example:
hassio is on automatic
custom internal DNS 192.168.5.95 -> this is set on home router
standard DNS 8.8.8.8 -> this is set on cablemodem which router is plugged into
hassio will use the one set on the router but wont use the cablemodem one when the custom one fails (windows and ubuntu will both do this)
Hi
I am trying to install antilinux on an old Asus eeePC R101 with 2G RAM.
I tried following the instructions here using Rufus to create an ISO/DD image on a Windows machine.
My version of Rufus is: Version 2.18 (Build 1213)
Hi
Not an error. asking permission to go online, what a well-behaved rufus. it is normal.
press Yes for success. after the rufus application is upgraded to current.
another thing that is normal is for rufus to offer to upgrade to the latest version when it is run; first it advises of updates available. So i am guessing that you are on a pc from eight years ago that is not online?
get the recent rufus verson to succeeed with the recent antiX iso.
Download from FDroid, is very useful to create a bootable linux USB Stick.
Got me out of trouble a couple of times.
Homepage is Sets analytics cooky unless do not
track enabled. Er illegal in EU.
Update: 07-02-2021 - C.S.Cameron posted this to askubuntu.com - -to-create-a-full-install-of-ubuntu-20-04-to-usb-device-step-by-step Although I've not tested this yet - it's a great post and appears to support both UEFI and older BIOS/MBR configurations.
I have followed exactly each step except that I have installed Ubuntu 18.04 LTS instead of 19.10.
Also, when I try to boot on the external ssd, I end up in the same grub window as on the thumb drive: it does not boot on my ubuntu sessions freshly created.
I went back into gparted, deleted and recreated, changed the flags, etc etc. Still nothing.
This is an install for ubuntu 19.10. HDD is a 1 tb Toshiba. Until I can find the fix, I'll keep using the usb. Hope you can help. Thanks.
If your motherboard is no less than 10 years old then it probably support UEFI.
Lookup BIOS for "Boot Mode" setting switch the setting Legacy to UEFI.
Then, Ubuntu installation will show you the "use as efi partition" option.
You'll have to switch BIOS to Legacy to boot in windows and switch to UEFI to boot with the portable ubuntu drive.
Switching BIOS every time is bit inconvenient.
For one solution, Windows 10 can be booted UEFI and one can easily switch windows booting option from legacy to uefi.(no reinstallation required. google "win10 convert legacy to uefi")
For the other way around, ubuntu can be installed to boot in legacy mode. Installing ubuntu with legacy booting is not that complicated but you will still have to reinstall grub.
I'm happy with UEFI booting for windows. So, I have no clue how to reinstall grub for legacy.
I tried 'sudo umount /media/cdrom/the uuid of your media' and it said 'no mount point specified'.
I tried 'sudo umount /dev/sdc1' (which is the only partition of USB), and it said 'umount: /cdrom: target is busy'.
I'm quite new to ubuntu. Please help me fix this. Thank you.
I am having exactly the same problem and seemed to have tried just the same things as you to no avail. There are quite a few responses with the same query, so I hope somebody posts a response to resolve it. That would make this an excellent resource.
BTW I am using Ubuntu 20.04 and after this system not working on another ubuntu system tried it on a computer without any fixed drives or OS in it.