You are not logged in.
I tried it when it was first announced, but it used MS file system Exfat, so didn't get very far with it, but now it uses an ext filesystem & works great.
(I only use a 16GB pendrive, but have plenty of choices to select from.)
@rdav
Found the requested (up above) link for Firefox-ESR - https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/a … esktop-esr
I just tried/looked at their site, & you are right, they only seem to have the .tar.gz now - but I expect it will work just the same, it should just create a folder in your /home, from where to run it.
I merely downloaded Firefox from their site, used the .deb file, & run it from the created folder in my home directory.
Also I am good at helping people figure out problems with computers and networks
I'm just wondering if any of that is considered a conribution?
That would help in the forums, (like I do when I can), & just promoting the distro is also of value, we aren't all coders.
@ einpoklum
These are ready made versions of Devuan - live/installable - saves people having to decide what to install for themselves from the vast collection of programs available - & very quick to install from the live media, usually.
I used to install from Debian CDs/DVD, until I found suitable live/installable media - now I nearly always use live distros to install from.
(To see what they look like, just go to their home pages.)
Unless you are really short of memory, (i.e. 1GB or less), & only use it as a standard desktop type of system, you don't even need swap.
I run Devuan on an old 1GB ram laptop, & I give it 2GB of swap, it works well enough as a basic machine, it even goes online with Firefox, if a little slowly, but perfectly usable. Two other old laptops with just 2GB ram, I don't even bother with swap.
If you have a laptop, & want it to hibernate, you will want a swap partition of equal size to your ram.
I"m an OpenBSD user and I"m eating this up. My choice would be Devuan if I were to use Linux ,,, or maybe Slackware 15 in the next century.
I keep OpenBSD in reserve, as it were, with the ever increasing amount of crud being put into some distros - Devuan is my choice for ease of use.
I was a long time Debian user - until they forced systemd on us, that made me look around for an alternative, first, AntiX, for many years, (after the demise of #! (Crunchbang) Linux), then the move to Devuan, full time, as I now am.
Well, Chimaera seems to be pretty stable, so I'm guessing, nobody has much to say really....
Welcome, once you have something you like it is difficult to change, but XFCE is a good compromise between heavy weight desktops like Gnome & KDE, which use a lot of resources, & a Window Manager, which is my preference, especially Fluxbox.
If it is a lack of swap, you could create a swap file; but it's always better to have a partition if it is needed.
Seems to be pretty stable already, I have it on 4 laptops, not on my regular desktop yet, but that's cause I'm a bit lazy, & I use it for Zoom, (so need to ensure it remains stable).
I think, on XFCE, it is,
Settings > Keyboard > Layout
Ctrl+L might redraw the screen for you.
I don't know, but I'm with you, IIRC it's a Microsoft deed.
That's pretty much my recollection too, & when that didn't stop us putting Linux on our machines, they introduced Secure Boot, but our community managed to beat that too, I'm very glad to say.
I have installed to 5 machines from the 'live' Chimaera image, all working fine as desktops, so yes, it is likely the best route.
I'm using Chimaera, & it seems to be perfectly stable - maybe, back up all your personal data, (which you should do anyway), & do a clean install of Chimaera.
I agree, it must be computer BIOS/UEFI firmware at fault - remind me never to buy one of those!
Strange behaviour - presumably you did try both USB ports with it - so very strange behaviour from your 'new' laptop.
EDIT: Just noticed, you were putting the image file onto sdb1 - it should be sdb - the disk, not a partition!
Thanks for your response, if there will be some images coming, I can wait for them, & much appreciate it if you do make them.
My personal configuration is basically twice what you think you need for the root (/) partition, equal swap (/swap) with ram (if you want to 'hibernate'), (else what you think you want), the rest is for home (/home) - (which you will back up to external media every so often, in case you ever have to re install, or your disk goes bad).
AntiX is a good systemd free distro, I only left it because they were adding too many things to the standard (top layer) menus; I hate unnecessary menu items.
The 'ratings' come from people who generally like to try new distros, they are not a popularity rating.
Once people find the distro for them, they seldom go back to Distrowatch, plus these are weekly download figures, many distro hoppers just download to try out new distros, & seldom stay with them more than a few weeks.
I'd been having screensaver problems for a long time - nowadays, I just increase the time before activation to a ridiculously long time, like 3 days!
(Power saving - everything set to 'never'.)
The above link gave me a 404 error, try this link
https://www.cocosenor.com/articles/comp … aptop.html
I think that I once had to manually create an EFI partition on one of my disks, before running the installer, (not sure if it was Devuan or another distro), then mark it as 'boot' & something else with 'manage flags' when partitioning - may or may not work for you.