Puppy is one of the best little distros that there is without a doubt
However my favourite distro of the last few months has definitely been Linux Lite, beautiful, simple, functional and has the best help file I've seen on a livecd
Puppy is one of the best little distros that there is without a doubt
However my favourite distro of the last few months has definitely been Linux Lite, beautiful, simple, functional and has the best help file I've seen on a livecd
Is this problem unique to this particular Distro, or does this Flash Drive have no success with other distro's ?
Alan:
The USB stick is an old 4 gb fat 32, not one of those "windows 8 certified" sticks, also not a super floppy. The problem probably lies with YUMI, not sure yet. Later today I'm going to try a distro that I know will work (Puppy 4.2.8), will report back what happens.
A small alarm on the matter of YUMI: After it failed to install Linux Lite to the USB stick the old win xp computer locked up tighter than a pit bull on a pot roast. I restarted, and it immediately went into check disk for the D:\ partition, which is the factory recovery partition. Powershadow had been running, so if YUMI tried to change the C:\ partition, it would have failed. But something happened to the D:\ partition. Check Disk reported everything OK. No harm done.
On the matter of Linux Lite: I ran the live dvd on the old win xp machine, everything worked fine. But when I shut it down, it took 8 or 10 minutes. A little gray scroll bar appeared at the bottom of the screen, then completed, then the screen just stopped. Had to shut off with the power switch. Odd to say the least. No harm done.
On the matter of Puppy 5.7.1, it works very well on the old win xp machine, but on the new win 7 machine (UEFI, GPT) it boots to a screen full of confetti and freezes. However on the old machine, one problem is that Puppy 5.7.1 will not allow me to save anything to my external USB HDD, says it is read only. Pops a message about needing drivers, I don't remember exactly. Will investigate more later.
Hazelnut, I fear that the good ole days where we could just boot up a linux distro and go with it are ending. If microsoft and the OEMs do this through the BIOS and the hardware drivers, not even a highly skilled coder such as I will be able to work around it. Still fun to play around with but not as easy as it has been.
I Using a Linux Boot tool I "Secure ATA Erased" my SSD and rebooted into a WinPE Boot Recovery disk to restore a Macrium image,
and found that the "Available Space" had shrunk a bit.
I have since been advised that contrary to the on screen instructions I should NOT have rebooted from Linux but totally shut down so the SSD firmware could recuperate.
2.
Without any Boot recovery tools, I simply powered up from a cold start and hit DEL until I had BIOS control,
and simply sniffed around looking but making no changes,
and then I proceeded into Windows and Windows was horrible broken with both my HDD out of action.
My MBR style HDD was "offline"
and my GPT style HDD had been changed to MBR style with the first two partitions destroyed and RAW,
and all the others were "Unallocated Space".
In this case all my drives have different "Drive Ready" delays from power on,
and a cold boot always had "Disk Numbers" allocated in one sequence.
and a Reboot delivered another sequence because the disks never stopped rotating.
I guess that my brief detour in the BIOS almost allowed a different sequence - but the end result was a race hazard and Windows mixed up Disk identities.
The common feature of both disasters is that I did not have a repeatable and clean transition from powered down to launch of Windows.