Hey Adler, long time no see.Adler wrote:Hi All,
I am coming back using Linux Mint Debian.
Welcome back!
Hey Adler, long time no see.Adler wrote:Hi All,
I am coming back using Linux Mint Debian.
Probably you will have the same issue.pretender wrote:Hi all! I do not know if I posted right place, if not, I apologize.
I burned a dvd with LDME, I've booted,but I have not internet connection in liveCD. what should I do to have web connection? if I'll install on hdd the Linux Mint Debian,I will have still the web connection problemm?
thanks in advance!
secipolla wrote:pretender wrote: Probably you will have the same issue.
How do you connect? Auto-DHCP connection? DSL (PPPoE) connection? 3G modem? Wireless? Dialup?
And you could open a new topic with your questions, with a good descriptive title so it will be easier to find answers.
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wget -c http://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/n/network-manager-pptp/network-manager-pptp-gnome_0.8.1-1_i386.deb
wget -c http://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/n/network-manager-pptp/network-manager-pptp_0.8.1-1_i386.deb
wget -c http://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/p/ppp/ppp_2.4.5-4_i386.deb
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sudo apt-get install ppp
secipolla, well, from my experience, options like GRUB_DEFAULT and GRUB_INIT_TUNE seem to be set by the last update, independent of OS. Options like GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT, which have resolution info, may be dependent on the individual system, although I am not totally convinced. I should try out some more experiments.secipolla wrote:Jesse, the settings at /etc/default/grub apply only for the system where it is. The other systems obey their own /etc/default/grub files.
I tried changing various options in various /etc/default/grub files (then running "sudo update-grub") but changing only the last one installed, that for LMDE, had an effect. From what I remember with previous tinkering, when I had installed the second system (64-bit KDE) and tried to adjust the boot up splash screen resolutions, the first system's (32-bit Gnome) got fixed (ie, got nice LM logo on splash) while the second one lost the logo and just went to "Linux Mint" text. This seems to imply that some functionality can be changed across different /etc/default/grub files, but, as I am far from a grub or Linux expert, I don't know. memtest86+.bin is present in my boot directories for the first and second systems, but not for LMDE; I'm assuming that's why grub doesn't currently pick it up. As you suggested, secipolla, I'm sure I could install it and update grub, but my boot up works okay for me at this point.Jesse654 wrote:secipolla, well, from my experience, options like GRUB_DEFAULT and GRUB_INIT_TUNE seem to be set by the last update, independent of OS. Options like GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT, which have resolution info, may be dependent on the individual system, although I am not totally convinced. I should try out some more experiments.secipolla wrote:Jesse, the settings at /etc/default/grub apply only for the system where it is. The other systems obey their own /etc/default/grub files.
Bother! Another choice to confuse me.clem wrote:Linux Mint Debian (201009) Today is very important for Linux Mint. It’s one day to remember in the history of our project as we’re about to maintain a new distribution, a rolling one, which promises to be faster, more responsive and on which we’re less reliant on upstream components. Linux Mint Debian Edition (LMDE) comes with [...]