You can download an Ubuntu image here. Make sure to save it to a memorable location on your PC! For this tutorial, we will use the Ubuntu 23.04 release which uses the new Ubuntu Desktop installer that will be included in all future Ubuntu releases.
Manual partitioning is designed for advanced users who want to create specific configurations for their use-cases. As such we assume that these users will be comfortable with this interface and will not go into detail during this tutorial on specific setups.
Disabling Windows BitLocker is not required when fully erasing Windows or when there is a separate, unencrypted drive available for Ubuntu. For more information see the final section at the end of this tutorial.
I've been putting this off for a while now. I want to organize my disks better than they are now, but I can't find a tutorial on mergerfs that is clear enough for me. I'm not new to linux, but I'm also not writing kernels either.
I've found two tutorials, but I get lost in the sections where it's talking about using nano to edit fstab. I know what fstab is. I just don't understand the edits being made and how to apply them to my own set up.
This tutorial is a follow up on my previous article Ubuntu Studio 20.10: Is It The Perfect Linux Distro? In the first article, we looked at all the major changes in Ubuntu Studio. There was a lot to cover already and I quickly realized there was no way I could also squeeze a JACK tutorial in there.
This tutorial will take you through the audio stack in Ubuntu Studio, and show you how easy it is to get a perfectly working JACK setup, including PulseAudio bridge, using Studio Controls, Carla, LSP plugins. On top of that, I wrote a small script to automatically start and minimize Carla rack, patchbay, and microphone plugins. In my opinion this helps a lot, especially if you are using Ubuntu Studio as your daily driver, not on a dedicated Audio/Video production machine.
At this point, you should be up and running with a very basic JACK audio server setup. Please note that this is just a starting point. Feel free to experiment, tweak and adapt this tutorial to your needs. If you need help or want to discuss this topic, feel free to reach out in the DLN Discourse Forum. If you have specific support requests you can contact Ubuntu Studio team directly, through their support channels.
I am trying to use a bag file which has point cloud data ( which I could see from rosrun rviz rviz and selecting pointcloud2 topic). I tried to follow the documentation and tutorial found at ::text=The%2.... But this seemed for EOL distro only
I tried the tutorial and tried skeleton code at (for which build worked), and then tried VoxelGrid to get familiar with filtering in PCL, for which I get error on build from usr/include/pcl_1.10/voxel_grid.h for vtable missing and somebase filter file. I do not understand why this error is happening
Use this tutorial to get started with Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2). You'll learn how to launch,connect to, and use a Linux instance. An instance is a virtualserver in the AWS Cloud. With Amazon EC2, you can set up and configure the operating system andapplications that run on your instance.
When you sign up for AWS, you can get started with Amazon EC2 using the AWS Free Tier. If you created your AWS accountless than 12 months ago, and have not already exceeded the Free Tier benefits for Amazon EC2, itwon't cost you anything to complete this tutorial because we help you select options thatare within the Free Tier benefits. Otherwise, you'll incur the standard Amazon EC2 usage feesfrom the time that you launch the instance until you terminate the instance (which is thefinal task of this tutorial), even if it remains idle.
The instance launched in this tutorial is an Amazon EBS-backed instance (meaning that the rootvolume is an EBS volume). You can either specify the Availability Zone in which yourinstance runs, or let Amazon EC2 select an Availability Zone for you. Availability Zones aremultiple, isolated locations within each AWS Region. You can think of an AvailabilityZone as an isolated data center.
You can launch a Linux instance using the AWS Management Console as described in the followingprocedure. This tutorial is intended to help you quickly launch your first instance, soit doesn't cover all possible options. For information about advanced options, see Launch an instance using the new launch instance wizard. For informationabout other ways to launch your instance, see Launch your instance.
After you've finished with the instance that you created for this tutorial, you shouldclean up by terminating the instance. If you want to do more with this instance beforeyou clean up, see Next steps.
In this part of the tutorial you will get comfortable with Juju by running a number of Juju write commands to achieve a deployment consisting of a Mattermost chat service backed by a PosgreSQL database with TLS-encrypted traffic.
To clean up and remove every trace of this tutorial, in a shell on your host machine, run multipass delete --purge tutorial-vm, then uninstall Multipass: Linux macOS Windows. (On Linux: sudo snap remove multipass.)
There are a lot of different tap functions that I found to more useful than requiring additional taps on a key in the long run; this tutorial on QMK tap functions was super helpful in understanding all of the functions available for various tap options.
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