On 12/8/18 11:27 AM, pmkel...@frontier.com wrote:
Thank you. I did understand that SoaS is for children, I first tried it
when I was trying out a bunch of the Fedora spins to see which one I
might like to help out with testing. All of the others had an Install
option, and in some places I have
Hello,
If you're referring to the email I sent, then I'm afraid I explained myself
horribly. I didn't mean to say that the SOAS team moved to Ubuntu. What I
said is that the continuation of the OLPC project in a specific country
(Uruguay, South America) moved to Ubuntu. The OLPC laptops with S
Thank you. I did understand that SoaS is for children, I first tried it
when I was trying out a bunch of the Fedora spins to see which one I
might like to help out with testing. All of the others had an Install
option, and in some places I have seen SoaS referred to as Live/Install.
I was just
"Soas is written for kids.
Designed to be used as a live usb.
Thus the installer was hidden so an install would not happen on the host PC.
To installgo to the list view of the home screen (f3) scroll down and start
terminal. Enter “liveinst” (liveinstaller). This starts a normal anaconda
i
Soas is written for kids.
Designed to be used as a live usb.
Thus the installer was hidden so an install would not happen on the host PC.
To installgo to the list view of the home screen (f3) scroll down and start
terminal. Enter “liveinst” (liveinstaller). This starts a normal anaconda
ins
Hello folks,
About SOAS: SOAS stands for "Sugar on a stick" so it's not meant to be
used as a installed system but live from the USB stick or memory. However,
SOAS was used as installed system in the earlier versions of XO/OLPC
laptops. Later versions used Fedora with two desktops installed,