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27.12.2018

Install Puppy Linux From Usb To Hard Drive

Install Puppy Linux From Usb To Hard Drive 6,1/10 9727 votes

Hi everybody. I'm trying to replace a dead hard drive in an old netbook. Can i install puppy linux my my ssd like it's an external CD or USB,. How NOT to install Puppy Linux. (see Setup in the menu for the installer). You can then tell Puppy at shutdown to save to the same USB drive, or to your hard disk.

• Drag the corner of the partition box to resize or enter the number manually to indicate the size of your partition. You should leave enough space for a swap partition. • Choose 'Primary Partition' and for 'Filesystem' choose 'ext3' or whatever your preference is. • Add another partition by again clicking 'Partition' and 'New.' This time, change Filesystem to 'linux-swap' and use the remaining space for your swap. • Click 'Apply' (remember, this cannot be undone).

It should say 'All operations completed successfully.' Click 'Close.' • Close all windows and click 'Install' on the desktop.

• Click the install button, which looks like a little lightning bolt at the bottom of the window. • Choose: 'Internal (IDE or SATA) hard drive. Then Click 'OK.' • Select your hard drive. If you have more than one, select the correct one. • Click the little dog icon to begin installing.

• Click 'CD' to install from the CD. • Click 'Full' in the next window since we are making Puppy our main OS on this computer.

If you skipped the partition creation, choose 'Frugal.' • Click 'Install/update GRUB.' • Click 'INSTALL.' • Choose 'Simple' and click 'OK.'

• Select 'Standard' in the next window and click 'OK.' • Install GRUB on your Linux partition. Leave the next window as is and click 'OK.' • Choose the first option 'Root' in the next window. • Click 'No' when it asks you if you want to do it again. • Close all open windows, click the 'Menu' button and click 'Shut Down.' It will give you the option to save your settings if you made changes. Kachestvennoe udostoverenie na gotovuyu produkciyu blank.

You can save them to the new partition. • Reboot the computer.

Welcome to BleepingComputer, a free community where people like yourself come together to discuss and learn how to use their computers. Using the site is easy and fun. As a guest, you can browse and view the various discussions in the forums, but can not create a new topic or reply to an existing one unless you are logged in. Other benefits of registering an account are subscribing to topics and forums, creating a blog, and having no ads shown anywhere on the site. Or read our to learn how to use this site. Now then; let's see what's what, shall we?

You say you've deleted Windoze 10.so you have an empty hard drive, yes? Do you want Puppy to be the only Linux OS on this machine, or are you likely to want to run more than one? It'll be easier to keep it as one OS rather than multiple ones, though it should be 'do-able'.although with Chromebook-like specs, Puppy's going to be a pretty good fit for that hardware. Let us know what it is that you'd like to do, please; it'll make it easier for us to tailor advice as to what the next step should be, y'see. Distros:- Multiple 'Puppies'. And Anti-X 16.1 ~~~ Compaq Presario SR1916UK; Athlon64 X2 3800+, 3 GB RAM, WD 500GB Caviar 'Blue', 32GB Kingspec PATA SSD, 3 TB Seagate 'Expansion' external HDD, ATI Radeon Xpress 200 graphics, Dell 15.1' pNp monitor (1024 x 768), TP-Link PCI-e USB 3.0 card, Logitech c920 HD Pro webcam, self-powered 7-port USB 2.0 hub Dell Inspiron 1100; 2.6 GHz 400FSB P4, 1.5 GB RAM, 64GB KingSpec IDE SSD, Intel 'Extreme' graphics, 500GB Seagate 'Expansion' external HDD, M$ HD-3000 'Lifecam'. There are several helpful Google search results for installing a linux distro on your Lenovo ideapad 110s.

The one I've linked to is for Linux Mint. Didn't see one for Puppy. But the setup should be near enough for following to install Puppy. I would suggest you install something other than Puppy for ease of keeping the OS and programs current. Mint would be a good choice or one of the less demanding Ubuntus. EDIT: I meant to add that Mike_Walsh is the one to listen to for best advice on Puppy. He always gives excellent advice on that distro.

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27.12.2018

Install Puppy Linux From Usb To Hard Drive

Install Puppy Linux From Usb To Hard Drive 6,1/10 9727 votes

Hi everybody. I'm trying to replace a dead hard drive in an old netbook. Can i install puppy linux my my ssd like it's an external CD or USB,. How NOT to install Puppy Linux. (see Setup in the menu for the installer). You can then tell Puppy at shutdown to save to the same USB drive, or to your hard disk.

• Drag the corner of the partition box to resize or enter the number manually to indicate the size of your partition. You should leave enough space for a swap partition. • Choose 'Primary Partition' and for 'Filesystem' choose 'ext3' or whatever your preference is. • Add another partition by again clicking 'Partition' and 'New.' This time, change Filesystem to 'linux-swap' and use the remaining space for your swap. • Click 'Apply' (remember, this cannot be undone).

It should say 'All operations completed successfully.' Click 'Close.' • Close all windows and click 'Install' on the desktop.

• Click the install button, which looks like a little lightning bolt at the bottom of the window. • Choose: 'Internal (IDE or SATA) hard drive. Then Click 'OK.' • Select your hard drive. If you have more than one, select the correct one. • Click the little dog icon to begin installing.

• Click 'CD' to install from the CD. • Click 'Full' in the next window since we are making Puppy our main OS on this computer.

If you skipped the partition creation, choose 'Frugal.' • Click 'Install/update GRUB.' • Click 'INSTALL.' • Choose 'Simple' and click 'OK.'

• Select 'Standard' in the next window and click 'OK.' • Install GRUB on your Linux partition. Leave the next window as is and click 'OK.' • Choose the first option 'Root' in the next window. • Click 'No' when it asks you if you want to do it again. • Close all open windows, click the 'Menu' button and click 'Shut Down.' It will give you the option to save your settings if you made changes. Kachestvennoe udostoverenie na gotovuyu produkciyu blank.

You can save them to the new partition. • Reboot the computer.

Welcome to BleepingComputer, a free community where people like yourself come together to discuss and learn how to use their computers. Using the site is easy and fun. As a guest, you can browse and view the various discussions in the forums, but can not create a new topic or reply to an existing one unless you are logged in. Other benefits of registering an account are subscribing to topics and forums, creating a blog, and having no ads shown anywhere on the site. Or read our to learn how to use this site. Now then; let's see what's what, shall we?

You say you've deleted Windoze 10.so you have an empty hard drive, yes? Do you want Puppy to be the only Linux OS on this machine, or are you likely to want to run more than one? It'll be easier to keep it as one OS rather than multiple ones, though it should be 'do-able'.although with Chromebook-like specs, Puppy's going to be a pretty good fit for that hardware. Let us know what it is that you'd like to do, please; it'll make it easier for us to tailor advice as to what the next step should be, y'see. Distros:- Multiple 'Puppies'. And Anti-X 16.1 ~~~ Compaq Presario SR1916UK; Athlon64 X2 3800+, 3 GB RAM, WD 500GB Caviar 'Blue', 32GB Kingspec PATA SSD, 3 TB Seagate 'Expansion' external HDD, ATI Radeon Xpress 200 graphics, Dell 15.1' pNp monitor (1024 x 768), TP-Link PCI-e USB 3.0 card, Logitech c920 HD Pro webcam, self-powered 7-port USB 2.0 hub Dell Inspiron 1100; 2.6 GHz 400FSB P4, 1.5 GB RAM, 64GB KingSpec IDE SSD, Intel 'Extreme' graphics, 500GB Seagate 'Expansion' external HDD, M$ HD-3000 'Lifecam'. There are several helpful Google search results for installing a linux distro on your Lenovo ideapad 110s.

The one I've linked to is for Linux Mint. Didn't see one for Puppy. But the setup should be near enough for following to install Puppy. I would suggest you install something other than Puppy for ease of keeping the OS and programs current. Mint would be a good choice or one of the less demanding Ubuntus. EDIT: I meant to add that Mike_Walsh is the one to listen to for best advice on Puppy. He always gives excellent advice on that distro.