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TheDiamondCG It works exactly the same as installing on USB. The easiest way is to take the HDD out and put it in your current PC. Then use (for example) etcher in unsafe mode so it detects your HDD and put the image on. Put the HDD in the old PC and fire it up -> voila Batocera ;-) I have two HDDs in my old PC one 80gb with the system and another 1TB with roms. As the PC is connected on the same network as my main PC I copy all I need via network. You can check your IP in system settings -> information and then just connect to it via shortcut i.e. 192.168.0.10. Depanding on your PC setup, especially GPU you might want to consider the 5.22 version with legacy driver. I have older nvidia so 5.22(legacy) actually runs some newer systems better than 5.23.
You can do the same by pressing F1 on your main system screen inside of Batocera and going 'up' then you will find 'boot' folders and re move the '#' from before "nvidia-driver=true" inside "batocera-boot.conf".
TheDiamondCG like Kugelblitz said. I use the internal installer and its installed on my hard drive just make sure you backup everything on your hard drive in case it crashes so that you can reinstall it later
Yes - best way to do that is though to boot Batocera from a USB on that machine, THEN use the internal installer to install it to the HDD/SDD built in. So you need a USB once. Can be an 8Gig one, dont need that much room for an install without ROMs.
You could try an alternative solution, but you will need a working system on that PC. Download EasyBCD and run it in your windows environment. Download link: -easybcd.html. After install open it and choose 'add new entry'. At the bottom there will be few tabs one of them should say 'bios extender'. The system drive should be selected automatically if not select it. Then click install. This program will give you custom boot options. One of them will be USB. Try it ;-)
thisguy There is space on his partition. He does not need to resize it.... The installation of Batocera must be corrupted or HDD/SSD/USB is broken or/and has bad sectors.... In my case it was surely installation problem as after reinstall I did not have this challenge anymore.
Programs like EasyBCD or LinuxReader are simpler to use as well to read the linux partition under windows rather than running another linux distribution just to copy roms ;-) (BZZ )That is if I understood you correctly.\
morning to all! quick question since we are talking about installations, wich hardware would be better to run Nintendo wii and ps2/psn games?? and old intel i5-3330 with 4 cores 3.3ghz/ 4gb ddr3 motherboard, Or a new intel pentium G(dual core ones) at 2.9ghz with 8gb ddr4 motherboard.??
Kossay In pure theory new > old. But I dont think with either of these setups you would see much difference. Test both... Once you have Batocera its just a matter of moving USB or HDD to the other PC. I run wii on lower specs than both of yours and it runs perfect.
BZZ ty for the quick reply BZZ, how did u manage to make wii games run with decent fps??what video card are u using?....side note: can't figure out how to set my ps3 joystick to work with nintendo emu, i have to remap all each time i start the arcade machine.
Kossay I use PS3 dual shock for most emulators and WII controller for WII games ;-) I only have GTX 460 ;-) I use 5.22 legacy version as it seems to run better than the new ones where I dont have nvidia driver ;-) I am not sure what you mean by decent as I actually never checked what my FPS is. But as I own a WII the games seem to look the same(not that I play many)
BZZ awesome, last but not least question, so u use the wii motes right?do they work for old N64 and gamecube to?,just plug and play? guess im gonna need something for nintendo games too, since i only got dualshock3
@checker: after my experience with the largely illiterate (*ducks*) masses of the Net, I believe a link is more eloquent and straightforward than a note. For one, it's part of the the database structure, while a note is easy to overlook. I motion for the link to be reinstated.
Seems to need admin rights, so no good for looking at a USB linux install from Windows on a public computer...
Program seems to run fine but gives a "need admin rights" type error message when attempting to search for linux partitions.
I try this tool, but it not works for me, until I recognize that I am fool. Reason is that I have Suse Linux which is on ReiserFS partition. So if someone need aplication to copy files from Suse, he can use this it seems to not write to registry - probably well portable.
Remember you have to open the .exe with a packer like 7zip.
The Program works fine, it instantly recognized my ext drives and lets me read-access them, 2MB small and tidy -- i like it.
Running it the first time created a tiny registry entry (only a run entry) on my pc, (can be found searching for "diskinternals" e.g.), so i removed that one and tried again - it still worked perfectly and no new entry was created, so it must have been my fault.
Nice portable application :)
I need to mount an ssd that came from a hp spectre x360 13 - aw0023dx laptop. The power charging source (not the battery) was damaged and no longer works on my wife's laptop. I removed the drive and have a reader but I cannot read the drive to recover files. Do I need software or something else to read the drive? Thanks
As an alternative, if you can remove the drive and attach it to a working PC with Windows on it, the app Disk Internals Liux Reader POo claims to be able to read BitLocker encrypted drives. I have not tried this, so I can not confirm it -- plus this is the Pro version -- which you have to buy.
Hello. Thanks for jumping in on this. The OS does not have bitlocker turned on. I pulled the ssd and used: M.2 NVMe SATA SSD Enclosure Adapter Tool-Free, USB 3.2 Gen2 10Gbps External NVMe to USB PCI-E 6Gbps SATA M-Key / B+M Key, NVMe Reader Support UASP Trim for SSDs 2230/2242/2260/228 to access the drive from another computer. The drive shows up, is assigned a drive letter, but i receive a "...file or directory is corrupted or unreadable..." message when I try to access it. The drive is from my wife's laptop - she basically broke the charger (on the laptop side) - if you put the power cord in it begins to smell like burning I wonder if HP compresses drives or does something else which is between me and the data. The goal is to copy certain files (kids pics etc.) off the drive. I also wondered whether it is a power issue. The only power this current setup has is from the USB bus. Thanks.
I had an SSD, a few weeks back, that suddenly became unmountable. So, I connected it to SATA leads on a desktop, ran this software, and over the span of several hours, was able to recover all the files and folders from the drive.
To give a context, my laptop just have arch linux, no other os's. Tha main use that I'm gonna give it, is as a backup disk. I'd like to try another distros on it and even other os's (tempted to play with BSDs), but I'm not sure if the performance it's going to be too flawed because it's accessing through usb2 (bonus question).
EXT4: I imagine that this is the best alternative because it's supposed to have the best performance, but it's big issue, is that lacks the capability to use on windows (in case I need to move something to another machine).
For most cases you should use EXT4. Performance wise it is best your system. Also, if you want to try other distros on it, you want it on ext4, not NTFS.
True NTFS has become much more secure now, but it still hasnt been perfected, and from time to time you still have very high latency values when using the ntfs-3g drivers.
There exist applications that will allow you to access the EXT4 filesystem in Windows. They are not fast, but should get the occasional job done.
You could create a tine NTFS partition with just the application so that you can use the drive on other Windows systems also.
Take ext4. That way you can backup your / preserving all file attributes/permission etc. which is very convenient for backup purposes. That way rsync (in case you wanna use it) doesn't copy the files all over again because the target filesystem lacks a certain feature of the source filesystem.
Ext4 is obvioulsy the best option when it comes to performance, but it won't work "out of the box" on windows machines, so that's it for me. Of course on your own windows PC you can have some software installed that will allow you to use ext4 (in which case forget about performance, there will be none), but think about how difficult it will be to use it on anything else, e.g. your friends computer. If he's not connected to the internet and you forgot your usb pen drive with drivers at home, then you got a nice and expensive paperweight.
FAT32, on the other hand, you'll be able to mount on anything, anywhere. Its performance is not great, but hey, you're gonna access it mostly via usb2 anyway. Reliability is reasonable, and let's face it, that's enough when talking about an external drive. Danger of it getting stolen, soaked with water after you get caught by rain, or falling from 4th floor makes the filesystem choice kind of insignificant, at least when it comes down to security By the way, when you actually do have to carry over files bigger than 4GB, then there's nothing easier than to pack it into several smaller files.
Another option you didn't mention would be ext3. It's not bulletproof either, but there's one big advantage - there's plenty of windows software for it and it works, read&write. That's not something you could say about ext4.
Running arch is like raising a puppy - if you spend a bit of time with it each day and do just a bit of training you'll end up with the most loyal partner you could want; if you lock it in a room and don't check on if for several days, it'll tear apart your stuff and poop everywhere.
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