I’ve been so busy lately between work (did some extra hours because of a co-worker’s operation) and getting ready for uni I forgot about this blog until Rubenerd left a comment overnight.
Anyway, now that I’ve remembered, it’s time to post about fulfilling another one of my 2010 Projects things: going open source. This update comes to you from Firefox 3.5 under Ubuntu 8.1 Intrepid Ibex, unlike all previous updates which have been from Firefox under Windows.
First I used GPartEd to wipe out the Linux Mint installation that I had but never used (and had forgotten the password for). Then I shrank the Windows partition to 42Gb and set up partitions for the swap area (6Gb), Linux (42Gb) and my home directory (the rest of the disk… 140Gb in total).
I first tried setting up Ubuntu 9.1 Karmic Koala. It worked fine until I updated it, then the updater gave me an error about read-only filesystems. On restarting it wouldn’t mount something or other and the GUI wouldn’t start.
So I wiped it out and reinstalled. This time the installer failed (same error about read-only filesystems).
So I tried the CD installer (as opposed to the DVD). Installed fine, updating produced the same read-only error.
At this point my bootloader was borked. So I got on my wife’s laptop and downloaded Ubuntu 8.1 Intrepid Ibex and burnt it to DVD.
After installing *that*, it booted up fine. Set it to use Internode’s quota-free mirror of the repositories, updated… and it worked! And it’s been fine ever since, I’ve installed Linux versions or equivalents of everything I used to do under Windows, and it’s going great. Even writes fine to my NTFS formatted external hard drive. I’m keeping the Windows partition because I will need some Windows software for uni, but 95+% of the time I’m in Linux.
I guess I should post some links to the things I’ve mentioned:
- Ubuntu Australia since I’m in Australia, I’ll link to the local site.
- Internode download mirror where I got most of the software I used from. Doesn’t count towards your quota if you’re one of their customers.
- GPartEd the open source partition editor
- Ubuntu entry on Wikipedia just in case anyone wants more info.
- finally, Linux Tux t-shirt I found while looking for the logo I used at the top of the page.
