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A System76 laptop displays the Ubuntu Edgy login screen.

 

The photo manipulation is very obvious here, but at small sizes, it should be less noticeable.

Installation of Windows XP on a Linux box (Ubuntu 7.04) using Virtualbox.

J'ai demandé un joli sourire à tous les avatars du forum.ubuntu-fr.org et puis flash!

Estamos regalando copias de ubuntu y kubuntu 7.10 en elreflejo.

Si deseas ganarte una copia, haz clic aquí para leer el artículo completo.

Say you edited a photo through DFO, and then you forgot about it, and edited it online as well. The next time when DFO does a 'Sync', it won't just go override your changes. Instead it would show you the photo as a conflict. You can edit the photo, the fields which are different would be colored red. Make the changes, 'Save & Close'. Resolved.

 

Uploaded through Desktop Flickr Organizer.

FACEBOOK - DV Photo

 

This is a screenshot, the background picture is not mine!

 

I got so fed up of my old laptop running like a clunky old dog I installed Ubuntu 10.10 on it today. What a transformation, its fast, looks good and easy to use.

 

With the help of 'Wine' for Linux I have also managed to install a few of my most used windows applications, so far I have found no bugs when running them.

 

I have only been using this OS for a few hours but would recommend it to anyone!

 

16th January 2011

Desktop screenshot of the newly released Ubuntu Lucid Lynx a.k.a. Ubuntu 10.04

Envío de 32 CDs dobles para la instalación de GNU - Linux en su distribución de UBUNTU a nombre de elcerritovalle.com

Imagen usada en mi blog

 

Picture featured in my blog

   

Bill Gates says: "I recommend Ubuntu". To see the original artwork (in english), look here.

 

Bill Gates nos recomienda Ubuntu, el sistema operativo Linux hecho para seres humanos (se refieren a su facilidad de instalación y uso). Ésta es mi versión (en castellano) del trabajo hecho por los argentinos del blog Seek Me. Vean el original aquí.

Ubuntu: 'I am because we are'. Fairtrade cola in the Museum of London cafe for £1.70.

Ubuntu at Mobile World Congress 2015 Barcelona

The desktop which is running from my Ubuntu phone (the Nexus 4) via the HDMI (plus Bluetooth keyboard and mouse).

There are still some problems: the 1900x1200 screen is being recognized as 1900x1080 and the font is non-configurabe (and too huge) but the whole thing is in development.

It is March 1st, and my Windows 7 Release Candidate (the test version) expired today.

 

I have used MS Windows since Windows '95, but I never directly purchased a copy for installation on a system. I had the fortune of getting them for FREE from trashed systems given to me. By the time the operating system reached my hands, it was the most stable version of Windows. Meanwhile, others were pulled their hairs with the latest version of it.

 

When I realized that Windows 7 available for testing, I immediately jumped for the opportunity and downloaded it (again for free) for my desktop. I tried Ubuntu simultaneously, but I never successfully found and installed the driver for my wireless ethernet adapter, so I gave up on the 8.10.

 

Now that Microsoft metaphorically pulled the rug from right underneath my faithful ginuea pig computer, without any form of a formal "Thank you Mr. Ginuea Pig" or a discount for helping test latest OS, I am left with a sour taste in my mouth. Like many of you (who chose the lesser evil: Apple), I refuse to purchase Windows 7 or any future Microsoft OS.

 

Now, I am revisiting Ubuntu with it's latest edition: 9.10.

 

"IMPRESSED" is an understatement on my feelings about this new system. Finding and installing the driver for my wireless adapter was very simple (and didn't involve the terminal this time of course). What gets me very excited about 9.10 is the availability of FREE applications and the integration with Google apps like Reader, Calendar, and Talk. Also, all of those apps are available as extensions for Google's Browser: Chrome, which was easy to install, too. Since the bookmarks are always sync'd in the cloud, I never missed a favorite link...that's comforting!

 

This screenshot was uploaded with Flickr for Ubuntu. Thanks to the "Software Center", I didn't even have to visit the Flickr website to download an installation package and delete the executable (to free up space). The "Software Center" handled the entire process beautifully.

 

Another thing: I installed Ubuntu on a separate drive and it retrieved all pertinent settings like documents, media, and even desktop background from the Windows 7 folder. All of the important things looked and felt familiar, which is comforting.

 

Until Google's Operating System: Chromium is released, Ubuntu 9.10 is as close as it gets to having a powerful Google desktop. I only wish I discovered 9.10 a little sooner.

Ubuntu, the dog, watching Steve Krug's presentation on how to do usability testing.

My Ubuntu desktop old screenshot

Finally got wireless working and Beryl! It's totally awesome!

IBM 600x

500mhz PIII

320meg

 

Ubuntu Breezy

I love the 3D effects, for instance when you change the desktop, as OSX.

Over the install you can choose to import a Windows XP session, ubuntu self-mount your partition.

In a bizarre parallel with Keith, I too have been mucking about with hard drives today, or more accurately SD cards.

 

Tech followers may be aware that a new Raspberry Pi was launched recently, with double the RAM and a quad core processor, for essentially the same money! Given the opportunity to massively upgrade my mail server for thirty quid, it seemed daft not to.

 

On Monday it arrived. That was when I realised that it used a slightly different case. No worries, only a fiver, so one got ordered. Then I realised that it uses a different media type, using microsd instead of sd. I didn't have any spare micro sd cards, so no worries, only a fiver, one got ordered.

 

Then I realised that I was mistaken, and that the card in the current mail server is a 32Gb, not a 16Gb. That shouldn't have been a problem, as it was only using about 4gb, but the partition was getting mashed when I resized it, and I thought that rather than arsing about, the easiest thing to do was get a 32Gb card. No worries, only a tenner, so one got ordered.

 

That takes us to tonight, when I discovered that the capacity of my 32Gb microsd card is actually smaller than the capacity of my 32Gb SD card, so one wouldn't clone on to the other without resizing after all.

 

Gparted has resized the partition to make it a touch smaller - a process taking two hours. As I type, dd is still cloning the data from one card to another, a process that has been running for half an hour and counting.

 

I do hope it's worth it. :)

Ubuntu Dapper 6.06 + Gnome 2.14.3 + gDesklets 0.35.3 + K3b 0.12.14

Ubuntu at Mobile World Congress 2015 Barcelona

Latest Ubuntu 7.04 released on the 19th of april with Beryl svn 0.3.0

 

This is the rotating cube screensaver with apps running in real time. This on a old p4 1.3ghz. w/640mb ram and old nvidia FX-5200 128mb card.

 

This on Vista No Way! Eat your Heart out Vista!

ubuntu gnome

my new theme :)

 

awn, conky

ffox, nautilus, quodlibet

testing out the new android sdk on ubuntu

Ubuntu Live boot. Is this what they call dual-boot?

Ubuntu is ready to do the extra 700% for you. (It was actually still working when I grabbed this screencap, so it probably did much more than 700% extra. That installation was REALLY done.)

Another Tribute Wallpaper. This time the chosen one is Ubuntu.

I hope you like it. Enjoy!

 

Installazione di Ubuntu... e adesso che faccio? non ho prompt, non ho X, non ho niente di niente... :(

Susan Williams (left) and Yvette Richards team up to clean the gymnasium floor at the Cabbage Patch Settlement House in Louisville, Kentucky, on April 24, 2014, an Ubuntu day of service before the 2014 United Methodist Women Assembly in Louisville, Kentucky. The UMW-supported institution provides services to at-risk children and their families. Richards is president of United Methodist Women.

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