Hi Paul,
>> Apparently for KDE you *also* have to do this:
>>
>> click on the advanced tab. In this new
>> window, click the box for 'Configure keyboard options.' Expand the entry
>> for 'Key sequence to kill the X server' and ensure Ctrl+Alt+Backspace is
>> checked.
>> (That is certainly user-fr
On 13-03-14 11:20 PM, Paul Hays wrote:
Apparently for KDE you *also* have to do this:
click on the advanced tab. In this new
window, click the box for 'Configure keyboard options.' Expand the entry
for 'Key sequence to kill the X server' and ensure Ctrl+Alt+Backspace is
checked.
(That is certai
This looked interesting, but when I tried it, my stick booted to
grub-rescue. Tried twice, also with USB HDD, which simply booted the
native OS on the machine.
If someone wants to spend an hour or so playing, I'll offer coffee.
Multisystem seems so far the best, but live-fat-stick does offer a
On Saturday, March 16, 2013 09:25:31 PM Prof J C Nash wrote:
> Summary of what I've found.
>
I haven't been followting this thread b uit if you're looking for something
like
Create multi boot USB stick/hard disk with whole iso/s on vfat/fat32 partition
keeping existing data untouched.
your mi