Hi.
In the first post I described I don't have wireless to test.
Sorry, but obviously I did not read the first post.
luvcview works if you have web camera attached
Thanks, for the info about the web camera.
This means you are not ready to learn something different.
Of course, I'm ready to learn something different.
To learn something different is the red line (or the common thread) that runs through my life.
I'm now a full time (LazY) Puppy Linux user (and partly a developer somehow) by learning something different, starting with AtariST (Pascal hobby programmer on so called (DE) Public Domain Software, MIDI-Music-Composing) and later using Windows for about 10 years just as a user.
Type startx and you get in jwm in 2 seconds. Just tested from live cd.
I had made USB hd install on a FAT32 partition using the boot menu entry from Keef:
Code: Select all
title Light Debian Core
uuid 9544e76c-4dc2-4023-97f5-bad2a907641d
kernel /live/vmlinuz boot=live
initrd /live/initrd.img
I assume, yours is NOT for Grub4DOS?
Code: Select all
title Light-Debian-Core-Test
root=(hd0,0)
kernel /live/vmlinuz boot=live config persistent swapon quickreboot noprompt autologin
initrd /live/initrd.img
boot
Since it has entry
boot at its end?
I know it can happen from time to time, that an OS hangs up and forces the user to do a hard shutdown. Last time when I have had such while trying XUbuntu 11.04, was in 2011. Did never ever try it again, because I don't like Operating Systems that will force me to make a hard shutdwon after a FIRST try.
Each time then I have to reboot Windows and to execute a scan disk - because of the FAT32 partition. Sometimes I do find some strange files in a .FOUNDXXX folder which I don't know how to handle them.
Usually I do then format the FAt32 boot partition and reinstalling everything - which means: copying the backup files back to the FAT32 partition, then installing Grub4DOS and replacing the menu.lst with my menu-lst backup.
I'm ready to learn something different, but I'm not willing to give any Operating System a second chance to force me to do such as described again.
Exactly this, what I've had described above, I had to do after testing the Light-Debian-Core Operating System - because I have found these strange files again (3 files this time in directory .FOUND000 (or similar)).
Sorry, but as I have stated in my previous post: I don't want to be offend and also I don't want to disparage anyone's work!
RSH