Hi Kent,
It's much easier to write the image to the USB stick using the dd command
instead:
# dd if=debian-9.4.0-amd64-xfce-CD-1.iso of=/dev/sdc bs=1M
This should give you a working install stick.
--Robert
On Fri, May 11, 2018, 12:12 Kent West wrote:
> I have a Dell Latitude E7250 laptop. I
Hi all,
On my home desktop, I'm running Debian on the testing channel (currently
at "buster"). A recent apt-get upgrade appears to have broken or removed
a few vital virtualbox packages, including virtualbox-dkms.
Launching any VM in virtualbox throws this error message:
[error]
The VirtualBox
Hello everyone,
My current desktop setup currently has a Debian installation on a 120GB
SSD, which
is mounted with both the EFI system partition and as / for my rig. I have a
3TB HDD
which I had mounted as /home during install.
As my desktop case still has enough space in it, I was contemplating
Hi list members,
I'm currently running Debian on a custom built desktop, and am looking to
get, as a little
something to complete the rig to desired specs, a sound card. Yes, I know
the spiel...
"Who needs a sound card in 2016?", or, "But onboard audio...!" My reason is
for audio
processing: I nee
Hi list, I am trying to help my dad with a strange problem with his
GNOME setup on Debian lenny-stable.
After having just installed the monodevelop packages from the repo and
making sure dependencies were resolved, he had restarted his system,
only to find that GNOME no longer brings up the deskto
On Fri, Apr 24, 2009 at 11:49 AM, Bob Cox wrote:
> I do this by not having xdm, gdm or kdm installed and starting X with
> "startx" when required.
So how can I disable gdm so it doesn't start automatically?
--Rob
--
Nobody's ever lost in life...they're merely taking the scenic route.
=
Hi folks, I have a Debian lenny-stable install that I need a little
memory refresher with.
I need to boot and go straight to a terminal, and not start X on
bootup. I know there was a
way of doing so, but I forgot (I'm a little rusty and need to not be rusty).
Can someone tell me how to just boot
Hi folks, I've just installed Debian lenny-stable onto my Asus Eee PC
10", and I'd like to
switch over from stable to squeeze-testing in order to make use of
more up to date apps
and KDE 4.2. I remember that you have to add a new repo, or I believe
point /etc/apt/sources.list
to the testing repos,
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