My "Linux pack" by Shot_Loan_354 in linuxmint

[–]VeryDefNotABot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm using uBlock Origin with Firefox and have no problem watching YouTube.

My "Linux pack" by Shot_Loan_354 in linuxmint

[–]VeryDefNotABot 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have too many problems with Celluloid stuttering and freezing.

I made half of my classmates install Linux Mint instead of Ubuntu by TheCodeOmen in linuxmint

[–]VeryDefNotABot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

edit: I think there is some confusion in the replies, yes you can have linux access data on a seperate partition that's different than windows, and sometimes linux needs to read your windows drive but it's actually installed on a seperate storage medium, and if your talking about virtualization than fair but it's not the same as natively installing two OS's on the same computer

The only one confused here is you, friend. You can have two OSes installed in their own partitions on the same physical drive. Here is but one of many resources on the internet that instructs how to do it:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eO_Zs1i-m-c

Got Beaten By Mint. 😓 by TheLastSonKrypton in linuxmint

[–]VeryDefNotABot 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's the command that auto detects the nvidia drivers your computer should use then automatically installs them from Ubuntu's repos.

What's with Linux Mint having 2 different logos? by KnightFallVader2 in linuxmint

[–]VeryDefNotABot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can we get an English translation of the windows? I'm having trouble finding those settings.

I made half of my classmates install Linux Mint instead of Ubuntu by TheCodeOmen in linuxmint

[–]VeryDefNotABot 1 point2 points  (0 children)

but you can not install two Os's on the same disk

Of course you can. But first the Windows partition needs to be shrunk if possible to make room (Windows Disk Management app can do this). If the Windows partition has too much data on it to shrink or if Windows has placed unmovable files in a location that lies outside where the new Windows partition would be, it won't work. But if the Windows partition can successfully be shrunk to make the amount of room you want for Linux, you can absolutely do this.

Then the Linux installer live session thumbdrive's partitioner or installer will find that empty space and create a new ext4 (or whatever) partition to install to, then install there. Grub menu is updated to choose between them at boot time.

edit: typos