The original user created during the install has sudo right so you could log in to a terminal as the original user and add the newly created user to the sudo group. There are literally, thousand of...
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The original user created during the install has sudo right so you could log in to a terminal as the original user and add the newly created user to the sudo group. There are literally, thousand of...
You are missing a very basic concept of Linux which is that it is a multi-user system by design and Ubuntu and almost all other Linux systems have at least one regular user plus the
root user. In...
Did you try the various methods to boot from USB referred to at the microsoft site at the link below? If so, what happens?
Your notes from that install are no help?
If you run the command: sudo fdisk -l it will LIST the partitions on the drive and if you have windows installed, there should be several partitions. One (the largest) would be the filesystem...
I would not expect that to happen without a user choosing to do so. There are generally several install options and the only one I would expect to overwrite everything is the 'Erase Disk and install...
Unless the person posts that information, there is no way to know and many people are. Your initial post had the sound of a new user as you asked "Can I somehow upgrade 22.04 to 24.04 using the...
My comment above was in response to your initial post which contained very limited information and you had to be asked before you posted information indicating you are referring to a production...
Doesn't make much sense to upgrade 22.04 to 24.04 to do tests. What do you do if the tests you do are not positive and you decide to not upgrade to 24.04. Not a simple task to go back to 22.04. ...
I would also suggest you use windows tools to repair whatever problem you have with booting windows. There are some strange things with your setup, particularly having the EFI partition on a...
That file is overwritten on reboot. You could try the suggestion at the link below.
...
Check the file in question (/usr/bin/hp-check) particularly for the error line mentioned in your output:
The line referenced above is shown in my file as: for g in getfacl_out_list: if...
So what actually happens when you boot? Does Ubuntu boot?
That does not seem to be the case from boot repair which shows you have windows on nvme1n1p2 (line 18 boot repair) a 465GB drive. ...
I used the method described in post 4 wirelessly, with the phone not attached to the computer with a usb cord. If you plug a usb cord to your computer and the other end to the iphone, you should see...
The link I posted might work in the reverse also but you probably won't see audio/music files from Ubuntu unless you first save them to the Files directory on the iphone. You might do an online...
You can try the suggestion at the link below to install VLC on Ubuntu and try selecting from the Documents on iphone icon in the file manager (Nautilus). I haven't tested the method described...
In addition to going through the steps suggested in post 2, what software did you use to write the Ubuntu iso to the usb? Did you verify the download before writing to the usb? Best to shrink the...
In addition to going through the steps suggested in post 2, what software did you use to write the Ubuntu iso to the usb? Did you verify the download before writing to the usb? Best to shrink the...
Exactly how did you try to do this? Did you do it using a GUI file manager? Using a terminal? External drives including flash drives are generally shown as owned by root when using a Linux...
At what point in the installation did these messages occur and what exactly were you trying to do to get those message. Some discussion of them at the link below.
...
Above is your output of the Ubuntu /etc/default/grub file which you posted in post 67. That is the default and should allow the user to see a menu on boot.
Above is the output when you ran...
The boot repair output in the first post indicates that Ubuntu on sda3 is the default but the first direct mention by the OP that it is in fact booting Ubuntu was post 36. Although asked and never...
Probably which is why I posted what I did in post 5. I haven't seen a response indicating which OS is being modified.
In your initial post, you asked how to unhide the Grub boot menu for each OS and that was explained to you in the various posts. You need to edit the /etc/grub/default file so that you do not have...
The simplest thing to attempt to repair this problem is the update -grub suggestion above and if that does not succeed, get boot repair as suggested in post 2 and make sure NOT to try to do a repair....
Whether you use only one systems or several is your choice. What reason would you want to do that? The problems you are seeing are the result of the default options being changed in the...