On Sunday 22 April 2018 02:11:43 Jimmy Johnson wrote:
On 04/21/2018 07:51 PM, William Morder wrote:
Since we are getting into other stuff, I am
starting a new thread. Maybe
it should be two threads?
And what a post it is.
I don't like to do anything halfway.
I'm sorry to hear you have systemd installed and
you're not happy with
it, if I knew what version you are using I could make a suggestion, I
run all LTS versions or Debian and Ubuntu and now Devuan too. For
hard drive management I use Wheezy and Jessie, for multimedia I use
the latest.
For the most part my system runs pretty well, except for hanging when I
try to reboot (as explained below).
What I would really like is to get VLC working right again. It was
always the best all-round multimedia player, and now it crashes every
time I open it. I searched round for solutions, and all I've found so
far are suggestions to go back to the Wheezy repositories for older
versions of VLC. Yet another user here in the Trinity group had the same
problems with VLC, and he was already using Wheezy. I don't know what
the problem is, but there is another great piece of software ruined.
Bill have you taken a look at SMPlayer? First you install MPlayer,
talking about an old app, and then install SMPlayer.
Yes, I've tried them ALL - pretty much every multimedia player available in
Debian repos, including some of the more out-of-the way repos. I usually just
download everything available (that won't break my system), and try out all
of them, until I find what works best for me; then I discard the rest. So I
have been through pretty much all the media players for Debian, and still
want to get the old VLC back.
Currently MPlayer and KMPlayer work best for me, but these items don't have
quite all the functionality of VLC.
(By the way, it is also impossible for other to buy presents for me, because I
want what I want, not something that's almost the same. I tell readers this
now, just to save them frustration.)
Maybe Slavek or somebody else out there could be persuaded to create
vlc-trinity packages?
Devuan is old school Linux, like Debian a few years
ago and most release
bugs get fixed in mins. not days or weeks.
Old school is best.
The icon is nice, but I would recommend that all
Devuan branding
distinguish > itself from Debian by making the spiral go round
widdershins: that is,
counter-clockwise. Then it would be perfect.
I hear you, it was just something I slapped together.
No problem, it was just a suggestion. If Debian do not complain, then
there is no obligation to change it. But since Devuan is a fork of
Debian, and thus technically "different" from it, I thought it might be
wise to think ahead.
One could also say, for example, that TDE *is* really just KDE, but I
believe some people out there will object. Likewise, you could say that
Icecat *is* really just Iceweasel, which is really just Firefox. You
could even say that *rock-n-roll* is really just *the blues* + *country
music*.
I do recognize that all categories are, to some degree, arbitrary and
influenced by personal biases, etc. They can also be useful, however, to
indicate that (for example) Devuan has struck out in a slightly
different direction, which in my opinion is truer to Debian's mission
than Debian itself currently operates.
Well, KDE is a name, not just a trade mark and it's not KDE's desktop
any longer, nor is it abandoned any longer, TDE belongs to Trinity.
As for the Debian Universal Logo, it's been used many a desktop on many
kinds of Debian forked systems, because if it was not for Debian what we
are doing today would other ways not be posable. But Devuan is not just
a fork it's now the real Debian with a new name. Debian is now a blob,
sudo windows some say and systemd is compared to the windows registry.
But the logo will always be Debian and may Ian always be remembered.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ian_Murdock
Yes, I remember hearing about it the night that he died. It still seems more
than a little mysterious to me.
One could make a fairly long list of names of top geeks and leet hackers who
have met what sound like untimely ends.
You do know that Devuan IS Debian don't you? The
only changes made
effect systemd and the packages needed so you can install the desktop
of choice, like udev and libpam, really just a hand full of packages
are changed. I'm running Devuan from Debian's Sid to Jessie, in other
words Devuan Jessie/Jessie, ASCII/Stretch, Beowulf/Buster and >>
Ceres/Sid and Trinity is a clean install on them all with no real
problem, All around Devuan Jessie is the best!
Yes, but the only practical way for me to get Devuan is to install
Debian first, then migrate to Devuan. I have tried to install from the
Devuan live DVD, and it wants to overwrite my home folder, with no other
option.
Please use the net install iso.
https://files.devuan.org/devuan_jessie/installer-iso/
Put Puppy Linux on a USB drive and you can edit your system. Puppy is
made for those things, like Knoppix only Puppy is small and fast.
http://www.knopper.net/index-en.html
http://puppylinux.org/main/Download%20Latest%20Release.htm#xenialpup
Just use the Devuan net-install and then install tde-trinity and
firmware-linux, after your first boot of course. I put everything I
want to save in /home, I also save /mnt and and put fstab in home too.
and delete everything else, don't forget to show hidden, also I delete
system files in home and then do a no-format install.
Right, I am trying to digest all this for when that day comes. But I think I
may use that method for simply migrating to Devuan without reinstalling
everything. There is a webpage somewhere that links from the Devuan pages. I
can find it again, if anybody else out there is really interested.
I have a
backup, of course, but this does not seem quite right.
I have found instructions for migrating from Debian to Devuan, without
the necessity of reinstalling my system, so that is my plan. However, I
have yet a couple loose ends to tie up, so that I can revert to my
working system if necessary, when I will inevitably mess up something
due to experimentation.
Both udev and systemd get removed by installing Devuan packages and it's
a bit tricky, but doable, I've done it a few times, Jessie is not too
hard to do because it dose not have many packages that depend on systemd.
Also, I have other responsibilities, various
little jobs, and other
things that I must do, as there is a life outside computers, and a whole
world waiting to be explored just outside my door; or so I hear.
I would love to hear about your whole world sometime. I've done many a
thing besides computers, most of my life has been way outdoors exploring
since I was a child I would go for long walks over hill and dale and
also I have a love for live music, but from '94 on it's been pretty much
computers apple and pc and many kinds of operating systems besides
windows and apple there was novell and sco and I used to be a Microsoft
Partner for eight years, they think I still am. From '94 to 2002 I was
installing every linux distro I could download staying at the cutting
edge drooling for the next beta release, by 2002 I was pretty much stuck
on Debian and it's forks, I now have more than 40 systems installed over
seven computers, my main testing computer has more than 20 systems.
I used to have a spare room full of computers and parts, where I could be free
to experiment and mess up everything and start over. Somewhere in the house
there were always three or four other computers that were running and able to
connect to the Internet when necessary. Now, however, I don't have that
luxury, and am more limited in how much I can experiment.
Bill just take away one thing from this post: If
it's not fun don't do
it.
I wish somebody had told me this back when I was in grad school.
Cheers!