Kindle Fire HDX

Looked for, found and installed old Kindle Fire HDX file xfer program, GMTP. Plugged in Kindle Fire HDX and Linux Mint 17 recognized it and mounted it as a android device! GMTP [required in Mint 13] not needed.

Backups

Linux Mint 17 backups take around 20 minutes as opposed to 5-6 min in Linux Mint 13 with GnomeBaker. So I thought I’d simply compile it like I did in Mint 13. However the 1st step, ./configure gave me “configure: error: C compiler cannot create executables”. A compiler can’t create executables? WTH? Short term solution is to use K3B in SolydX.

Installed Gnome Encfs Manager. Also does on the fly encryption. Looking into alternatives to Truecrypt because of brew-ha-ha [developers bailing out]!

Put Linux on Sisters computer

My sister Terry sent down her laptop PC because it was running Windows XP which is no longer supported…support ended 4/6. I wanted to install Linux Mint but the current LTS is just ending and the new isn’t out yet. Wiped off XP after backing up data. Laptop is an older Dell Dimension. So I installed SolydX which seems to run very peppy on it. It’s a rolling release so theoretically it can stay updated forever…however the very first thing I had to do was update sources.list so it could update! Updates a little confusing, because the one in the menu updated much more than the one on the main screen. Time was wrong and very hard to fix on the command line. Got wireless working. Got her wireless router setup and working. Put buttons under address bar in Firefox for Facebook, Yahoo [for her email] and Youtube. Installed Google chrome also and installed the “LastPass” browser plug-in so she can easily manage her passwords. Trying to make Linux as easy as I can for a not very tech savy person.

Solydk

Found out when I got the Networking “waiting for authorization” problem in Solydk that I can simply log off then back on to fix the problem rather than reboot. Then reenter the Kwallet password. Much quicker. SolydK seems pretty nice!

SolydK

Replace my fall back Linux Distro [see 11/19/2013] from Suse to solydK 64 bit.

SolydK uses Debian as their base. Solydk is their KDE version. It’s a rolling release.

It comes with a Steam installer.

Comes with all codecs installed.

Major updates:

Gimp from v2.6 to v2.8 [single window mode]

LibreOffice from v3.5 to v4.0

Suse is just not sitting right with me. What’s with the continuous gstreamer updates? Like everytime!

And Some updates fail with dependency issues. And Virtualbox was hard to install.

I installed the latest version of Virtualbox on SolydK with the 64 bit version of Debian wheezy and it works great.

I may try Suse again someday because its run by a large community.

The one problem I’m having with SolydK is Networking/KDEwallet. One time Networking comes up…the next it’s “waiting for authorization”. Rebooting seemed like the only option [see above]. I guess I could disable the KDEwallet, but I read somewhere the Network password is stored as plaintext.

openSUSE 13.1: Frustrations

openSUSE 13.1: Frustrations. Trying to install Oracle VM Virtualbox. Found RPM and install seemed to go OK. However trying to start existing VMs report that Kernel modules may need to be recompiled. Command gived errors out reporting “Make” not installed. Once again trying to install “make” using YAST shows a rediculous amount of dependencies needing to be installed. Such as libre-office-icon-themes libre-office help, samba-client [32 bit no less], flash-player, java and once again 77MB of KDE wallpapers. Really? Really? The web one-click install worked and seemed much more reasonable. Installing software using YAST seems absurd. After all this it still fails. Googling each problem seems to point to another fix.

Once again if I had to install this in openSUSE, I’m sure I could. Went through similar steps to install many software packages…ten years ago! In Linux Mint I believe the only thing I had to do after installing was to add a user to a group.

I don’t want to work this hard in 2013 when I know I don’t have to! So once again I need to re-evaluate openSUSE as a fall back distro. Why is this getting such great reviews?

openSUSE 13.1: Recap!

openSUSE 13.1: Recap! Codecs required a little work to get working. Still, probably at least 50 times easier than older distros from a few years back. But still, harder than it should be in 2013. This stuff just worked in Linux Mint. This is a long term supported release…at least 3 years. After installing…some applications required me to manually add them into menu.

So I intend [at least initially] to primarily run a Linux Mint LTS. A new one should be available in a few months. The 32 bit version now requires PAE mode which will access more memory. But I will continue to update and play with openSUSE 13.1 as a fall back option for Linux. This will allow me to be more comfortable with it should the need arise to switch. As far as a skill, knowing openSUSE is probably more valuable than knowing Linux Mint.

openSUSE 13.1

openSUSE 13.1: Finally got VLC and mPlayer working, using 4 terminal commands:

I think the link was:

http://forums.opensuse.org/blogs/caf4926/opensuse-13-1-multi-media-restricted-format-installation-guide-149/

This also resulted in many packages [157]…but they all seemed to make sense [lib…] and most were small downloads. No 80MB of wallpaper.

If history is any indication…VLC or codecs will be just as hard to install the next release, beause you will have to try many crappy recomendations before you find the one that works!