On Thursday 04 April 2019 07:01:11 am Gene Heskett wrote:
And it won't boot, grub, by the time its
installed, is too far into the
drive, and this dumbassed bios can't find it. So I'got to rethink my
partitioning scheme to add a 250 meg /boot up front...
Here's my dumb bios partitions:
michael@local [/media/michael]# lsblk
NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT
sda 8:0 0 465.8G 0 disk
├─sda1 8:1 0 243M 0 part /boot
├─sda2 8:2 0 1K 0 part
└─sda5 8:5 0 465.5G 0 part
└─sda5_crypt (dm-0) 252:0 0 465.5G 0 crypt
├─ubuntu--vg-root (dm-1) 252:1 0 461.5G 0 lvm /
└─ubuntu--vg-swap_1 (dm-2) 252:2 0 4G 0 lvm [SWAP]
Hope that helps?? And that email doesn't eat it beyond readability...
> Ok ... thing one: don't use "sudo",
use "su". "sudo" is like a choir
In a sudo choked distribution you can use 'sudo -i' to open a root prompt.
{snip}
with. And thosee fpga boards take care of the high
speed timings so it
all runs on a 1 millisecond main IRQ loop. Power to throw away on a
dual core atom. Plenty of time left to drive your eye candy which I am
not allergic to writing. That also explains why those nearly decade old
atom boards sell on ebay for more that they sold for new. Intel
accidently made us machine tool people an ideal board.
But I'd better shaddup go see what the missus wants for breakfast.
Hi Gene,
I know most of what you write has no real relation to TDE, but please don't
stop :) I for one find it fascinating and informative, especially since it
all seems transferable and translatable to home automation control systems,
of which I will be tinkering with in a few months.
Best,
Michael