Interestingly if you use OOTB 10.4, the internet is mostly broken, due to SSL issues in Firefox.
Also, the bidirectional clipboard in Virtualbox is a lifesaver.
Also, the bidirectional clipboard in Virtualbox is a lifesaver.
![]() Interestingly if you use OOTB 10.4, the internet is mostly broken, due to SSL issues in Firefox. Also, the bidirectional clipboard in Virtualbox is a lifesaver. |
|
![]() I'm still thinking like it's the early 2000s and you just sed the sources list and update. I'm so glad they've "improved" the process. -- Drew |
|
![]() Apparently, if you're a lunatic, you can upgrade from Windows 1 to Windows 10, having many adventures along the way. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PH1BKPSGcxQ |
|
![]() I would search, find a reference on Ubuntu Forums, but couldn't actually get to them. -- Drew |
|
![]() Fresh install of Ubuntu 10.04LTS upgraded to 20.04, and the only third party tool I had to use was a gparted boot ISO, because I stupidly made the initial vmdk image far too small. 32GB should be your minimum; at 10GB you're going to hit capacity issues. As per my advice to drook on Slack: Ensure you have quite a lot of time set aside. This will take at least a couple of hours; quite a lot more if your storage is rotating rust and/or your network is embarrassingly slow Ensure that you have at least 10GB spare disk space and/or do "apt-get clean" between versions; the upgrade is not stupid and checks first I had to comment out the third-party repository in sources.list If this machine is virtualised, consider removing the VirtualBox additions (other virtualisation solutions with similar auxiliary packages are available) - could have been coincidence, but I had a hard lockup at the GDM screen when upgrading 10.10 -> 11.04. The order of releases it chooses is a bit weird at first - Mine went 10.04LTS, 10.10, 11.04, 11.10, 12.04LTS, 14.04.LTS (and so on) - just roll with it Remember to pass the flags for saying "yes" to everything if you want this to be even slightly unattended-flavour Also note you can give do-release-upgrade, which is very conservative by default, a kick by adding the "-d" option. Original uname: Linux mavtest 2.6.32-21-generic #32-Ubuntu SMP Fri Apr 16 08:09:38 UTC 2010 x86_64 GNU/Linux current uname: Linux mavtest 5.4.0-31-generic #35-Ubuntu SMP Thu May 7 20:20:34 UTC 2020 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux |
|
![]() do-release-upgrade stalls on building data structures. Updating the sources and update/upgrade stalls downloading a source. If I can track down where that source is and disable one repo I'll try again, otherwise I'm going to do a fresh install. -- Drew |
|
![]() |
|
![]() Actually I haven't had time to mess with it today. Might try tonight. -- Drew |
|
![]() I was about to start a clean install, but it indicates you need 2 Ghz dual-core and 4G RAM to run the default (Gnome) desktop. This box is far short of those specs, and I don't trust the installer not to brick it. Besides, I *like* the current desktop on this thing. Now I'm thinking I'll just keep it disconnected from the net, do the book updates I want, then wipe and get rid of it. My inner nerd is screaming at me to not let this hunk of metal beat me. My inner adult is telling my inner nerd to piss off. -- Drew |
|
![]() ;-) Ok, maybe not. Maybe ChromeOS? https://www.howtogeek.com/217659/how-to-get-a-chrome-os-like-operating-system-on-any-pc/ ;-) Cheers, Scott. |
|
![]() Dumped it (well - sort of) a couple of years ago. My two former OS/2 computers (my two main computers) now run ArcaOS - the 2017 update from OS/2. Only problem I have, the running version of Firefox is pretty long in the tooth, I couldn't get the Firefox beta to run (thought other people have). Firefox development has pretty much stopped, and the promised Falkon browser (in active development) isn't quite finished yet. Porting all the libraries from Linux has been the problem. |
|
![]() I had tried all the Ubuntu graphical package tools, and the command line. On a whim I tried Synaptic. I watched it fail to pull the translation files - which is what kept stalling the command line update - but get everything else. I kicked off a dist-upgrade before heading to bed. -- Drew |
|
![]() |
|
![]() The interface can be rather infuriating but you get a good view at what is broken/stuck. And it groups the packages so you can deal with one area at a time. |