Linux Tutorials on the topic “Ubuntu”

  • How To Add A Splash Image To GRUB 2 On Ubuntu 9.04

    ubuntu Author: Falko TimmeTags: Comments: 4

    How To Add A Splash Image To GRUB 2 On Ubuntu 9.04 This tutorial shows how you can add a splash image to your GRUB 2 boot loader on Ubuntu 9.04. Please note that you should use this tutorial only if you have upgraded your bootloader to GRUB 2 previously.

  • How To Install GRUB 2 On Ubuntu 9.04

    ubuntu Author: Falko TimmeTags: Comments: 19

    How To Install GRUB 2 On Ubuntu 9.04 This tutorial shows how you can upgrade your GRUB bootloader to GRUB 2 on Ubuntu 9.04. GRUB 2 has been rewritten from scratch to clean up everything for modularity and portability.

  • How To Enable Adobe's Flash Player In Google Chrome (Ubuntu 9.04)

    ubuntu Author: Falko TimmeTags: , Comments: 39

    How To Enable Adobe's Flash Player In Google Chrome (Ubuntu 9.04) This tutorial explains how you can install the Google Chrome browser on Ubuntu 9.04 and how to enable the Adobe Flash plugin in it. Please note that Google Chrome for Ubuntu is still in alpha state and should not be used on production systems.

  • Creating Backups With Back In Time On An Ubuntu 9.04 Desktop

    ubuntu Author: Falko TimmeTags: , , Comments: 3

    Creating Backups With Back In Time On An Ubuntu 9.04 Desktop This tutorial explains how to install and use Back In Time on an Ubuntu 9.04 desktop. Back In Time is a simple backup tool for Linux inspired from "flyback project" and "TimeVault". The backup is done by taking snapshots of a specified set of directories.

  • Setting Up Subversion W/ WebDav, Post-Commit Hook & Multiple Sites On Jaunty Jackalope (Ubuntu 9.04)

    ubuntu Author: mfooteTags: Comments: 7

    Setting Up Subversion W/ WebDav, Post-Commit Hook & Multiple Sites On Jaunty Jackalope (Ubuntu 9.04) This tutorial was designed for someone setting up their 1st Jaunty Jackalope (Ubuntu 9.04) - Subversion server. When I first started with Subversion, I became very frustrated with the many tutorials that were vague on the key part of what I was installing... Subversion! I included some "ease of use" packages for us Linux newbs :).

  • Installing The Sugar Desktop Environment On Ubuntu 9.04

    ubuntu Author: Falko TimmeTags: , Comments: 0

    Installing The Sugar Desktop Environment On Ubuntu 9.04 Sugar is the desktop environment that is used for the "One Laptop per Child" (OLPC) netbooks. It can also be installed on normal computers. This guide shows how you can install Sugar on an Ubuntu 9.04 desktop.

  • Creating Backups With luckyBackup On An Ubuntu 9.04 Desktop

    ubuntu Author: Falko TimmeTags: , , Comments: 5

    Creating Backups With luckyBackup On An Ubuntu 9.04 Desktop This tutorial explains how to install and use luckyBackup on an Ubuntu 9.04 desktop. luckyBackup is an application for data back-up and synchronization powered by the rsync tool. It is simple to use, fast (transfers over only changes made and not all data), safe (keeps your data safe by checking all declared directories before proceeding in any data manipulation ), reliable and fully customizable.

  • Clean Up Your Desktop With Computer Janitor On Ubuntu 9.04

    ubuntu Author: Falko TimmeTags: , Comments: 4

    Clean Up Your Desktop With Computer Janitor On Ubuntu 9.04 Computer Janitor is a tool that lets you clean up a system so it's more like a freshly installed one. Computer Janitor deletes unnecessary files to free valuable disk space. This tutorial shows how to use it on an Ubuntu 9.04 desktop.

  • The Perfect Desktop - Kubuntu 9.04

    kubuntu Author: Falko TimmeTags: , Comments: 6

    The Perfect Desktop - Kubuntu 9.04 This tutorial shows how you can set up a Kubuntu 9.04 desktop that is a full-fledged replacement for a Windows desktop, i.e. that has all the software that people need to do the things they do on their Windows desktops. The advantages are clear: you get a secure system without DRM restrictions that works even on old hardware, and the best thing is: all software comes free of charge. Kubuntu 9.04 is derived from Ubuntu 9.04 and uses the KDE desktop instead of the GNOME desktop.

  • The Perfect Desktop - gOS 3.1 Gadgets

    linux Author: Falko TimmeTags: , Comments: 2

    The Perfect Desktop - gOS 3.1 Gadgets This tutorial shows how you can set up a gOS 3.1 Gadgets desktop that is a full-fledged replacement for a Windows desktop, i.e. that has all the software that people need to do the things they do on their Windows desktops. The advantages are clear: you get a secure system without DRM restrictions that works even on old hardware, and the best thing is: all software comes free of charge. gOS is a lightweight Linux distribution, based on Ubuntu 8.04, that comes with Google Apps and some other Web 2.0 applications; gOS 3.1 Gadgets uses the GNOME desktop.