Hello, sorry to interrupt in this thread but it appeared on my feed. I know (almost) nothing about laserdiscs.
Would you be so kind as to explain what are the acronyms CAV wnd CLV referring to ?
Cheers
Hello, sorry to interrupt in this thread but it appeared on my feed. I know (almost) nothing about laserdiscs.
Would you be so kind as to explain what are the acronyms CAV wnd CLV referring to ?
Cheers
Me too, and it's disturbing we have found something less stupid.
Time of my life - Black Eyed Peas
The technology is proMising.
The article was, however, very poorly written.
My honest opinion : there's no red flag, don't listen to the otger dinwit.
Stop devaluating yourself. Be proud of your accomplishments, no matter hoe small. Stop complaining. Start valuating yourself and others. Stop pointing out your foaws, value your qualities.
Nobody has fun with someone who constantly tries to play the victim and the whiNy baby. Be proud, be fierce.
You are looing at DB with nostalgia glasses.
There's a lot which sucks, but there's also good animes. We've aged, so we're not the main population to attract. Of course it doesn't always suit us.
I wish to point out that, perv stuff has become more mainstream, due to the internet. But it has always exi ted, in the same proortions.
...
Putting cassettes in computer is OLD. Like... Gen X old.
The problem seems to come from Windows. However, what you can do is open a terminal then type :
sudo os-prober
sudo grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg
Try to reboot and see what happens. If it doesn't fix anything, then it might be that your Windows SSD should be mounted directly on the motherboard or, at the very least, on a USB-C port.
Sometimes, what happens is that the hub needs a driver which isn't loaded by the DOS kernel by default. And since it isn't loaded, Windows can't recognise the hub so the hard drive containing itself can't be found.
If that solution works, maybe you should swap your windows and your linux SSDs, see if the linux kernel can figure out the hub at boot.
This error (hd0) is typical of legacy (BIOS) booting end happens solely because of the MBR. GRUB2 is hit or miss with MBR.
If you're not planning on dual booting with Windows XP/Vista/7, I'd recommend going to your motherboard settings and changing the boot mode to UEFI.
Then reinstall Debian. That will automatically sort things out :)
Thank you for differentiating between french and parisians.