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This show has been flagged as Explicit by the host. Background It all happened when I noticed that a disk space monitor sitting in the top right hand side on my Gnome desktop was red. On inspection I discovered that my root filesystem was 87% full. The root partition was only 37GB in size which meant there was less than 4GB of space left. When I thought back I remembered that my PC was running a bit slower than usual and that that the lack of space in the root partition could have been to blame. I had some tasks that I wanted to complete and thought I'd better do something about the lack of space before it became an even bigger problem. What happened As per usual all this happened when I was short of time and I was in a bit of a hurry. Lesson one don't do this sort of thing when your in a bit of a hurry. Because I was in a hurry I didn't spend time doing a complete backup. Lesson two do a backup. My plan was to get some space back by shrinking my home partition leaving some empty space to allow me to increase the size of my root partition. For speed and ease I decided to use Gparted as I have used this many times in the past. Wikipedia article about Gparted Official Gparted webpage It's not a good idea to try and resize and or move a mounted filesystem so a bootable live version of Gparted would be a good idea. The reason for this is that if you run Gparted from your normal Linux OS and the OS decides to write something to the disk while Gparted is also trying to write or move things on the disk then as you could imagine very bad things could and probably would happen. I knew I had an old bootable live CDROM with Gparted on it as I had used this many times in the past though not for a few years. As I was short on time I thought this would be the quickest way to get the job done. I booted up the live CD and setup the various operations such as shrinking the home partitions, moving it to the right to leave space for the root partition then finally increasing the size of the almost full root partition. What I didn't notice at the time is that there was a tiny explanation mark on at least one of the partitions. I probably missed this because I was in a hurry. Lesson three don't rush things and be on the lookout for any error messages. When I clicked the green tick button to carry out the operations it briefly seemed to start and almost instantly stopped saying that there were errors and that the operation was unsuccessful and something about unsupported 64 bit filesystems. At this point I thought / hoped that nothing had actually happened. My guess was that the old live Gparted distribution I was using didn't support Ext4 though I could be completely wrong on this. Lesson four don't use old versions of Gparted particularly when performing operations on modern filesystems. Wikipedia article about the Ext4 filesystem I removed the Gparted bootable CD and rebooted my PC. At this point I got lots of errors scrolling up the screen I then got a message I've never see before from memory I think it said Journaling It then said something about pass 1 pass 2 pass 3 and continued all the way to 5. Then it talked about recovering data blocks. At this point I got very nervous. I had all sorts of fears going through my head. I imagined I may have lost all the contents of my hard-rive. The whole experience was very scary. I let it complete all operations and eventually my Ubuntu operating system came up and seemed okay. I rebooted the PC and this time it booted correctly with no error messages and everting was okay. I have often seen things said about Journaling filesystems and how good they are though until this point I had never seen any real examples of them repairing a filesystem. Both my root and home partitions were EXT 4 and thankfully EXT 4 supports Journaling which I believe on this occasion saved me from a great deal of pain. Lesson five it might be a good idea to use Journaling filesystems. Wikipdeai article about Journaling filesystems This still left me with the original problem in that I had little free space on my root filesystems. This time I decided to take my time and break the task up into smaller chunks and not to do it in one go. First I downloaded the newest Live distribution version of Gparted I performed the checksum test to make sure the download was successful with no errors. The next day I tried to write it to a CD-ROM something I haven't done for a very long time. I initially couldn't understand why I couldn't click on the write button then I looked at my blank CD-ROM using the UBUNTU GNOME DISKS application. It reported that the disk was read only. I did a bit of goggling and came across a post saying that they had come across this and that they solved this by installing the CD-ROM writing application Brasero. Wikipedia article about Brasero ) Official website for Brasero Installing Brasero solved the problem and allowed me to write the image file to CD-ROM. I was actually surprised that it wasn't installed as I've used this application in the past. Just goes to show how long it's been since I've written anything to CD-ROM! I booted the CD-ROM to check that Gparted worked and didn't see any explanation marks on any of my partitions. I was short on time and didn't want to rush things so decided to stop at this point. Later on I popped the live bootable Gparted CD-ROM running version 1.6.0.3 AMD 64 version into my PC and booted it up. Everything seemed okay and there were no errors showing. I took my home partition SDA6 and shrunk it down by about 20 GB and then shifted it 20 GB to the right to the end of the disk. This left a 20 GB gap at the end of my root partition. I then increased the size of my root partition SDA5 by approximately 20 GB to fill the empty space. It took Gparted about one hour and 40 minutes to complete all the operations. The root partition is now reporting 61% full rather than 86% full. The root partition is now approximately 53 GB in size with 31 GB used. 22 GB is now free which is a bit more comfortable. Picture 1 Is a screenshot of GParted showing the new sizes of my root and home partitions. I removed the GParted CD from my CD-ROM drive and rebooted the PC to thankfully find all was well and no errors reported. Conclusion My PC is now running more smoothly. All I can say after all this is that I consider myself very lucky this time and I hope I learned some valuable lessons along the way. Provide feedback on this episode.
We're celebrating the 1.7 release of Gparted, the new hybrid approach to a queueing problem in the Linux kernel, and musing over the news that GTK5 won't have any X11 support. Then there's KDE news, a Thunderbird update, OpenAI's troubled relationship with that "open" element of their name, and the kernel's maintainer worries. For tips we have pw-v4l2 for Pipewire fun, certbot for HTTPS certificate wrangling, and rocminfo for examining your system's ROCM status. You can find the show notes at https://bit.ly/3Emasia and happy Linuxing! Host: Jonathan Bennett Co-Hosts: Ken McDonald and David Ruggles Download or subscribe to Untitled Linux Show at https://twit.tv/shows/untitled-linux-show Want access to the ad-free video and exclusive features? Become a member of Club TWiT today! https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord.
Librement Linux - S02E18 - Enregistré le Dimanche 10 mars 2024 Avec : Cédric - Le Tux Masqué - STEvE 00:00 Le billet : Un Peu D'intimité Merde !!! 00:00 Les actualités Jargonaut : la nouvelle XAPP de Linux Mint https://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=4650 Fedora 41 abandonne X.ORG https://9to5linux.com/fedora-project-now-considering-dropping-xorg-session-for-fedora-41-workstation 00:00 Notre sélection des sorties de la semaine KDE Plasma 6.0 | https://www.numetopia.fr/kde-plasma-6-0-est-disponible-quoi-de-neuf/ GParted 1.6 | https://9to5linux.com/gparted-1-6-open-source-partition-editor-improves-exfat-support-and-fixes-bugs Zorin OS 17.1 | https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/03/zorin-os-17-1-released-debuts-new-education-edition DUDE (DUplicates DEtector) 1.0400.502 | https://github.com/PJDude/dude/releases/tag/v1.0400.502 00:00 Le Dossier : Les NAS perso 00:00 Conclusion Rejoignez-nous sur le site de Librement Linux Podcast pour écouter tous nos épisodes passionnants. Réagissez avec votre compte Fedivers à l'épisode sur le site “Librement Linux” https://www.mindcast.fr/@librementLinux_podcast ou avec la compte @librementLinux_podcast@www.mindcast.fr Quelques liens : Librement Linux RSS @letuxmasque@mamot.fr @Chaine_STEvE@mastodon.social @cedricAbonnel@piaille.fr Nous sommes impatients de vous retrouver dans le salon Matrix Librement Linux pour discuter, poser des questions et partager vos réflexions avec notre équipe et une communauté engagée. Ne manquez pas l'opportunité de vous connecter avec d'autres passionnés de Linux et de l'Open Source. Rejoignez-nous dès maintenant ! Générique début : Merci à Henrique de WavebeatsMusic Cet épisode est diffusé sous les conditions Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International, excepté : les extraits musicaux les bandes sons externes et les œuvres sonores non produites par l'équipe de Librement Linux.
How do you balance the stress of tech with the benefits? Noah and Steve dig through the delicate issue of work life balance. -- During The Show -- 01:00 Migrations Complete! $22/month on EMS to $50/month Self Hosted 02:30 Ajit Praise - Cory Their are cultural differences between Japan and the US Most of us want "maximum absence of coercion" People have different views of "justice" Internet going from luxury to necessity in a generation Still learning the effect of internet and technology Book recommendation The Master Switch (https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/194417/the-master-switch-by-tim-wu/) Moral compasses Things are moving fast in multiple directions 12:40 Django vs PHP - Joe Batteries included approach Open Source Tech Training Overview (https://opensourcetechtrn.blogspot.com/p/open-source-tech-training-overview.html) Our Note Organizer (GitHub) (https://github.com/JoeMrCoffee/OurNoteOrganizer) 15:40 Naelr from Mumble Suggestion: iRedMail (https://www.iredmail.org/) Suggestion: MailCow (https://mailcow.email/) Mail in a Box (https://mailinabox.email/) Noah has not decided to self host email Going on 3 months of Microsoft unable to send email to Yahoo 23:20 Smart Vacuums - Charlie Tech should be there from me Some smart vacuums can be locally controlled via MQTT Home Assistant integration Some smart vacuums can be "flashed" NY Times (https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/25/technology/roomba-irobot-data-privacy.html) Digital Trends (https://www.digitaltrends.com/home/how-to-map-house-with-roomba/) 28:00 News Wire OpenSUSE systemd-boot - OpenSUSE (https://news.opensuse.org/2024/03/05/systemd-boot-integration-in-os/) Tails 6.0 - Beta News (https://betanews.com/2024/02/27/tails-6-0-linux-privacy-big-brother/) KDE 6 Update - How To Geek (https://www.howtogeek.com/kde-6-update-plasma-desktop-linux/) Gnome Variable Refresh Rate - GitLab (https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1154) GDB 14.2 - Phoronix (https://www.phoronix.com/news/GNU-Debugger-GDB-14.2) Shotcut 24.02 - GitHub (https://github.com/mltframework/shotcut/releases/tag/v24.02.29) Gparted 1.6 - Source Forge (https://sourceforge.net/projects/gparted/files/gparted/gparted-1.6.0/) Distrobox 1.7 - Phoronix (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Distrobox-1.7) Linux 6.8 Back on Track - The Register (https://www.theregister.com/2024/03/04/linux_6_8_rc_7/) Ubicloud AWS Alternative - Tech Crunch (https://techcrunch.com/2024/03/05/ubicloud-wants-to-build-an-open-source-alternative-to-aws/) AMD's HDMI 2.1+ Rejected - Tech Radar (https://www.techradar.com/pro/amd-just-had-its-proposition-for-a-new-open-source-hdmi-driver-rejected) GTPDOOR - The Hacker News (https://thehackernews.com/2024/02/gtpdoor-linux-malware-targets-telecoms.html) BIFROSE - The Hacker News (https://thehackernews.com/2024/03/new-bifrose-linux-malware-variant-using.html) 29:25 Balance of Technology Shut off all devices for 1 Day Noah has staff You have to have a passion for IT to work in IT Example of a day off win Work Life Balance Steve's experience Turning off the device and walking away can be the best choice It can be challenging Turn the box off Responsibility/Stimulus Noah's experience and reaction Finding a win Cancel Culture Face to Face vs Online communication Book Recommendation Irresistible (https://www.amazon.com/Irresistible-Addictive-Technology-Business-Keeping/dp/1594206643) -- The Extra Credit Section -- For links to the articles and material referenced in this week's episode check out this week's page from our podcast dashboard! This Episode's Podcast Dashboard (http://podcast.asknoahshow.com/379) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed)
Trato de zangar, aclarar, finalizar el asunto y de paso hablo de asuntos técnicos de la grabación. Aquí tienes un lugar donde están todas las formas de contactar: https://linktr.ee/vgargifonte Te paso la dirección de la extensión para GParted con el que podrás formatear los discos en exFAT. https://github.com/exfatprogs/exfatprogs De todas formas: Aquí, en Anchor.fm puedes publicar comentarios que se pueden añadir al podcast, si te apetece. Si quieres mandar un texto largo puedes hacerlo escribiendo al correo argifonte.podcast@gmail.com Si quieres ponerte en contacto por otras vías puedes hacerlo en el canal recién abierto Telegram: https://t.me/ArgifontePodcast En Twitter: @hermes_gabriel En Mastodon: hermesgabriel@todo.nl o bien en victorgabriel@podcastindex.social En Hubzilla: victor@zotum.net #canal #chat #podcast #podcasting #grupo #telegram #argifonte #ArgifontePodcast #elDiariodeArgifonte #critica #opinion #reflexion Si no quieres perderte ningún episodio puedes hacerlo añadiéndo los siguientes enlaces, feeds o RSS a tu #podcatcher favorito, como puede ser ivoox, spotify, googlepodcast, applepodcast, podcast addict, pocket cast, overcast, etc. O bien, buscando "argifonte" en su buscador. El #podcast #diario: https://anchor.fm/s/378f889c/podcast/rss El podcast #extra: https://anchor.fm/s/854b638/podcast/rss --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/eldiariodeargifonte/message
On this episode of This Week in Linux: Fedora Linux 36 Beta, Ubuntu 22.04 LTS Beta, Rolling Rhino Remix (Ubuntu Derivative), Google Chrome 100, Lutris 0.5.10, Parrot OS 5.0, openSUSE's New D-Installer, GParted 1.4, Deepin 20.5, Linux Support for Wacom Pens & Tablets, Drawing 1.0 and KNotch of KDE Plasma. All that and much more […]
Pi13 upgrade from Jessie 8 to Stretch 9 - performed 15/12/20 History Upgraded my raspberry pi 13, which I think had a minimal install Raspbian, Debian i.e. has no desktop installed. The Pi had a PiFaceIO board installed, refer to my previous HPR episode Hpr2901 Backup process, in case something went wrong I first moved all the unnecessary files to free up as much space as possible Shrunk the Pi partition on the installed 128GB SD card down to 25106MB (24.52GB), (25708544K), 26,325,549,056 bytes using partition magic I calculated that this would be 51,417,088 blocks of 512 bytes I used dd to make an image file and grabbed some unallocated space after partition by using count=55417088, refer to the command below sudo dd if=/dev/sdb of=/home/stuart/pi-13-img-backup.img bs=512 count=55417088 I used the following command to image files to a spare 64GB SD card sudo dd if=/home/stuart/pi-13-img-backup.img of=/dev/sdb bs=512 status=progress I then expanded the partition to fill the full 64GB of the card Booted from the 64GB card to make sure that I had a backup in case anything went wrong Removed the 64GB card which I can go back to if things don't work out Booted from 128GB card and expanded the partition using Gparted to fill 128GB SD card I used the 128GB SD card to perform the upgrade, remember I have 64GB card to fall back on if things go wrong Upgrade process Source of information below Step 1: Check available disk space In order to update to Raspbian Stretch, there must be enough space on the SD card. Therefore you should check the available and used disk space usage first: $ df -h Step 2: Check package status You must also check that all packages are in a state that is suitable for upgrade. The following command displays all packages that have the status semi-installed or configuration failed, and those with error status: $ sudo dpkg --audit $ sudo dpkg --get-selections | grep hold Step 3: Update system Before upgrading, the Raspbian should be completely updated: $ sudo apt-get update $ sudo apt-get upgrade $ sudo apt-get dist-upgrade Step 4: Modify Release For upgrading to the new Raspbian version, the package lists must be adapted to the "Stretch" release. To do this, only the word "jessie" has to be replaced by "stretch". In order not to overlook any position, we simply let the replacement be done by the following command: $ sudo sed -i /deb/s/jessie/stretch/g /etc/apt/sources.list $ sudo sed -i /deb/s/jessie/stretch/g /etc/apt/sources.list.d/*.list Step 5: Updating package lists The new package lists must then be updated and imported: $ sudo apt-get update Step 6: Update to "Stretch" Now we are ready to start the upgrade: $ sudo apt-get upgrade $ sudo apt-get dist-upgrade Step 7: Clean up installation Old, unnecessary packages are removed after the system update with the following commands: $ sudo apt-get autoremove $ sudo apt-get autoclean What was reported during upgrade repo for get_iplayer no longer available so had to comment them out. On my Pi these were located at the following location. /etc/apt/sources.list.d/packages.hedgrows.org.uk.list change to lsb_release command The lsb_release command no longer worked so after the upgrade I could not use it to check what version of Debian I was running. Link to alternative methods to check installed Debian version. I chose the following method cat /etc/os-release .bashrc - kept my original file Something about /etc/login.defs & /etc/login.defs.dpkg-new lots of changes in new version of ssh Something was mentioned about apt hashes sha1 weak "yes" & apt hashes ripe-md/160 weak "yes" Something about ~/.ssh/authorized_keys & ~/.ssh/authorized_keys2 Something about key length and accepted key types What went wrong after the upgrade mocp wouldn't run I had to modify my config file in .moc folder I added the following line near the top of the file ALSAStutterDefeat = no In my .moc folder I had to also modify the my_keymap file at line 82. I think the next_search option is not available in the new version of moc 2.6-alpha3 installed with Debian Stretch. I commented out the following #next_search = ^g ^n pifacedigitalio test.py reported an error multiple errors reported last line of error was:- pifacedigitalio.core.NoPiFaceDigitalDetectedError: No PiFace Digital board detected (hardware_addr=0, bus=0, chip_select=0) I changed the first line of my python script from #!/usr/bin/env python to #!/usr/bin/env python3 This removed the original error. I stupidly thought this had solved the problem so I went about converting my script to run with Python 3 only to find at the end once I had correct everything that I ended up with the same original error. How I solved the pifacedigitalio test.py reported error The problem was solved by looking at this post According to the post it had something to do with the SPI serial speed changing from 500Khz to 125Mhz Problem was solved by modifying a file spi.py I found the location of the file by using the following command find / -iname spi.py The files were located at /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/pifacecommon/spi.py /usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/pifacecommon/spi.py I created a copy of the original file and called it spi.py.bak I only modified the file in python2.7 as my program test.py runs in python2.7 I added a comma to the end of line 68 and added the following line to line 69 speed_hz=ctypes.c_uint32(15000) SSH from pifacecad stopped working My Raspberry pi "Pi10" downstairs would not SSH into my Pi13 server upstairs This made it impossible for me to remotely start and stop podcasts and audiobooks playing on my Pi13 upstairs. This happened because the downstairs Pi10 had DSA and RSA keys and it was using DSA keys to ssh into Pi13. I found this by looking at /var/logs/auth.log on Pi13 The log reported userauth_pubkey: key type ssh-dss not in PubkeyAcceptedKeyTypes SSH from EEEPC stopped working Was not able to SSH into Pi13 from EEEpc My EEEPC netbook only had DSA keys and that is what it was using to try and SSH into Pi13 I generated new RSA keys and added them to Pi13, this solved the problem and allowed me to ssh into Pi13 from the EEEpc
Toutes les notes sont disponibles sur https://www.clever-cloud.com/fr/podcast/episode29 Avec par ordre d'apparition : @ldoguin @zepag @hsablonniere @agoncal Comment Reddit a contré des short sellers https://www.lemonde.fr/pixels/article/2021/01/26/comment-une-communaute-sur-le-forum-de-discussion-reddit-a-affole-la-bourse_6067686_4408996.html Les stats Github de 2020 https://octoverse.github.com/ Gitlab change d'offre (mais pas de licence) https://about.gitlab.com/blog/2021/01/26/new-gitlab-product-subscription-model/#about-gitlab-premium Aftermath des déconvenues de Mozilla, lancement d'une initiative Open Web Docs pour maintenir la base documentaire historique de Mozilla https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=Mozilla-Open-Web-Docs https://web.dev/open-web-docs/ https://opencollective.com/open-web-docs/updates/introducing-open-web-docs Content lead : https://twitter.com/floscholz Florian Scholz (ex Mozilla) (JHipster sur OpenCollective: https://opencollective.com/generator-jhipster ) Une proposition pour faire exécuter une partie de UI (un Web Component) dans un thread à part https://jasonformat.com/element-worklet/ Les AbortController arrive dans plusieurs API du DOM mais aussi dans Node.js https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/g/blink-dev/c/8_86NDuVdRk/m/Q7KXPPJAAwAJ https://github.com/whatwg/dom/pull/919 https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/AbortController https://docs.google.com/document/d/1OA3LVQWj7StZSL9F8zuITEssm1gB8Yws4jwT-vOHWRg/edit# Le compte twitter intenttoship https://twitter.com/intenttoship Quarkus 1.11, une release importante https://quarkus.io/blog/quarkus-1-11-0-final-released/ JBang https://emmanuelbernard.com/blog/2021/01/18/jbang/ Espresso, new JVM implementation in Java https://medium.com/graalvm/java-on-truffle-going-fully-metacircular-215531e3f840 Support de la Nintendo 64 dans le kernel Linux :D https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=Nintendo-64-Controller-Driver GParted 1.2 sort, avec le support d'exFAT https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=GParted-1.2-Released Vipe: Vi-pipe, commande qui permet d'intercepter une série de commandes et d'éditer le flux de la sortie pour le passer à la commande suivante.
First up, in our Wanderings, I follow in Tony H's footsteps and paint, Tony H upgrades a laptop and attends another LUG, Josh returns, Moss meets a mintCast listener, Joe listens to more books and learns about Cockpit, and Tony Watts edits video and works on his Studio. Then in our news a new Wine, GParted, Edge and Yaru theme for Ubuntu. The Pinephone ships and Firefox runs into issues. Finally, in security, we talk password leads and Mozilla addon bans. Download
On this episode of This Week in Linux, we have a LOT of new releases to talk about from applications to distros and even some hardware news. GParted has finally reached the 1.0 milestone, Krita 4.2 & Zorin OS 15 were released this week, and some Security News was released regarding the HiddenWasp Malware so… Read more
Frankenstein Linux malware and a Docker bug that's blown out of proportion get our attention this week. As well as the new GParted release, the Unity Editor for Linux and the Browser vendors struggle with the W3C's latest twist.
Frankenstein Linux malware and a Docker bug that's blown out of proportion get our attention this week. As well as the new GParted release, the Unity Editor for Linux and the Browser vendors struggle with the W3C's latest twist.
Frankenstein Linux malware and a Docker bug that's blown out of proportion get our attention this week. As well as the new GParted release, the Unity Editor for Linux and the Browser vendors struggle with the W3C's latest twist.
On this episode of This Week in Linux, we have a LOT of Distro News from Linux Mint, Peppermint, MX Linux, GParted, Lubuntu and Bedrock Linux. If you haven’t heard of Bedrock, you will certainly want to stick around for that. Then we’ll check out some App News from VirtualBox, Handbrake and some command-line goodies,… Read more
Cette semaine Xavier nous présente GNOME Partition Editor: GParted. Une solution simple et très efficace pour partitionner vos disques. Bonne écoute ! https://youtu.be/t2tHUQf4kgY Avec: Xavier Hang (Chroniqueur)http://www.snugr.be - http://xavier.smart-it.beICT manager et consultant pendant plus de 10 ans. CEO & co-fondateur de 4INCH, une société belge qui a développé Snugr pour aider les les propriétaires et gestionnaires de bâtiments à augmenter leur confort et à réduire leur consommation de chauffage.J'adore tout ce qui a une adresse IP ou un firmware à mettre à jour, la magie, la photographie, la musique, le poker, être avec des amis et, par dessus tout, ma femme et nos deux fils.Marc Lescroart (Animateur / Réalisateur)http://www.commealaradio.netPassionné par les nouveaux médias, les nouvelles technologies, ...J'ai fréquenté avec assiduité les studios de radios belges durant plus de 30 ans en tant que réalisateur, producteur, chroniqueur, animateur ou encore webmaster.
Cette semaine Xavier nous présente GNOME Partition Editor: GParted. Une solution simple et très efficace pour partitionner vos disques. Bonne écoute !Avec:Xavier Hang (Chroniqueur)http://www.snugr.be - http://xavier.smart-it.beICT manager et consultant pendant plus de 10 ans. CEO & co-fondateur de 4INCH, une société belge qui a développé Snugr pour aider les les propriétaires et gestionnaires de bâtiments à augmenter leur confort et à réduire leur consommation de chauffage.J'adore tout ce qui a une adresse IP ou un firmware à mettre à jour, la magie, la photographie, la musique, le poker, être avec des amis et, par dessus tout, ma femme et nos deux fils.Marc Lescroart (Animateur / Réalisateur)http://www.commealaradio.netPassionné par les nouveaux médias, les nouvelles technologies, ...J'ai fréquenté avec assiduité les studios de radios belges durant plus de 30 ans en tant que réalisateur, producteur, chroniqueur, animateur ou encore webmaster.L’épisode Hors série: GParted, éditeur de partitions et les sources des sujets sont disponible sur Les Technos.
Cette semaine Xavier nous présente GNOME Partition Editor: GParted. Une solution simple et très efficace pour partitionner vos disques. Bonne écoute !https://youtu.be/t2tHUQf4kgYAvec:Xavier Hang (Chroniqueur)http://www.snugr.be - http://xavier.smart-it.beICT manager et consultant pendant plus de 10 ans. CEO & co-fondateur de 4INCH, une société belge qui a développé Snugr pour aider les les propriétaires et gestionnaires de bâtiments à augmenter leur confort et à réduire leur consommation de chauffage. J'adore tout ce qui a une adresse IP ou un firmware à mettre à jour, la magie, la photographie, la musique, le poker, être avec des amis et, par dessus tout, ma femme et nos deux fils.Marc Lescroart (Animateur / Réalisateur)http://www.commealaradio.netPassionné par les nouveaux médias, les nouvelles technologies, ...J'ai fréquenté avec assiduité les studios de radios belges durant plus de 30 ans en tant que réalisateur, producteur, chroniqueur, animateur ou encore webmaster. Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
Cette semaine Xavier nous présente GNOME Partition Editor: GParted. Une solution simple et très efficace pour partitionner vos disques. Bonne écoute ! Avec: L’épisode Hors série: GParted, éditeur de partitions et les sources des sujets sont disponible sur Les Technos.
The 2013 "Vacation Episode", Robbie tackles the mailbag on his own and answers a plethora of excellent viewer questions and shares your comments.
In this episode: GParted Live CD; listener feedback; an audio walk-through of a SUSE Linux 10.1 hard drive installation. Additionally, you may want to see a screencast of the installation here. A particularly good review of this distribution is from Tuxmachines. Next week, we will be using some of things described in this guide to help tweak the installation.
In this episode: listener feedback; an overview discussion of hard drive partitioning, including a look at primary, logical, and swap partitions; brief mentions of third party partitioners like PartitionMagic, Acronis, and the GParted live CD; a look at how Linux designates hard drives and hard drive partitions; a review and explanation of bootloaders, including the Linux bootloaders GRUB and LILO, as well as third party bootloaders; a discussion of alternative locations where a bootloader can be installed, such as the Master Boot Record or the boot sector of the Linux partition.