wintpe wrote:...
I know this is an old Linux tradition from the early days of slackware, and you will probably find that slackware works well on your hardware, if you are willing to spend 3 months tweaking it....
wintpe wrote:i used slackware for 6 years before moving to mandrake 9.
each and every release used to take weeks to perfect, with no tools to auto setup graphics,
add packages not supplied by the operating system, no online updates to fix known problems,
no X login manager configured by default, no groups setup, or sudo, to simplify the users experience,
a basic fdisk partitioner followed by an archaic installer.
maybe its changed since 2001, ......... but we are wandering off topic
regards peter
wintpe wrote:why do people keep insisting on installing upto date just released OS distributions on hardware that should be put in the skip.
regards peter
isadora wrote:Whatever you may like, or may not like about Mageia, is a call to yourself.
Mageia is the community, and in the end yourself.
Rather than kicking around, would be supporting, to make Mageia the distribution, the way you would like it to be.
Besides: please use to-the-point subjects, and use different topics for different issues.
Another thing you may have missed. Both of us are 1 posters... ie we gave enought of a **** to actually register an account to vent our fustration. I
shazeal wrote:I dont see the need to rename the thread either I thought it explained the thread quite well. And would allow users to make a better judgement as to the content. Now it looks like a help thread or something.
mageiawant wrote:...............................
Mageia did seem to be the new kid on the block which was going to topple Ubuntu but I notice Mageia is falling behind Ubuntu on distrowatch.
benmc wrote:Sorry to hear you are having problems.
Like you I am just a person who doesn' t get under the hood much, but I have installed Mageia in a variety of systems, single O/S, dual boot with various Windows and Linux, multiple Linux and Windows O/S on single and mixed IDE / SATA mobos. Each has its own quirks!So....
Which version of Mageia ? 1 / 2 / 3, 32 or 64 bit?
Was your install media live cd / dvd or installation media?
Is your Hdd a single or multiple set and are they / is it IDE or SATA?
Are you running a raid set up?
If SATA, is you Mageia hdd connected to SATA 1 mobo connection?
Did you attempt a dual boot option? If so, did you add Mageia manually to your Mint bootloader
At the configuration menu at the end of the installation did you set up the graphics drivers correctly, and, choose which and where the bootloader should be installed, or did you just " accept " and reboot?
looking forward to hearing from you
benmc wrote:Correct. MBR on sda
The reason I suggest having just one hdd connected to the mobo to start with is that by doing so you and or the installer will not overwrite existing boot-loaders on any other drives by accident, causing more headaches to recover from.
After you have confirmed a useable system, then, when you reconnect the other drives, you can re-configure your bios to boot to your preferred drive, then edit the boot-loader entries of that system as required to enable a reboot to different operating systems.
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