• I brought a NEW Computer so what am I doing this weekend??

    From Daniel65@2:250/1 to All on Thu Mar 7 09:36:40 2024
    I've just brought myself a new 'puter ....

    https://www.officeworks.com.au/shop/officeworks/p/hp-24-cr0002a-24-all-in-one-n100-8gb-256gb-hpcr0002a

    So, I intend to spend this weekend (hopefully not too much of it!)
    reducing the Win11 area on the SSD, and installing MageiaLinux 9 ....
    and disabling MSIE or whatever Browser/Mail/News system is installed. If
    I disable MSIE will I also lose MS Office??

    Internet connection is via Wi-Fi, so, hopefully, that will not be too difficult (Umm! Where did I put my Wi-Fi password when I last used it??
    ;-P )

    Does anyone here have any suggestions that might help me out??
    (By-the-by, First time SSD user, so that could be interesting!!)
    --
    Daniel

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From Grimble@2:250/1 to All on Thu Mar 7 11:41:10 2024
    On 07/03/2024 09:36, Daniel65 wrote:
    I've just brought myself a new 'puter ....

    https://www.officeworks.com.au/shop/officeworks/p/hp-24-cr0002a-24-all-in-one-n100-8gb-256gb-hpcr0002a

    So, I intend to spend this weekend (hopefully not too much of it!)
    reducing the Win11 area on the SSD, and installing MageiaLinux 9 ....
    and disabling MSIE or whatever Browser/Mail/News system is installed. If
    I disable MSIE will I also lose MS Office??

    Internet connection is via Wi-Fi, so, hopefully, that will not be too difficult (Umm! Where did I put my Wi-Fi password when I last used it??
    ;-P )

    Does anyone here have any suggestions that might help me out??
    (By-the-by, First time SSD user, so that could be interesting!!)
    In my limited experience, HPs don't play very well with Linux. Had
    difficulty getting WiFi to work, installing Mageia caused cancellation
    of the warranty....
    My HP laptop is just single boot Mageia 8 now.
    Good luck - hope it all works out for you.
    --
    Grimble
    Machine 'Haydn' running Plasma 5.27.10 on 6.6.18-desktop-1.mga9 kernel.
    Mageia release 9 (Official) for x86_64


    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From David W. Hodgins@2:250/1 to All on Thu Mar 7 16:07:08 2024
    On Thu, 07 Mar 2024 04:36:40 -0500, Daniel65 <daniel47@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:

    I've just brought myself a new 'puter ....

    https://www.officeworks.com.au/shop/officeworks/p/hp-24-cr0002a-24-all-in-one-n100-8gb-256gb-hpcr0002a

    So, I intend to spend this weekend (hopefully not too much of it!)
    reducing the Win11 area on the SSD, and installing MageiaLinux 9 ....
    and disabling MSIE or whatever Browser/Mail/News system is installed. If
    I disable MSIE will I also lose MS Office??

    Internet connection is via Wi-Fi, so, hopefully, that will not be too difficult (Umm! Where did I put my Wi-Fi password when I last used it??
    ;-P )

    Does anyone here have any suggestions that might help me out??
    (By-the-by, First time SSD user, so that could be interesting!!)

    When you first boot the windows system to remove stuff and reduce the partition size, don't connect to the internet, assuming win11 can run without internet access, like prior versions of windows.

    Regards, Dave Hodgins

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From TJ@2:250/1 to All on Thu Mar 7 21:55:58 2024
    On 2024-03-07 06:41, Grimble wrote:
    On 07/03/2024 09:36, Daniel65 wrote:
    I've just brought myself a new 'puter ....

    https://www.officeworks.com.au/shop/officeworks/p/hp-24-cr0002a-24-all-in-one-n100-8gb-256gb-hpcr0002a

    So, I intend to spend this weekend (hopefully not too much of it!)
    reducing the Win11 area on the SSD, and installing MageiaLinux 9 ....
    and disabling MSIE or whatever Browser/Mail/News system is installed.
    If I disable MSIE will I also lose MS Office??

    Internet connection is via Wi-Fi, so, hopefully, that will not be too
    difficult (Umm! Where did I put my Wi-Fi password when I last used
    it?? ;-P )

    Does anyone here have any suggestions that might help me out??
    (By-the-by, First time SSD user, so that could be interesting!!)
    In my limited experience, HPs don't play very well with Linux. Had difficulty getting WiFi to work, installing Mageia caused cancellation
    of the warranty....
    My HP laptop is just single boot Mageia 8 now.
    Good luck - hope it all works out for you.

    I have 2 HPs, both purchased used. Probook 6550b and a Pavilion 15. Both
    are very happy with Mageia. BUT, on both I completely removed the
    travesty that is Windows, so it's not necessary for me that they play
    well with both OS's installed. In addition, because each was a few years
    old when I got them, no warranty worries.

    TJ

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From Daniel65@2:250/1 to All on Fri Mar 8 10:37:20 2024
    Grimble wrote on 7/3/24 10:41 pm:
    On 07/03/2024 09:36, Daniel65 wrote:
    I've just brought myself a new 'puter ....

    https://www.officeworks.com.au/shop/officeworks/p/hp-24-cr0002a-24-all-in-one-n100-8gb-256gb-hpcr0002a


    So, I intend to spend this weekend (hopefully not too much of it!)
    reducing the Win11 area on the SSD, and installing MageiaLinux 9 ....
    and disabling MSIE or whatever Browser/Mail/News system is installed.
    If I disable MSIE will I also lose MS Office??

    Internet connection is via Wi-Fi, so, hopefully, that will not be too
    difficult (Umm! Where did I put my Wi-Fi password when I last used
    it?? ;-P )

    Does anyone here have any suggestions that might help me out??
    (By-the-by, First time SSD user, so that could be interesting!!)
    In my limited experience, HPs don't play very well with Linux. Had difficulty getting WiFi to work, installing Mageia caused cancellation
    of the warranty....

    It's not 'the weekend' yet so I am still on my old system, a HP 6730b,
    which I purchased, second hand, in 2009 with Win7 installed.

    I installed Mandrava 2009 on it but could not get Internet, via USB
    Dongle, up and running, so, one weekend when I was going to be away, I
    gave it to my ISP to see in he could get things running.

    The conversation, when I picked my Laptop up on the Monday, went
    something like ....

    Him: mumble, mumble, bloody Linux, mumble, mumble.
    Me: But, hang on, it's Linux which is sort of like the Unix that you use
    to run your server.
    Him: mumble, mumble, bloody Linux, mumble, mumble.

    .... but he HAD gotten me connecting!! :-P

    I've since upgraded through MGA4 and MGA6

    My HP laptop is just single boot Mageia 8 now.
    Good luck - hope it all works out for you.

    So do I .... we shall see ...... and to think it's all because I spilt a
    drink on my Laptops keyboard a couple of years ago, so have been using a
    $15 wired USB Keyboard and that some of those keys are loosing their lettering!! Perhaps I should have just brought another $15 keyboard!! ;-P
    --
    Daniel

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From Daniel65@2:250/1 to All on Fri Mar 8 10:40:24 2024
    David W. Hodgins wrote on 8/3/24 3:07 am:
    On Thu, 07 Mar 2024 04:36:40 -0500, Daniel65
    <daniel47@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:

    I've just brought myself a new 'puter ....

    https://www.officeworks.com.au/shop/officeworks/p/hp-24-cr0002a-24-all-in-one-n100-8gb-256gb-hpcr0002a

    So, I intend to spend this weekend (hopefully not too much of it!)
    reducing the Win11 area on the SSD, and installing MageiaLinux 9
    .... and disabling MSIE or whatever Browser/Mail/News system is
    installed. If I disable MSIE will I also lose MS Office??

    Internet connection is via Wi-Fi, so, hopefully, that will not be
    too difficult (Umm! Where did I put my Wi-Fi password when I last
    used it?? ;-P )

    Does anyone here have any suggestions that might help me out??
    (By-the-by, First time SSD user, so that could be interesting!!)

    When you first boot the windows system to remove stuff and reduce the partition size, don't connect to the internet, assuming win11 can
    run without internet access, like prior versions of windows.

    Regards, Dave Hodgins

    Thanks, Dave, I had thought about that .... maybe I can turn off the
    Wi-Fi Internet access whilst the computer is booting.
    --
    Daniel

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From David W. Hodgins@2:250/1 to All on Fri Mar 8 14:33:38 2024
    On Fri, 08 Mar 2024 05:40:24 -0500, Daniel65 <daniel47@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:

    David W. Hodgins wrote on 8/3/24 3:07 am:
    On Thu, 07 Mar 2024 04:36:40 -0500, Daniel65
    <daniel47@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:

    I've just brought myself a new 'puter ....

    https://www.officeworks.com.au/shop/officeworks/p/hp-24-cr0002a-24-all-in-one-n100-8gb-256gb-hpcr0002a

    So, I intend to spend this weekend (hopefully not too much of it!)
    reducing the Win11 area on the SSD, and installing MageiaLinux 9
    .... and disabling MSIE or whatever Browser/Mail/News system is
    installed. If I disable MSIE will I also lose MS Office??

    Internet connection is via Wi-Fi, so, hopefully, that will not be
    too difficult (Umm! Where did I put my Wi-Fi password when I last
    used it?? ;-P )

    Does anyone here have any suggestions that might help me out??
    (By-the-by, First time SSD user, so that could be interesting!!)

    When you first boot the windows system to remove stuff and reduce the
    partition size, don't connect to the internet, assuming win11 can
    run without internet access, like prior versions of windows.

    Regards, Dave Hodgins

    Thanks, Dave, I had thought about that .... maybe I can turn off the
    Wi-Fi Internet access whilst the computer is booting.

    Don't forget to disable restricted boot (aka secure boot), and to turn off
    fast boot in windows. https://wiki.mageia.org/en/Mageia_in_dual_boot_with_Windows8_and_over#Troubleshooting

    As the new system will be uefi, I strongly recommend using refind as the boot loader instead of grub2.

    Regards, Dave Hodgins

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From William Unruh@2:250/1 to All on Fri Mar 8 19:36:08 2024
    On 2024-03-07, Grimble <grimble@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
    On 07/03/2024 09:36, Daniel65 wrote:
    I've just brought myself a new 'puter ....

    https://www.officeworks.com.au/shop/officeworks/p/hp-24-cr0002a-24-all-in-one-n100-8gb-256gb-hpcr0002a

    So, I intend to spend this weekend (hopefully not too much of it!)
    reducing the Win11 area on the SSD, and installing MageiaLinux 9 ....
    and disabling MSIE or whatever Browser/Mail/News system is installed. If
    I disable MSIE will I also lose MS Office??

    In what? Mageia does not use MSOffice, so when you run Mageia you will
    use Libreoffice, which is very close to MSoffice ( and you can save
    files in MSOffice format if you wish.)
    Remember that the various MSoffice programs are incompatible with each
    other.


    Internet connection is via Wi-Fi, so, hopefully, that will not be too
    difficult (Umm! Where did I put my Wi-Fi password when I last used it??
    ;-P )

    Does anyone here have any suggestions that might help me out??
    (By-the-by, First time SSD user, so that could be interesting!!)

    SSD is just a hard drive technology. There should be nothing interesting
    about it.

    In my limited experience, HPs don't play very well with Linux. Had difficulty getting WiFi to work, installing Mageia caused cancellation
    of the warranty....

    Crap. Installing Mageia will not cancel the warrenty. It will mean that
    HP cannot help you when you have problems with Mageia, which is fair
    enough, but just go to windows and show tha tthe problem is also there,
    and they have to help you. But if the problem does not show up in
    Windoes but does in Mageia then you are on your own. (or rather then you
    come here to ask for help)

    My HP laptop is just single boot Mageia 8 now.
    Good luck - hope it all works out for you.

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From Daniel65@2:250/1 to All on Sat Mar 9 09:19:34 2024
    William Unruh wrote on 9/3/24 6:36 am:
    On 2024-03-07, Grimble <grimble@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
    On 07/03/2024 09:36, Daniel65 wrote:
    I've just brought myself a new 'puter ....

    https://www.officeworks.com.au/shop/officeworks/p/hp-24-cr0002a-24-all-in-one-n100-8gb-256gb-hpcr0002a

    So, I intend to spend this weekend (hopefully not too much of it!)
    reducing the Win11 area on the SSD, and installing MageiaLinux 9
    .... and disabling MSIE or whatever Browser/Mail/News system is
    installed. If I disable MSIE will I also lose MS Office??

    In what? Mageia does not use MSOffice,

    Yes, so I must have meant on the Win11 Installation.

    so when you run Mageia you will use Libreoffice, which is very close
    to MSoffice ( and you can save files in MSOffice format if you wish.) Remember that the various MSoffice programs are incompatible with
    each other.


    Internet connection is via Wi-Fi, so, hopefully, that will not
    be too difficult (Umm! Where did I put my Wi-Fi password when I
    last used it?? ;-P )

    Does anyone here have any suggestions that might help me out??
    (By-the-by, First time SSD user, so that could be interesting!!)

    SSD is just a hard drive technology. There should be nothing
    interesting about it.

    Doesn't it have a limitation on the number of Writes to each Byte?? I'm guessing, if it does have a limitation, it will be some reasonably big
    number .... but, still, something to remember.

    In my limited experience, HPs don't play very well with Linux. Had
    difficulty getting WiFi to work, installing Mageia caused
    cancellation of the warranty....

    Crap. Installing Mageia will not cancel the warrenty. It will mean
    that HP cannot help you when you have problems with Mageia, which is
    fair enough, but just go to windows and show tha tthe problem is
    also there, and they have to help you. But if the problem does not
    show up in Windoes but does in Mageia then you are on your own. (or
    rather then you come here to ask for help)

    Of course. ;-)

    My HP laptop is just single boot Mageia 8 now. Good luck - hope it
    all works out for you.
    --
    Daniel

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From Daniel65@2:250/1 to All on Sat Mar 9 09:33:17 2024
    David W. Hodgins wrote on 9/3/24 1:33 am:
    On Fri, 08 Mar 2024 05:40:24 -0500, Daniel65
    <daniel47@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
    David W. Hodgins wrote on 8/3/24 3:07 am:
    On Thu, 07 Mar 2024 04:36:40 -0500, Daniel65
    <daniel47@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:

    I've just brought myself a new 'puter ....

    https://www.officeworks.com.au/shop/officeworks/p/hp-24-cr0002a-24-all-in-one-n100-8gb-256gb-hpcr0002a

    So, I intend to spend this weekend (hopefully not too much of
    it!) reducing the Win11 area on the SSD, and installing
    MageiaLinux 9 .... and disabling MSIE or whatever
    Browser/Mail/News system is installed. If I disable MSIE will I
    also lose MS Office??

    Internet connection is via Wi-Fi, so, hopefully, that will not
    be too difficult (Umm! Where did I put my Wi-Fi password when I
    last used it?? ;-P )

    Does anyone here have any suggestions that might help me out??
    (By-the-by, First time SSD user, so that could be
    interesting!!)

    When you first boot the windows system to remove stuff and reduce
    the partition size, don't connect to the internet, assuming win11
    can run without internet access, like prior versions of windows.

    Regards, Dave Hodgins

    Thanks, Dave, I had thought about that .... maybe I can turn off
    the Wi-Fi Internet access whilst the computer is booting.

    Don't forget to disable restricted boot (aka secure boot), and to
    turn off fast boot in windows. https://wiki.mageia.org/en/Mageia_in_dual_boot_with_Windows8_and_over#Troubleshooting

    As the new system will be uefi, I strongly recommend using refind as
    the boot loader instead of grub2.

    Regards, Dave Hodgins

    Thanks again, Dave.

    On that wiki.mageia page that you link to, in the instructions for ....

    "If you are using Microsoft powershell or Windows 10 and higher you need
    to use following command:"

    It shows ....
    bcdedit /set "{bootmgr}" path \EFI\mageia\grubx64.efi

    but in the screen grab it shows ....
    bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path \EFI\mageia\grubx64.efi

    without the double inverted commas around '{bootmgr}' .... so I should
    be using ...........??

    And will 'refind' be on/with in the MGA9 iso as an option??
    --
    Daniel

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From David W. Hodgins@2:250/1 to All on Sat Mar 9 15:54:27 2024
    On Sat, 09 Mar 2024 04:33:17 -0500, Daniel65 <daniel47@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
    On that wiki.mageia page that you link to, in the instructions for ....

    "If you are using Microsoft powershell or Windows 10 and higher you need
    to use following command:"

    It shows ....
    bcdedit /set "{bootmgr}" path \EFI\mageia\grubx64.efi

    but in the screen grab it shows ....
    bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path \EFI\mageia\grubx64.efi

    without the double inverted commas around '{bootmgr}' .... so I should
    be using ...........??

    I haven't used windows in a long time, so don't know for sure. I suspect
    the double quotes have no effect, so it doesn't matter, but don't know
    for sure.

    And will 'refind' be on/with in the MGA9 iso as an option??

    With the classic iso images you have to choose to install the refind package for it to be shown as an option when it gets to the point of setting up the bootloader. With the live iso images you have to install refind and switch to it after booting into the installed system, as it is not on those iso images.

    Regards, Dave Hodgins

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From David W. Hodgins@2:250/1 to All on Sat Mar 9 15:46:26 2024
    On Sat, 09 Mar 2024 04:19:34 -0500, Daniel65 <daniel47@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
    William Unruh wrote on 9/3/24 6:36 am:
    <snip>
    SSD is just a hard drive technology. There should be nothing
    interesting about it.

    Doesn't it have a limitation on the number of Writes to each Byte?? I'm guessing, if it does have a limitation, it will be some reasonably big
    number .... but, still, something to remember.
    <snip>

    In my desktop system, my oldest ssd drive is an OCZ-AGILITY4 that I've been using since 2012. That's longer than some of the hard drives I've had lasted.

    From "smartctl -a /dev/sdb" ...

    ID# ATTRIBUTE_NAME FLAG VALUE WORST THRESH TYPE UPDATED WHEN_FAILED RAW_VALUE
    1 Raw_Read_Error_Rate 0x0000 005 000 000 Old_age Offline - 5
    3 Spin_Up_Time 0x0000 100 100 000 Old_age Offline - 0
    4 Start_Stop_Count 0x0000 100 100 000 Old_age Offline - 0
    5 Reallocated_Sector_Ct 0x0000 100 100 000 Old_age Offline - 1
    9 Power_On_Hours 0x0000 100 100 000 Old_age Offline - 94053
    12 Power_Cycle_Count 0x0000 100 100 000 Old_age Offline - 517
    232 Lifetime_Writes 0x0000 100 100 000 Old_age Offline - 96637212637
    233 Media_Wearout_Indicator 0x0000 091 000 000 Old_age Offline - 91

    The reallocated sector count went from zero to one shortly after I started using the drive. The lifetime writes works out to just over 46,000 GB.
    The Media_Wearout_Indicator has been holding at 91 for several years now.

    I've been using the drive as my primary boot drive since I got it, and it's still where my primary install and most data goes. I have three other ssd drives that I added over the years, for testing and backup of data

    A full Mageia install from a local mirror takes about 10 minutes, while an install on the spinning rust drive I have (that is now only used for
    additional backup) took around 40 minutes.

    The difference in speed is incredible. Not only is each read faster, but
    with no head movement, multiple file reads happen much faster too.
    I would not bother buying anymore spinning rust drives, unless I had a need
    for a very large volume of data.

    If I disable networking, boot to a login prompt (I prefer to use run level 3) is under 10 seconds. The networking, especially chronyd, adds another 5
    to 20 seconds.

    In my laptop, I have two pcie nvme ssd drives. They make the sata ssd drives seem slow. :-)

    I've had multiple hard drives fail on me over time. I have yet to have an ssd drive fail. The only real drawback is that when they do fail, I don't expect
    to be able to recover anything from it, while with a spinning rust drive you usually (not always!) have some chance to recover things.

    Regards, Dave Hodgins

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From William Unruh@2:250/1 to All on Sat Mar 9 18:09:06 2024
    On 2024-03-09, Daniel65 <daniel47@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
    William Unruh wrote on 9/3/24 6:36 am:
    On 2024-03-07, Grimble <grimble@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
    On 07/03/2024 09:36, Daniel65 wrote:

    SSD is just a hard drive technology. There should be nothing
    interesting about it.

    Doesn't it have a limitation on the number of Writes to each Byte?? I'm guessing, if it does have a limitation, it will be some reasonably big number .... but, still, something to remember.

    Manufacturers have heard about this, and speifically have write radomizatin--ie, transfering writes to different locations on the disk
    to average things out. But also, hard drives ( iron rust drive) also
    have limited lifetimes which are shorter than SSD drives these days.

    So if you are worried about it, make backups. Or don't use the computer, because everything will fail after a while.



    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From Daniel65@2:250/1 to All on Sun Mar 10 08:35:45 2024
    David W. Hodgins wrote on 10/3/24 2:46 am:
    On Sat, 09 Mar 2024 04:19:34 -0500, Daniel65
    <daniel47@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
    William Unruh wrote on 9/3/24 6:36 am:
    <snip>
    SSD is just a hard drive technology. There should be nothing
    interesting about it.

    Doesn't it have a limitation on the number of Writes to each Byte??
    I'm guessing, if it does have a limitation, it will be some
    reasonably big number .... but, still, something to remember.
    <snip>


    The reallocated sector count went from zero to one shortly after I
    started using the drive. The lifetime writes works out to just over
    46,000 GB. The Media_Wearout_Indicator has been holding at 91 for
    several years now.

    I've been using the drive as my primary boot drive since I got it,
    and it's still where my primary install and most data goes. I have
    three other ssd drives that I added over the years, for testing and
    backup of data

    A full Mageia install from a local mirror takes about 10 minutes,
    while an install on the spinning rust drive I have (that is now only
    used for additional backup) took around 40 minutes.

    The difference in speed is incredible. Not only is each read faster,
    but with no head movement, multiple file reads happen much faster
    too. I would not bother buying anymore spinning rust drives, unless I
    had a need for a very large volume of data.

    If I disable networking, boot to a login prompt (I prefer to use run
    level 3) is under 10 seconds. The networking, especially chronyd,
    adds another 5 to 20 seconds.

    In my laptop, I have two pcie nvme ssd drives. They make the sata ssd
    drives seem slow. :-)

    Sorry! Are you suggesting you had two SSDs installed and functioning AT
    THE SAME TIME??

    If so, was the second one installed on a plug-in board or something??

    I've had multiple hard drives fail on me over time. I have yet to
    have an ssd drive fail. The only real drawback is that when they do
    fail, I don't expect to be able to recover anything from it, while
    with a spinning rust drive you usually (not always!) have some chance
    to recover things.

    Regards, Dave Hodgins
    --
    Daniel

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From Daniel65@2:250/1 to All on Sun Mar 10 08:42:14 2024
    William Unruh wrote on 10/3/24 5:09 am:
    On 2024-03-09, Daniel65 <daniel47@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
    William Unruh wrote on 9/3/24 6:36 am:
    On 2024-03-07, Grimble <grimble@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
    On 07/03/2024 09:36, Daniel65 wrote:

    SSD is just a hard drive technology. There should be nothing
    interesting about it.

    Doesn't it have a limitation on the number of Writes to each Byte?? I'm
    guessing, if it does have a limitation, it will be some reasonably big
    number .... but, still, something to remember.

    Manufacturers have heard about this, and speifically have write radomizatin--ie, transfering writes to different locations on the disk
    to average things out. But also, hard drives ( iron rust drive) also
    have limited lifetimes which are shorter than SSD drives these days.

    Yes, I hadn't considered this for spinning rust drives ..... maybe
    someone just made a bigger thing about it for the new tech!!

    So if you are worried about it, make backups. Or don't use the computer, because everything will fail after a while.

    The more I think about it, the more I'm leaning towards your option Two.
    I mean, a new keyboard and mouse costs about $50 ..... if only I hadn't already spent the $650!! ;-(
    --
    Daniel

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From Daniel65@2:250/1 to All on Sun Mar 10 08:44:50 2024
    David W. Hodgins wrote on 10/3/24 2:54 am:
    On Sat, 09 Mar 2024 04:33:17 -0500, Daniel65
    <daniel47@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
    On that wiki.mageia page that you link to, in the instructions for
    ....

    "If you are using Microsoft powershell or Windows 10 and higher you
    need to use following command:"

    It shows .... bcdedit /set "{bootmgr}" path
    \EFI\mageia\grubx64.efi

    but in the screen grab it shows .... bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path
    \EFI\mageia\grubx64.efi

    without the double inverted commas around '{bootmgr}' .... so I
    should be using ...........??

    I haven't used windows in a long time, so don't know for sure. I
    suspect the double quotes have no effect, so it doesn't matter, but
    don't know for sure.

    And will 'refind' be on/with in the MGA9 iso as an option??

    With the classic iso images you have to choose to install the refind
    package for it to be shown as an option when it gets to the point of
    setting up the bootloader. With the live iso images you have to
    install refind and switch to it after booting into the installed
    system, as it is not on those iso images.

    Regards, Dave Hodgins

    Thanks.
    --
    Daniel

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From David W. Hodgins@2:250/1 to All on Sun Mar 10 12:02:00 2024
    On Sun, 10 Mar 2024 04:35:45 -0400, Daniel65 <daniel47@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:

    David W. Hodgins wrote on 10/3/24 2:46 am:
    <snip>
    In my laptop, I have two pcie nvme ssd drives. They make the sata ssd
    drives seem slow. :-)

    Sorry! Are you suggesting you had two SSDs installed and functioning AT
    THE SAME TIME??

    Correct. A pcie ssd drive is just an m.2 card that plugs into a pcie slot on the motherboard.

    For examples of some m.2 pcie ssd drives, see https://www.pcmag.com/picks/the-best-m2-solid-state-drives

    If so, was the second one installed on a plug-in board or something??

    The laptop came with one 512GB m.2 pcie card plugged into it's motherboard. I opened the case and plugged in a 1TB card in another m.2 pcie slot. This laptop has two m.2 pcie slots.

    <snip>

    On the laptop ...
    # lsblk
    NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINTS
    nvme0n1 259:0 0 447.1G 0 disk
    ├─nvme0n1p1 259:2 0 511M 0 part /boot/EFI
    ├─nvme0n1p2 259:3 0 32G 0 part [SWAP]
    └─nvme0n1p3 259:4 0 64G 0 part
    nvme1n1 259:1 0 953.9G 0 disk
    ├─nvme1n1p1 259:5 0 260M 0 part
    ├─nvme1n1p2 259:6 0 16M 0 part
    ├─nvme1n1p3 259:7 0 37.9G 0 part
    ├─nvme1n1p4 259:8 0 1.2G 0 part
    ├─nvme1n1p5 259:9 0 17.5G 0 part
    ├─nvme1n1p6 259:10 0 32G 0 part [SWAP]
    ├─nvme1n1p7 259:11 0 231G 0 part
    └─nvme1n1p8 259:12 0 64G 0 part /

    I have one linux install on each drive, with lots of room for virtual machines.

    Regards, Dave Hodgins

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From David W. Hodgins@2:250/1 to All on Sun Mar 10 12:27:48 2024
    On Sun, 10 Mar 2024 04:42:14 -0400, Daniel65 <daniel47@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
    Yes, I hadn't considered this for spinning rust drives ..... maybe
    someone just made a bigger thing about it for the new tech!!

    It isn't just that an ssd drive can fail, just like hard drives, and even tape drives do. It's that when an ssd drive does fail do not expect any warning.

    With a hard drive, there's usually some noise or other symptom to indicate it's starting to fail, giving you a chance to recover most of the data. With an ssd drive, when it does fail, it's sudden. No chance of recovery software reading it.

    Regards, Dave Hodgins

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From Daniel65@2:250/1 to All on Mon Mar 11 08:43:47 2024
    David W. Hodgins wrote on 10/3/24 11:27 pm:
    On Sun, 10 Mar 2024 04:42:14 -0400, Daniel65
    <daniel47@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
    Yes, I hadn't considered this for spinning rust drives ..... maybe
    someone just made a bigger thing about it for the new tech!!

    It isn't just that an ssd drive can fail, just like hard drives, and
    even tape drives do. It's that when an ssd drive does fail do not
    expect any warning.

    With a hard drive, there's usually some noise or other symptom to
    indicate it's starting to fail, giving you a chance to recover most
    of the data. With an ssd drive, when it does fail, it's sudden. No
    chance of recovery software reading it.

    Regards, Dave Hodgins

    But, in either case, of course we would have previously done a back-up!!

    OF COURSE WE WOULD HAVE!! :-)
    --
    Daniel

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From TJ@2:250/1 to All on Mon Mar 11 13:37:33 2024
    On 2024-03-10 04:35, Daniel65 wrote:
    David W. Hodgins wrote on 10/3/24 2:46 am:
    On Sat, 09 Mar 2024 04:19:34 -0500, Daniel65
    <daniel47@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
    William Unruh wrote on 9/3/24 6:36 am:
    <snip>
    SSD is just a hard drive technology. There should be nothing
    interesting about it.

    Doesn't it have a limitation on the number of Writes to each Byte??
    I'm guessing, if it does have a limitation, it will be some
    reasonably big number .... but, still, something to remember.
    <snip>

    Individual cells do wear out over time, but modern drives have extra
    cells included so they can switch to those when one stops working. In addition, there is something called "wear leveling" where writes don't
    always use the same cells each time. All of this is automatic with the firmware of the drive.

    In addition, there is something called "trim" that should help extend
    the life of your drive. Once you have Mageia installed, come back here
    and one of us will explain how to activate that for your Mageia partition(s)

    (snip)

    In my laptop, I have two pcie nvme ssd drives. They make the sata ssd
     drives seem slow. :-)

    Sorry! Are you suggesting you had two SSDs installed and functioning AT
    THE SAME TIME??

    If so, was the second one installed on a plug-in board or something??

    My latest desktop build has two M.2 NVME slots on the motherboard, and I
    put a 1TB ssd in each. I don't have any rust drives on the system at
    all, but I do have a hotswap bay I use with a lightly-used rust drive
    for backing things up.

    As Dave says, the speed difference is incredible. I still have a couple
    of my old desktops that I use for testing purposes, but using them after
    this new build is almost painful - and as things go this isn't a
    particularly fast system by modern standards.

    I've had multiple hard drives fail on me over time. I have yet to
    have an ssd drive fail. The only real drawback is that when they do
    fail, I don't expect to be able to recover anything from it, while
    with a spinning rust drive you usually (not always!) have some chance
    to recover things.

    I haven't had any fail yet, either - and my first ssd was purchased used
    from ebay years ago, more as an experiment than anything else. I have no
    idea how much use it saw before I bought it, but it was an "old" drive
    even then. I replaced it because it was way too small, not because it
    failed. But, there was also the fact that because it was an older ssd,
    it didn't have some of the life-extending features more modern drives
    have. I put it into a usb case and use it as an external hard drive.

    TJ



    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From David W. Hodgins@2:250/1 to All on Mon Mar 11 15:48:30 2024
    On Mon, 11 Mar 2024 09:37:33 -0400, TJ <TJ@noneofyour.business> wrote:
    <snip>
    In addition, there is something called "trim" that should help extend
    the life of your drive. Once you have Mageia installed, come back here
    and one of us will explain how to activate that for your Mageia partition(s)
    <snip>

    While trim is absolutely needed on some drives, there have been some rare reports that it can cause problems, which is why it's not enabled by default.

    Best to experiment with the drive before putting it into regular use, to see
    if trim causes problems or not or check with the manufacturer's data sheets, and search for reports of problems with that make/model.

    An ssd drive connected using usb can not be trimmed as the usb interface does not support the trim command. Trying to run trim will report the feature is
    not supported.

    Some newer ssd drives have firmware that automatically runs trim, as needed.

    Regards, Dave Hodgins

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From TJ@2:250/1 to All on Mon Mar 11 20:54:02 2024
    On 2024-03-11 11:48, David W. Hodgins wrote:
    On Mon, 11 Mar 2024 09:37:33 -0400, TJ <TJ@noneofyour.business> wrote:
    <snip>
    In addition, there is something called "trim" that should help extend
    the life of your drive. Once you have Mageia installed, come back here
    and one of us will explain how to activate that for your Mageia
    partition(s)
    <snip>

    While trim is absolutely needed on some drives, there have been some rare reports that it can cause problems, which is why it's not enabled by default.

    Best to experiment with the drive before putting it into regular use, to
    see
    if trim causes problems or not or check with the manufacturer's data
    sheets,
    and search for reports of problems with that make/model.

    I hadn't read/heard about that. But I'm in luck. The two M.2 drives I
    bought (One Crucial, one TeamGroup) both claim to support trim.

    The Crucial drive uses Micron chips. I found that interesting, as Micron
    is about to build a $1 billion chip fab less than 20 miles from here. Construction of the first phase is scheduled to start later this year.

    TJ


    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From Daniel65@2:250/1 to All on Tue Mar 12 10:06:52 2024
    TJ wrote on 12/3/24 12:37 am:
    On 2024-03-10 04:35, Daniel65 wrote:
    David W. Hodgins wrote on 10/3/24 2:46 am:
    On Sat, 09 Mar 2024 04:19:34 -0500, Daniel65
    <daniel47@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
    William Unruh wrote on 9/3/24 6:36 am:
    <snip>
    SSD is just a hard drive technology. There should be nothing
    interesting about it.

    Doesn't it have a limitation on the number of Writes to each Byte??
    I'm guessing, if it does have a limitation, it will be some
    reasonably big number .... but, still, something to remember.
    <snip>

    Individual cells do wear out over time, but modern drives have extra
    cells included so they can switch to those when one stops working. In addition, there is something called "wear leveling" where writes don't always use the same cells each time. All of this is automatic with the firmware of the drive.

    In addition, there is something called "trim" that should help extend
    the life of your drive. Once you have Mageia installed, come back here
    and one of us will explain how to activate that for your Mageia
    partition(s)

    Don't hold your breath, TJ, but Yes, I know where to come.

    Buying the new Computer was a bit of a "Spur of the Moment" thing! As I
    may have mentioned elsewhere, I ended up buying a Desktop Computer (for
    $674) when I am used to using a Laptop Computer ..... so now I've
    ordered myself (as well) a new USB Keyboard and Mouse (for $25) which
    can plug into this Laptop and I'll see how I go!!

    Old Habits Die Hard!!
    --
    Daniel

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.6 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)