Can you just keep a backup of your personal files on an external drive
and down load an extra ISO? I always have a few copies of Mint lying
around. If there is ever a serious problem I'll just wipe the drive,
install
a new ISO, and restore. I use Linux Mint Cinnamon and have for 3-4 years.
Blessin
FOUND IT. I replied too soon.
Remastersys is what you would have wanted in the past, but it has been
discontinued/abandoned/
It does however give you a place to start looking. If you want to wrap up
your current installation as an installable ISO (retaining personal files/,
configuration, and fon
On Tue, Oct 15, 2019 at 9:34 PM John Jason Jordan wrote:
> Oh damn, I think I just rekindled the war between the 'fresh install'
> people and the 'just keep upgrading' folks.
>
There are pros and cons to everything, and slow package installation is a
tradeoff all debian-based distros accept.
As
On Tue, 15 Oct 2019 23:30:43 -0400
tomas.kuchta.li...@gmail.com dijo:
>It takes about half an hour to install Linux + all the apps + update -
>maybe hour if you are taking notes.
LOL.
Last time I did a clean install it took the better part of a day before
the system was basically usable for the
As far as I can tell - Windows restore produces blank/new/clean installation.
The reason for that - there really is not any installation media other than to
create it by this process.
On the other hand - you can just download any Linux installation media and
typically there is no need to activate
Hi Portland
I'm not in immediate need of an answer to this question.
I'm only researching this for future possible needs.
Usually, Windows PC's offer a way to create system restore DVD discs.
These are created by a utility that comes with the PC, and the first disc
is bootable, with a utility to