I’ve found that if you’ve got a VGA analog output port on your motherboard or GPU, it’ll output to that by default; so any digital (HDMI, DP, DVI) interface that is powered or plugged in after the fact will have to be toggled with a hotkey to mirror or extend the monitors
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darius@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•what app can I use to see my android device on my debian 13.0 xfce as another directory / plugable external disk?
2·3 months agoThis is definitely it, you beat me to it! Thank you
darius@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•How can I delete the Windows 11 operating system from my laptop, which has a dual boot system?
41·7 months agoI second this point, a fresh install is definitely the way to go.
darius@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•How can I delete the Windows 11 operating system from my laptop, which has a dual boot system?
1·7 months agoGood spot & thank you for the correction!
darius@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•How can I delete the Windows 11 operating system from my laptop, which has a dual boot system?
71·7 months agoStep 1: make a backup / clone the disk
Step 2: double check the backup
Step 3: Assuming you’ve got a grub bootloader, boot into Linux Mint, use GParted or Gnome-Disk-Utility
Step 4: Identify your NTFS Windows 11 partition, the utility should show if it is mounted or not (it should not be mounted unless you added it to /etc/fstab
Step 5: resize your Linux mint partition (ext4fs), & make sure you don’t accidentally move the partition
Step 6: sudo update-grub to remove the entries for Windows 11 since it doesn’t exist anymore
More info on if you’ve got an HDD vs SSD, MBR vs GPT partitioning, or a screenshot of your partition table from either of the disk utilities in step 3 would help us help you
darius@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•want to clone my debian install so i can test updating to trixie
7·8 months agoI would recommend cloning the entire disk to another disk of equal or greater size before, best procedure is to boot to a USB installation, run Gnome-Disk-Utility, create a disk image onto a second larger disk, then restore that image to a third disk which is equal or greater in terms of capacity to your bookworm disk, then unplug your orignal bookwork disk amd then attempt to boot from that third disk (fingers crossed)
If you’re comfortable with the dd command that’s another route to take but if you’re not paying attention you can very easily wipe your own disk!
darius@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Question: Can I use dd to clone my luks encrypted lvm os drive?
2·10 months agoIs it LVM2? If you need a GUI I recommend: Blivet-GUI from a bootable USB environment so as you said nothing is mounted, hope this helps!
darius@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•"Deploying" images rather than installing from the official ISO?
25·1 year agoI have the exact same workflow except I have two images: one for legacy/MBR and another for EFI/GPT – once I read your post I was glad to see I’m not alone haha!
darius@lemmy.mlto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•Tailchat - The next-generation noIM Application in your own workspace
2·2 years agoI’ve had a Rocket.Chat instance for the past few months, are there any major differences between RC & Tailchat?
darius@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Where, and when, did you start using Linux? Where are you now?
4·2 years agoStarted: ~2008 because I saw compiz had the virtual desktop cube & wobbly windows animations. Now I’m on Debian.
I’m a bit late here but when installing grub to a USB drive with a GPT/EFI compatible partitioning, you need to run the following command: “grub-install --target=x86_64-efi --efi-directory=/boot/efi --removable” (without the quotes).

~2007, Compiz wobbly windows and the desktop cube was my gateway via Ubuntu, after a few years shifted over to Debian with XFCE