It all depends on one information: Which file system the hard drive uses.
Depending on the file system type, our approach will be different.
Press Ctrl + Alt + T to open a terminal emulator.
Type the commands presented on the paragraph bellow (for every new line,
press Enter), except the
Try gksudo nautilus.
What ADFENO says is OK. But I've got to mention that we are not sure if this
is a problematic partition.
That root directory you're trying to access (if I didn't get you wrong) is
not the root directory of the live OS on your DVD. So, you shouldn't have
access to it like if you were the
I have now tested installing Trisquel 32bit, 64bit, LXDE and gnome edition.
Even netinstall. The result below:
Tested with 32bit version of Trisquel mini but with the same error:
Errors were encountered while processing:
I made this wiki --
https://trisquel.info/en/wiki/wipe-out-files-and-partitions on this topic,
please add there your knowledge.
I just read about Trisquel yesterday and it sounded exactly like what I
wanted so I installed it today. I was looking for a distro that would be
similar to Windows as it is for my daughter and she and computers don't get
along very well. I wanted to keep it as similar to Windows as
ssdclickofdeath posted this solution: If your panel disappears, press
Alt+F2, then type 'gnome-panel' without the quotes, then press 'Run'.
http://trisquel.info/en/forum/task-bar-not-apearing
It has happened to me too. I'm not sure why unfortunately.
You would have to use Wine for something like that. You can run wine cmd and
it will give you a batch prompt. And Linux, the kernel, has nothing to do
with bash or batch.
In common speak (as pointed out int the wiki article linked above) batch
files are text files with command sequences. In essence ususal shell scripts,
Python or Perl scripts are nothing else:
A sequence of commands which are executed one by one by some interpreter.
And the common writing