So I got this error alot with elementaryOS doing exactly what you did. And it was always some dependency like lightDM not initiating properly.
So I got this error alot with elementaryOS doing exactly what you did. And it was always some dependency like lightDM not initiating properly.
VMware requires you to click on the downloaded install and click yes a bunch of times before it’s finished.
Why would you want that on Linux? We already have qemu KVM which can be used via libvirt. Just install virtual manager and be done with it.
Slow down. VMware can be one click and done. All these alternatives and extras and configurations are the reason windows people don’t try Linux. Don’t over complicate a simple thing. If they want new or more they can figure that out at a later date.
Lol really? Edit: oh! My bad thought this was something else. Gimme a minute I’ll run through it
Unfortunately not. But I’d imagine flawless. You know of a free way to test?
I’ve been on mint for a while. Here’s a tip for anyone who needs some windows apps that won’t work in Linux.
VM workstation 17 is free and is fast as balls. With plug and play pass through too.
Yea I rent my first house out. Mortgage is 900 and they pay 2000. If they bought my house right now it’d cost them 2800 monthly. Plus their rent is cheaper than the local average by a long shot.
Oooo thanks! I’ll take a look. I’m in the process of making a multiboot external drive.
I’d just want a file explorer and Firefox to run. That’s all I ask for.
Cause I don’t know what OS/2 Warp is. Is that IBMs?
Can we modernize 3.11?
And the wife is yelling about dinner getting cold. He’s got 10 bolts on the ground but has no idea why there are only 9 threaded holes for bolts. And hey wait…he’s changing the oil, what could he possibly have taken 9 bolts off of.
UHF references are always a nice supplies.
I’m gonna cause a time paradox harder now.
What if it worked. What if like dr.stranges 1/14million chances. This is the least caustic one.
There should be an undo oopsies feature you can turn on and off somewhere so in terminal when I accidentally rm -f * the entire system doesn’t eat it’s own tail.