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182 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3285
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Title: HPR3285: Upgrading Lubuntu on my Samsung N150 Plus netbook
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3285/hpr3285.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 20:12:37
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio episode 3,285 for Friday the 5th of March 2021.
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Today's show is entitled Upgrading Ubuntu on My Samsung N150 Plus Network.
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It is hosted by MrX, and is about 18 minutes long, and carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is Ubuntu 16.04 LTS at 20.04.1 LTS Upgrading Samsung N150 Plus Network.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by Ananasthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15.
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That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at Ananasthost.com.
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Hello and welcome Hacker Public Radio days.
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My name is MrX, and welcome to this podcast.
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It's pre-usual and I'd like to thank the people at HPR for making this service available
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to us all.
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HPR is a community-led podcast provided by the community for the community.
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That means you can contribute to.
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Why don't you pick up a microphone or a mobile phone or a addictive phone or anything
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you've got to hand, hit the record button and send something in.
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It's really quite easy.
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I've gone to a lot of effort to make it simple and slimline the whole process and you might
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find it quite therapeutic.
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As I do anyway, it's late December 2020.
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The thing is still going on.
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I recorded a previous episode which hasn't gone out neither this one yet.
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I'm guessing this will be a second follow-on one to the previous one which hasn't
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gone out yet.
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I will try in this occasion to speak a little slower, a little less frantic, trying to
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clip my audio because I did notice I was a bit of clipping going on, so I backed out
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off a little bit.
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I think it was all done in a bit of a rush, so I'm a bit more relaxed at ease with the
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audio.
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So moving on, in this episode I'm going to cover, I've been upgrading my machines because
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I've got a wee bit of time on my hands at last and the second machine I'm upgrading
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this and this occasion is my aging Samsung N150 Plus netbook.
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I got given it from Mrs X, I'm sure I've mentioned this to you before, and there's one
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thing about it that I thought it was quite surprising, and so she got it and it came with
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Windows 7 and it ran for about over a year, something absolutely fine, and I think it
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was just after the year, after the warranties up off course, but it started to run slower
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and slower and slower to the point where it would take forever to boot up, I mean just
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took forever.
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Well, I've not got any use for you, you can just have it, so thank you very much.
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So we still got Windows 7 on it, but I put a partitioned down and installed, I think
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it was the Ubuntu installed in originally, I can't remember that, I think that's maybe
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the second time, there could be a third time I've upgraded the Ubuntu, but the point
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is anyway, that once I installed Linux on it, it was absolutely fine, and it's never
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slowed down, now I'm sure a lot of you might be tempted to blame Microsoft for this, but
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I don't think it is, I think it's the suppliers of the netbook, whether it's the shop or
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Samsung itself, but it must be the software that they're installing and this thing is
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actually, I suspect it's, although I have no categorical proof, but I suspect it's set
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to make the machine run like a bag of old nails after a year or so after the warranties
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gone, and there's no need for that, I mean that's just verging and being criminal really,
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anyway, that's my rental, but this is about the upgrade, my third upgrade I think, at least
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the third upgrade to this Samsung, and so I'm going from, I was going to upgrade from
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Ubuntu 1604 LTS to 2004, I ended up 2004.1 LTS, so the first thing I did, I copied all my
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important documents and files onto Hard Drive, just to back up just in case things went wrong,
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and then I had to be digging around and I found that, I think now I'm sorry, I've not done a lot
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of research after the fact, I was just, as per usual, just keen to get the thing done,
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but when I Googled, I found that an upgrade really wasn't possible from 1604,
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Ubuntu 1604 to 2004, and this is, I think because the Ubuntu team switched desktops or something
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like that, everything, obviously things were a bit of a flux, they switched to a different
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desktop environment, and it wasn't really possible to, they said if you did it, we'd end up with
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a non-booting machine, I seem to remember, I don't have a link for that, I don't know where I
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read that, it was just something I Googled at the time, so it was just as well, I backed up on my
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files, so I downloaded a fresh version of Ubuntu 2004.1, and I found a spare, well I found a 32GB
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USB stick, I had to then copy all the files from that into a safe place, and then, of course that's
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all takes time, I opened the download image using disk image writer, I think this is the first thing
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I've actually used that, I can't remember how I did it in the past, whether it was DD or something,
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I don't know, but it was very easy, very easy, there was quite a press with, I think it's something
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I've never really thought to use before, for some reason, I'm not sure why, but anyway, I'm
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sure you've already found that to be the case, and I'm probably slowing up, take to use image writer,
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yep, so I switched on the laptop, hit F2 to check the boot, order and whatnot, and it was
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said that it's a USB, and I booted from the USB stick, it's a live distro, and so I tried a few
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things out, I found that the mouse speed was really slow on the track pad, and I was trying to
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adjust it, but it didn't seem to make a difference, I discovered what it was later on, so I'm going
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to cover it later on, I corrected the Wi-Fi, and the Wi-Fi connecting icon in the process was a lot
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more, seems a lot more clunky than, not a lot more, a bit more clunky than, and I ended up going
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through the menus a few times, you've got to kind of do a single scan sweep, and then pick the
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work things if it finds, but it just seemed that, unfortunately I didn't write any notes on this,
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but I do remember it being a bit, a bit, seemed a bit, a lot more clunky than it was previously,
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however, it had connected, it was fine to that, that seemed okay, I went to YouTube and played a
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few videos just to make sure that they worked okay, the volume keys worked okay to adjust the volume
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up and down, not particularly important, but I've got volume keys under the notebook, so I thought
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okay, that's good enough, I'm not using it for very much, just for simple SSH again to things,
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and cutting and pasting a few things, some Firefox or something, but it's scripting or whatever,
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as well, so that would be fine, so I went through the install process, and I selected a manual
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partition, because I couldn't make head nurse sense of, I wasn't sure what it was going to do,
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so I thought well, I'm playing a save, so if I do it myself, then I've only got myself to blame,
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but if I leave it to, for it to decide, then it might go haywire, it's what I usually tend to do
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actually, to be fair, I usually do it manually, so I use the existing partition, and so I form
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into the existing Lubuntu partition, and the swap partition, which is on SDA6, and so then that
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was fine, went through the whole process, it was slow, it took a long time on this wee netbook,
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but eventually it completed, and booted the thing up, and what I was kind of surprised, and
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maybe it's because I do these upgrades, these installs so infrequently, but it remembered the Wi-Fi
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connection between boot, so that was nice, that was nice touch, so then you need to go through
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arduous nonsense of trying to connect again, and I was thinking about doing a full upgrade,
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it didn't give any details, so I wasn't quite sure, was it going to go from 2004 to 20.10,
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which we've taken out to the LTS release, because remember this is 2004, I like to stick to LTS,
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releases could I, such a nuisance to upgrade, so I wanted it to last as long as possible,
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so I was wee bit reluctant, but I said yes to that, and at the end of the full upgrade as they
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called it, after the first boot, I tried to do LTSB underscore release, of course that didn't work,
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because that's been something's happened to that, just like on my previous install for the
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pie, so I did cat slash Etsy slash OS dash release, and yes I was still running 2004 LTS, so that was
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good, excellent, the login screen has an option, has a desktop option, but by default it's set to
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LeBoon2, now I don't know what that means, what desktop environment it means, I'm a bit,
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I mean I know I'd recognise no more thing, I think I'd recognise KDE, but I'm a bit rusty with
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all the different desktop environments, so I don't actually know what the default LeBoon2 desktop was,
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but anyway the default one I found it to be really slow and unresponsive, it was fast enough,
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but it was a bit slow, and I also found that the the decoration around the terminal windows were a bit,
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it was a bit clunky, and obviously it's a wee network with a small screen, so that made it,
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meant that things tended to wrap on the screen, and I mean I'm sure I could have
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maybe, there's probably options to tidy things up and everything, but I did think it was a bit,
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a bit clunky, on such a small screen, so on that boot screen I tried one of the other
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desktop, and I think there might only been one more I can't remember, but there was one LXQT,
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so I picked that one, I was also pleased to find it when I rebooted it, it remembered that setting,
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which was quite nice, and it was a bit more responsive, and the terminal screen was much tidier,
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the text didn't wrap, and the whole experience was much more fluid, still not as quick as the previous
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LeBoon2, I guess it's just everything gets a bit fatter and it's a really old netbook, so
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what can I expect I guess, but certainly usable, so that's that's the main thing, I'll look,
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so that's fine, what I found was, I was seeing the mouse speed was too slow,
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and I was kind of thinking that the mouse and trackpad were the same thing, but they're not,
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of course, silly me, there's actually an option for the trackpad, so it was in preferences,
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LXQT settings, keyboard and mouse, mouse and touchpad, acceleration speed, and I think it was
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set to 0.1, it's now set to 5, I just think, oh and I also selected single click-tactivity items,
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I just felt that the interface was a wee bit, you know, I felt maybe that for somebody who was
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just starting now, they might find some of the interface a wee bit more, so they're confusing,
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if you're a seasoned LX user you'd be fine, but I don't know, I thought it was a cleaner,
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simpler with a previous living to, just my general observations, could be me of course,
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I installed some of my favourites like Midnick, Commander, NCDU, Screen, PV, MOC, SSH,
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Generators at my RSA keys that I could log into my Pi 13 upstairs, no problems,
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I copied all my files and documents from my portable hard drive back onto the laptop,
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now this time, because I had installed MC Midnick Commander, I thought I'd use it,
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and oh I was surprised how good Midnick Commander was, actually when I was copying the files
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off the laptop, the netbook, it crashed a couple of times, and I had to split the job up
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because it locked up a couple of things, it was probably due to limitations of RAM and whatnot,
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but also with the trackpad and whatnot, it's so easy to lift your finger off and, you know,
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put things around, I generally use control C, control V when I'm using file managers like that,
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I don't like moving things out of the mouse because it's so easy to put something in the wrong
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place, let it go, bang and off you go, you made a disaster, you know, but Midnick Commander was so
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nice, it gave a constant percentage of the progress of each individual file being copied,
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an overall progress which was also very useful and reassuring, was such a slow laptop,
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with a GUI file manager that comes with Lubuntu, I wasn't actually sure for a long time whether
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the machine crashed or not, where you would instantly know with Midnick Commander, I had no
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crashes at all with that, it just ran completely smooth, completely fast, it's just, you know,
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if you're going to be doing things like that, I thoroughly recommend Midnick Commander,
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I don't use it and I did the basis to be fair, but for something like that, I guess it's
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one of these things, if you use the right tool for the right job I suppose, you know,
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yeah, so finally some general thoughts and observations, I might be able to cover some of this,
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the keyboard screen brightness buttons, keyboard buttons don't work anymore, there's a
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keyboard, quite a nice keyboard to capture facility where you pick the option and you say
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and you hit a button and then when you hit a key, it picks up the key combination that you're
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pushing it in and then records it, so that's fine, and I thought maybe it wasn't recognising the
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function key followed by the brightness up and down button, but it turned out it wasn't that because
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it also tells you the command of it, it's not running to do the action, so I pasted that command
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into a terminal and it didn't push the brightness up and down, so it's something else that's
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fault, now I haven't looked into that and I may not even bother because it's not that big a deal,
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but it worked with the previous version of Lubuntu, boot time is much, much slower than the
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previous Lubuntu, maybe twice as slow because it was quite snappy booting up previously,
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it still feels a lot sluggish now, but I think it's perfectly usable, I've got a feeling
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this might actually be the last upgrade of the Snitbook series, it's now getting a bit long in the
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tooth, it's got limited RAM and processors pretty low grade and it really is quite a few years old
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now, and of course the power switch is a snapped off a number of years ago, I've quit using
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a pair of scissors to turn it on, so it really is getting past it, but for now perfectly usable,
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well that's basically it I think, I have much else to add, I don't know when this is going to
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go out, but I hope you all have a Merry Christmas when it comes, a nice new year and you all stay safe
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and whatnot, and this could be months before this gets posted, so it could be meaningless that,
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thank you very much and all the very best for now, if you want to contact me, I can be contacted
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at MrX at hpr at googlemail.com, that's MRX, AT, HPR, the at symbol googlemail.com, so until next time,
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thank you and goodbye.
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Community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday,
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today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an hpr listener like yourself,
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