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Ubuntu Studio 20.04

 

Media creation focused Ubuntu, comes with lots of audio and graphic apps pre-installed.

 

ubuntustudio.org/

 

distrowatch.com/table.php?distribution=ubuntustudio

 

Copying the disk contents to a .vdi file so that virtualbox can boot the (2.0 kernel) Linux that the machine is set up with.

After opening up your code editor of choice, one of the first changes we need to make is to edit the widget.xml file. This file contains identifier information specific to you and your widget.

 

Next, for the purposes of this tutorial, we will open up the strings file for our widget and add the English language strings our widget will use. You find these resource files inside the Resources directory. Inside there, you will find multiple folders, one for each language supported by your widget (we include some there to get you started). Opening up the Localizable.strings file for English, we will paste in the following five lines at the end of the file:

 

"Snippet.Text" = "Hello World";

"Main.ButtonLabel" = "Press Me!";

"Main.DialogTitle" = "A button was pressed";

"Main.DialogMessage" = "You pressed the button!";

"Main.DialogOkButton" = "Ok";

 

You would also need to do the same for other languages you wish to support assuming this was a real widget, but for now, we will focus on English.

Google Chrome OS in VirtualBox displaying the Google homepage.

Quote from @ltomuta when I was attempting to install the Windows 8 dev trial on my MacBook Pro via Virtual Box. #LucianRocks

VirtualBox: chiavetta USB sotto Ubuntu 7.04.

Windows 10 and MS-DOS 6.22 running together in virtual machines, on my laptop running Linux Mint Sarah.

Le login par défaut de Mint 7 (dans une VM sous VirtualBox, ici).

-- Stef

www.man-linux-magique.net/

Ubuntu Hardy corriendo compiz + VirtualBox con OpenSUSE + Win XP + Mandriva 2008

Son jesuitas, ubícate

Next, inside the directory which you will use for storing your widget source code, you need to extract the zip file which you downloaded from our WDK download page.

 

After extracting the contents into that directory, then you need to invoke the following command to create and start the VM:

 

> vagrant up

First, we need to install Vagrant from www.vagrantup.com following the instructions on their site for your platform.

 

Next, we need to install the WDK's "box" (Vagrant terminology for the VM image) using the following command line:

 

> wget h.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/lib/ctv/wdk/wdk.box.zip

> unzip wdk.box.zip

> vagrant box add wdk ./wdk.box

To create our HelloWorld.widget, we will simply make a copy of the BaseTemplate.widget which is provided in the zip you downloaded. After copying it over, we need to make a few changes to get our widget working. Here you see me opening up TextMate as the editor, but feel free to use whatever editor environment you prefer on your machine. As you can see, I am using an OS X based text editor as my code editor. There is no reason to use the Ubuntu VM for anything other than running the Simulator. By keeping this separation, it allows you to easily keep your VM environment stable and compatible with our WDK.

Here you see the Ubuntu VM up and running.

The same render (based on the Blender Guru tutorial), but with some slight improvements:

 

- using rule of thirds

- rotated donuts so differences between them were more apparent

- improved colour scheme

- changed depth of field

 

I quite like how this turned out. This is pass 1500 of 4000. I'm a bit worried this render will crash - I think next time I will create a separate copy of Blender on Centos/Ubuntu inside VirtualBox so that I can periodically take full-OS snapshots mid-render (although I'm not sure how this would work with OpenCL/Cuda).

Windows 7 in a VM under Ubuntu 9.04.

Asa is streaming video, encoding as ogg theora and using tag from HTML5.

 

I'm watching it using MacOS X, and VirtualBox with Ubuntu 9.04 nightly, and Windows 7 beta...

 

And its all open standards!

Le login par défaut de Xubuntu 9 (une VM sous VirtualBox, ici).

-- Stef

www.man-linux-magique.net/

My brand new Ubuntu 10.04 installation under Virtualbox. Host system is a MacBook.

Screenshot of OpenBSD 4.6 in #Virtualbox at native resolution (1280x800)

Opensuse 11.3 running in VirtualBox

MUSICEZEE*(TM) LOGO - (C) Copyright Paul Callanan 1987-2013_All Rights Reserved. Janston PtyLtd.,_ACN_061089138.

If you hit enter on the "Press Me!" button on screen, we then see the dialog we created in it's onSelect handler appear on screen. Feel free to explore around in the widget and check out the other widgets in the Simulator.

This is a stock windows 7 install. Fully patched. No special software running.

Next, we need to open up the view class for our snippet. In the template, we have already fleshed out one in the Javascript/views/view.snippet.js file. Open it up and replace the code in there with the following:

 

Get code from here: gist.github.com/384653

 

Here we are creating a Text element and setting it's label to the localized string we setup in the previous step with the key of 'Snippet.Text'. We also setup some style information (like making the font color white, fontSize to be 20, and centered text) while we are at it.

 

Advanced Users:

Here you can also start to see parts of our class pattern (similar in style to MooTools). Basically we are mapping a pseudo classical inheritance structure onto Javascript. In this code, we are creating a new class named "SnippetView" and having it extend from the AnchorSnippetView class. All snippets which aren't profile (aka TV user) specific extend from AnchorSnippetView (as opposed to ProfileSnippetView). You also see we are providing a single method implementation called createView(). View event lifecycle will be covered in more depth in future howtos.

Livestrong LAF Lance Armstrong Foundation images with a 3d effect running in Mepis linux (6.5 Version) 2008

The Ubuntu 10.10 release candidate running on VirtualBox.

 

Need to work out how to install the guest additions so I can get a proper screen resolution.

 

Solution to VirtualBox guest problem

1. Open terminal and enter the following command:

sudo apt-get update

sudo apt-get install build-essential linux-headers-$(uname -r)

sudo apt-get install virtualbox-ose-guest-x11

2. Once installation is finished, restart your virtualBox machine.

3. Go to System -->Preferences -->Monitors and change the resolution of your screen.

Running an 8GB image of Ubuntu Hardy Heron (8.04) within Windows via VirtualBox.

Bootable VirtualBox install on a tiny USB flash drive. I love technology.

Screenshot of desktop2 on my Fedora 14 (RedHat based GNU/Linux Distribution) where is running VirtualBox with 3 running Virtual Machines :

1 - Bactrack (GNU/Linux Distribution) ;

2 - Windows XP Pro with Word 2003 running ;

3 - Windows Server 2003.

I installed 8GB of RAM in my primary desktop and immediately tried to use it all.

 

Host = Vista 64 bit

 

Guest VM's on VirtualBox:

Windows 7 Ultimate x64 Beta

Windows 2008 Server Enterprise

Sun Solaris 10

Sun OpenSolaris 2008.11

Ubuntu 9.04 Jaunty Jackelope x64 Desktop

Ubuntu 8.10 Intrepid Ibex x64 Server -- currently not running Oracle :(

 

I shrunk too much so it may be hard to read that I'm using 7.69GB. Host OS was lagging a fair bit but didn't fall over.

 

I was previously running 6GB and occasionally running out of RAM when being sloppy & unfocused with multiple VM's. The 6GB ran stably using the dynamic OC feature of this Gigabyte P35 board. Unfortunately the 8GB choked a couple times. I reverted to stock speeds and seems stable. I might have to adjust memory settings or do a manual OC. I went from 4-4-4-15 to 5-5-5-18 chips.

na potrzeby wczasow robie w*ndowsa dla cada a

Better solution to explore other operating system, without wipe out our hardisk and running side by side with default operating system you have installed.

 

all-open-source.blogspot.com/2011/02/virtual-box-ose.html

Found a Nikon AF3 while buying a Nikon F-801 for my daughter.

 

It's not as pretty as the original model but it has some cool features, like the white diffuser when it fires the flash at short distances, also it has "the" button for stoping the ever wanting to fire flash and at last but not least a nice macro distance.

 

The lense is good but i found it a little soft.

 

Nice camera to hang arround anyway. This little one will be a keeper.

   

Scanned with an old Canon Canoscan FS4000us, with the original software Filmget, running on windows xp, with Photosp CS6. All thru Virtualbox on a modern laptop with windows 10.

Installing Windows XP in VirtualBox for Mac.

The result was impressive. Windows runs unbelievably smooth.

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