Thanks for the tip,
the GUI looks easy enough to have the USB ready in few minutes.
Petr
I found this tool tonight that just makes it too easy to make a bootable linux thumb drive. You can check the list on the site for the distros it supports at the moment.
I installed ubuntu and it worked great.
There is also an option to run ubuntu in a window in Windows via a customized Virtual Box. That works great too.
http://www.linuxliveusb.com/
Acer Notebook: Win 10 Home 64 Bit, Core i7-4702MQ @ 2.2Ghz, 12 GB RAM, nVidia GTX 760M and Intel HD 4600
Raspberry Pi 3: Raspbian OS use for Home Samba Server and Test HTTP Server
Thanks for the tip,
the GUI looks easy enough to have the USB ready in few minutes.
Petr
Learn 3D graphics with ThinBASIC, learn TBGL!
Windows 10 64bit - Intel Core i5-3350P @ 3.1GHz - 16 GB RAM - NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti 4GB
Thanks Kent,
This looks perfect for Linux development. I would much prefer to work with a lightweight Linux on my main PC. I wonder if FreeBasic will run on it.
I'll try downloading freebasic and let you know Charles.Originally Posted by Charles Pegge
Acer Notebook: Win 10 Home 64 Bit, Core i7-4702MQ @ 2.2Ghz, 12 GB RAM, nVidia GTX 760M and Intel HD 4600
Raspberry Pi 3: Raspbian OS use for Home Samba Server and Test HTTP Server
FreeBASIC is not available on any of the program repositories for Ubuntu. I then downloaded it from freebasic.net. I got the standalone version.
When I went to compile hello.bas I got an error. The solution is here:
http://www.freebasic.net/forum/viewtopic.php?t=11217
I used the Jaunty commands in that post and it worked with Ubuntu 9.10.
I got hello.bas to compile, but when I try to run it, it doesn't run. So I don't know what is wrong there.
Acer Notebook: Win 10 Home 64 Bit, Core i7-4702MQ @ 2.2Ghz, 12 GB RAM, nVidia GTX 760M and Intel HD 4600
Raspberry Pi 3: Raspbian OS use for Home Samba Server and Test HTTP Server
Thanks Kent. It looks like FreeBasic has a lot of dependencies, (even for console i/o!) and the required libraries are not always
available in different distros.
I will try to confine Oxygen core dependencies to the Linux kernel and Opengl, when the time comes
Charles
Charles have you looked at Chrome OS yet? It is sitting right on top of linux from my readings. I did not download it because system level stuff is beyond me. But I am sure you might find it interesting.
http://dev.chromium.org/chromium-os/...ng-chromium-os
Acer Notebook: Win 10 Home 64 Bit, Core i7-4702MQ @ 2.2Ghz, 12 GB RAM, nVidia GTX 760M and Intel HD 4600
Raspberry Pi 3: Raspbian OS use for Home Samba Server and Test HTTP Server
This is a very interesting an important topic Kent, so I've started a new thread with some videos on Chromium/Chrome OS
The security stuff proposed for native code on the Google Summit video was astonishing! Complete disassembly
of application and functional inspection at the binary level
http://community.thinbasic.com/index.php?topic=3120.0
Thanks Charles, I am in a video watching learning mode tonight to check out your links, thanks!
Acer Notebook: Win 10 Home 64 Bit, Core i7-4702MQ @ 2.2Ghz, 12 GB RAM, nVidia GTX 760M and Intel HD 4600
Raspberry Pi 3: Raspbian OS use for Home Samba Server and Test HTTP Server
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