

It goes directly to the “web” tab of search results, which is way more likely to be what you wanted in the first place.
It’s like the old school Google search.
It goes directly to the “web” tab of search results, which is way more likely to be what you wanted in the first place.
It’s like the old school Google search.
The best option is to get a new hard drive. You can find one for $100.
Then just connect your old drive to the PC with a USB to SATA adapter and copy any files you need.
With the extra drive there is no risk to your data from the install as long as you DON’T CONNECT THE OLD DRIVE DURING THE INSTALL PROCESS, since you could conceivably choose the wrong install disk. If it’s not plugged in then you can’t choose it
You’re getting good advice here.
“Bricking” though normally means turning a software problem into a hardware problem. You just have a software problem, which is infinitely easier to fix.
Don’t fret.
Ahh! Cool! Thanks for the explanation.
Is hardlink the same as ln without the -s switch?
I tried reading the page but it’s not clear
How come?
Such an awesome project.
I didn’t know what leap was, and the news release didn’t tell me.
Going to the website says that it’s a “brand new way of building openSUSE and a new type of a hybrid Linux distribution”
I’m still not sure what that means, but that’s all I got.
I really like your posts; thank you.
Can you help me understand how atomic distros work when you need to, for example, install a small script which is unsupported in the packaging, but takes liberties by creating folders or assuming some kind of file structure?
You’re getting a lot of good advice. Whatever distro you decide to use, try to find a live CD that lets you use it on the PC without installing it. That should ease your mind tremendously.
Oh my.
That IS amazing!