10 (or 8.04
 LTS) or trying to see if we can easily fix the network driver problem
 causing all the issues.
 
 Let me know
 --Michael
 
 _
 Michael Fletcher
 
 Visit my website here - http://www.mgfletcher.com/blog
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Michael G Fletcher
On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 11:48 AM, Rowan Berkeley
rowan.berke...@googlemail.com wrote:
 I wouldn't mind installing 8.10, and then I could run all the updates as
 and when they appear, and enjoy all the cutting edge improvements. But
 it's true that I do not know whether the non-default interface driver
 was necessitated by the particular interface card used by Compal, the
 manufacturer of the machine, in which case my problem would re-appear
 even on 8.10, wouldn't it?

 I didn't try running the kernel re-install disc, because then I would
 have had to find all the essential applications somehow, including the
 one needed to find them online, i.e., the Internet browser, it seems to
 me, whereas I would hope that a complete new install of 8.10 would
 include a browser. To be stuck without a browser and without an
 installable version on disc ready in advance would be fatal, wouldn't
 it?


Ah, I think I see where your reluctance to install a fresh and new
Ubuntu stems from - you are still completely engrossed in the windows
model of computing.

1. Installing Ubuntu from the CD (downloaded off the website) will
give you a fully function computer.  by default practically everything
you need is installed.  things like firefox, openoffice, synaptic and
many many more applications will be ready to go from the very
beginning!  With windows all you get is a basic operating system.

2. If you download 8.10, burn it to CD, insert it into your CD drive
and reboot the machine (I think you mentioned pressing F12 and
selecting boot from CD) you will have an option there to try Ubuntu
without changing anything.. or something to that effect.  this is
called running a LiveCD - it basically gives you a picture of how
Ubuntu will work on your machine (only a little slower cause it needs
to constantly load info from the CD) but it will show you if the
network driver that installs will work with your laptop.  So whilst
running the LiveCD, plug in the network cable and see if you have
internet connectivity.  if it works, then double click the install
item.  If it doesn't work, reboot, remove the CD and your computer is
exactly the same as you left! (I hope I'm not being condescending my
possibly explaining something that you already know!)

Cheers
--Michael

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Rowan Berkeley
Indeed, I was laboring under a misconception there. It sounds quite
straightforward, when you explain it like that ...


On Mon, 2009-03-09 at 12:13 +, Michael G Fletcher wrote:
 On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 11:48 AM, Rowan Berkeley
 rowan.berke...@googlemail.com wrote:
  I wouldn't mind installing 8.10, and then I could run all the updates as
  and when they appear, and enjoy all the cutting edge improvements. But
  it's true that I do not know whether the non-default interface driver
  was necessitated by the particular interface card used by Compal, the
  manufacturer of the machine, in which case my problem would re-appear
  even on 8.10, wouldn't it?
 
  I didn't try running the kernel re-install disc, because then I would
  have had to find all the essential applications somehow, including the
  one needed to find them online, i.e., the Internet browser, it seems to
  me, whereas I would hope that a complete new install of 8.10 would
  include a browser. To be stuck without a browser and without an
  installable version on disc ready in advance would be fatal, wouldn't
  it?
 
 
 Ah, I think I see where your reluctance to install a fresh and new
 Ubuntu stems from - you are still completely engrossed in the windows
 model of computing.
 
 1. Installing Ubuntu from the CD (downloaded off the website) will
 give you a fully function computer.  by default practically everything
 you need is installed.  things like firefox, openoffice, synaptic and
 many many more applications will be ready to go from the very
 beginning!  With windows all you get is a basic operating system.
 
 2. If you download 8.10, burn it to CD, insert it into your CD drive
 and reboot the machine (I think you mentioned pressing F12 and
 selecting boot from CD) you will have an option there to try Ubuntu
 without changing anything.. or something to that effect.  this is
 called running a LiveCD - it basically gives you a picture of how
 Ubuntu will work on your machine (only a little slower cause it needs
 to constantly load info from the CD) but it will show you if the
 network driver that installs will work with your laptop.  So whilst
 running the LiveCD, plug in the network cable and see if you have
 internet connectivity.  if it works, then double click the install
 item.  If it doesn't work, reboot, remove the CD and your computer is
 exactly the same as you left! (I hope I'm not being condescending my
 possibly explaining something that you already know!)
 
 Cheers
 --Michael
 


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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Sean Miller
I hadn't considered the LiveCD aspect... you are, of course,
absolutely right Michael.  So there's no need for Rowan to even
install to prove that 8.10 brings up the network without any problems.

Sean

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Michael G Fletcher
On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 12:19 PM, Rowan Berkeley
rowan.berke...@googlemail.com wrote:
 Indeed, I was laboring under a misconception there. It sounds quite
 straightforward, when you explain it like that ...



Great!  I think it explains where some of the frustration was creeping
into the list from :-)  Something we need to work on, making sure that
advise is targeted with the correct background information.  What many
saw as simple is not actually totally intuitive to somebody completely
new to Ubuntu/Linux.

Will you be able to download 8.10 on your old sony machine and burn it
to disc, or would you like me to pop a copy in the post for you?  Who
knows, with our wonderful royal mail it may even be in your hands
tomorrow and you can solve it all yourself :-)

--Michael

_
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Rowan Berkeley
But I would have lost all my applications if I had done what Tony
suggested earlier, here is what he said:

Did you try my advice of booting the kernel originally supplied by LC?
I don't think the 'restricted' drivers are the problem, it's the fact 
that LC installed a non-standard kernel module for your NIC. However, 
this should not be a problem if you boot from the kernel they supplied.
People on this list should know better than to start talking to you 
about different releases of Ubuntu as if that will solve your problem 
without making it clear that it's the version of the kernel in these 
releases that will solve your problem because they have an updated 
realtek NIC driver in them - Like the one LC compiled for you!

You see I did ask LinuxCertified about the two discs they supplied, and
they confirmed that the one I have now used twice has all the
applications, but the other one has none of them. 


On Mon, 2009-03-09 at 12:23 +, Sean Miller wrote:
 I hadn't considered the LiveCD aspect... you are, of course,
 absolutely right Michael.  So there's no need for Rowan to even
 install to prove that 8.10 brings up the network without any problems.
 
 Sean
 


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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Sean Miller
On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 12:30 PM, Michael G Fletcher
mich...@ilovemylinux.com wrote:
 Great!  I think it explains where some of the frustration was creeping
 into the list from :-)  Something we need to work on, making sure that
 advise is targeted with the correct background information.  What many
 saw as simple is not actually totally intuitive to somebody completely
 new to Ubuntu/Linux.

I am quite prepared to admit that this was the situation in my case...
I didn't spot the Microsoft-thinking at all (ie. that the vendors
had supplied software as well as the OS) but the minute that you
pointed it out Rowan's message about kernel etc. made perfect sense.

I've been using Linux for too long, I think.  But very good advice!

Sean

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Sean Miller
On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 12:31 PM, Rowan Berkeley
rowan.berke...@googlemail.com wrote:
 You see I did ask LinuxCertified about the two discs they supplied, and
 they confirmed that the one I have now used twice has all the
 applications, but the other one has none of them.

Be very interested to find out what this first disc is... the other
one you refer to that you restored from must, surely, also contain
the original kernel?  Unless it's only a partial system restore...

Sean

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Rowan Berkeley
Michael, I am actually using the new machine right now, with the updater
switched off. When this email came, I was just gonna go out and buy a
pack of blank CD/R-W's. But since you offer, a ready-burned copy would
be very nice.

As it happens, everything on this list gets crawled by Google, so I
shan't post my home address, but I'll send it to you off-list by email
right now. I think your email address is in these list messages, as in
fact is mine, but if not please email me off-list and tell me what it
is.


On Mon, 2009-03-09 at 12:30 +, Michael G Fletcher wrote:
 On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 12:19 PM, Rowan Berkeley
 rowan.berke...@googlemail.com wrote:
  Indeed, I was laboring under a misconception there. It sounds quite
  straightforward, when you explain it like that ...
 
 
 
 Great!  I think it explains where some of the frustration was creeping
 into the list from :-)  Something we need to work on, making sure that
 advise is targeted with the correct background information.  What many
 saw as simple is not actually totally intuitive to somebody completely
 new to Ubuntu/Linux.
 
 Will you be able to download 8.10 on your old sony machine and burn it
 to disc, or would you like me to pop a copy in the post for you?  Who
 knows, with our wonderful royal mail it may even be in your hands
 tomorrow and you can solve it all yourself :-)
 
 --Michael
 
 _
 Michael Fletcher
 
 Visit my website here - http://www.mgfletcher.com/blog
 Interested in Linux? Then visit - http://www.ilovemylinux.com
 


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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Rowan Berkeley
Yes, both discs they supplied contain their non-default driver along
with all of the (otherwise standard) kernel components, but the one I
used also contains the applications, whereas the other doesn't.  

On Mon, 2009-03-09 at 12:41 +, Sean Miller wrote:
 On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 12:31 PM, Rowan Berkeley
 rowan.berke...@googlemail.com wrote:
  You see I did ask LinuxCertified about the two discs they supplied, and
  they confirmed that the one I have now used twice has all the
  applications, but the other one has none of them.
 
 Be very interested to find out what this first disc is... the other
 one you refer to that you restored from must, surely, also contain
 the original kernel?  Unless it's only a partial system restore...
 
 Sean
 


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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Tony Travis
Rowan Berkeley wrote:
 But I would have lost all my applications if I had done what Tony
 suggested earlier, here is what he said:
 
 Did you try my advice of booting the kernel originally supplied by LC?
 [...]

Hello, Rowan.

No you wouldn't!

You can boot different kernels under the same 'distribution' of Linux:

The kernel is more or less independent of the rest of the distribution. 
You can update your 'userland' (i.e. all your applications) but still 
run the previous Linux kernel.The modules used by a particular kernel 
are stored in a folder under /lib for that particular kernel. if you 
list them in reverse order like this, you should see the same list you 
get in the GRUB menu at boot-time:

 ls -rl /lib/modules
 total 12
 drwxr-xr-x 7 root root 4096 2009-02-11 12:28 2.6.24-23-generic
 drwxr-xr-x 7 root root 4096 2008-12-07 15:22 2.6.24-22-generic
 drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 2009-01-14 10:03 2.6.24-16-generic

In my case, the oldest kernel is 2.6.24-16-generic. My suggestion was 
that you try to boot the Linux kernel that came with the LC product 
recovery disks, after having upgraded the rest of the distribution.

All you have to do is select the kernel at boot time by pressing Esc at 
the GRUB prompt (i.e. when you computer boots). Look down the list and 
select the oldest kernel at the bottom of the list. Knowing how to do 
this might help you solve problems in the future caused by a kernel upgrade.

Bye,

Tony.
-- 
Dr. A.J.Travis, University of Aberdeen, Rowett Institute of Nutrition
and Health, Greenburn Road, Bucksburn, Aberdeen AB21 9SB, Scotland, UK
tel +44(0)1224 712751, fax +44(0)1224 716687, http://www.rowett.ac.uk
mailto:a.tra...@abdn.ac.uk, http://bioinformatics.rri.sari.ac.uk/~ajt

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] comprehensively messed up by updates

2009-03-09 Thread Rowan Berkeley
Ah, I see. I thought you were talking about using the other disc that
came with the machine, the one without the apps. So I had completely the
wrong idea of what you meant. Thanks.

On Mon, 2009-03-09 at 16:02 +, Tony Travis wrote:
 Rowan Berkeley wrote:
  But I would have lost all my applications if I had done what Tony
  suggested earlier, here is what he said:
  
  Did you try my advice of booting the kernel originally supplied by LC?
  [...]
 
 Hello, Rowan.
 
 No you wouldn't!
 
 You can boot different kernels under the same 'distribution' of Linux:
 
 The kernel is more or less independent of the rest of the distribution. 
 You can update your 'userland' (i.e. all your applications) but still 
 run the previous Linux kernel.The modules used by a particular kernel 
 are stored in a folder under /lib for that particular kernel. if you 
 list them in reverse order like this, you should see the same list you 
 get in the GRUB menu at boot-time:
 
  ls -rl /lib/modules
  total 12
  drwxr-xr-x 7 root root 4096 2009-02-11 12:28 2.6.24-23-generic
  drwxr-xr-x 7 root root 4096 2008-12-07 15:22 2.6.24-22-generic
  drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 2009-01-14 10:03 2.6.24-16-generic
 
 In my case, the oldest kernel is 2.6.24-16-generic. My suggestion was 
 that you try to boot the Linux kernel that came with the LC product 
 recovery disks, after having upgraded the rest of the distribution.
 
 All you have to do is select the kernel at boot time by pressing Esc at 
 the GRUB prompt (i.e. when you computer boots). Look down the list and 
 select the oldest kernel at the bottom of the list. Knowing how to do 
 this might help you solve problems in the future caused by a kernel upgrade.
 
 Bye,
 
   Tony.
 -- 
 Dr. A.J.Travis, University of Aberdeen, Rowett Institute of Nutrition
 and Health, Greenburn Road, Bucksburn, Aberdeen AB21 9SB, Scotland, UK
 tel +44(0)1224 712751, fax +44(0)1224 716687, http://www.rowett.ac.uk
 mailto:a.tra...@abdn.ac.uk, http://bioinformatics.rri.sari.ac.uk/~ajt
 


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