Persistence to usb (how to?)

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  • This topic has 19 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated Jun 24-2:59 pm by dski.
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  • #21279
    Anonymous
      #21309
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      dacomboman
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        http://imagizer.imageshack.com/img921/5049/wazqKE.png

        Fast startup is disabled:
        HiberbootEnabled DWORD
        0 = Turn off fast startup
        1 = Turn on fast startup

        #21321
        Anonymous
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          .

          #22601
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          dacomboman
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            Turns out, the usb device itself was defective (bummer!).
            Everything running smoothly now on a Sandisk.

            #23787
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            dski
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              > That said, as a former technical writer, you might be willing to participate
              > and make what you can — help writing some better documentation.

              That would be a case of the blind leading the blind. I struggle with this
              stuff as much as anyone else, even when the documentation is decent (and the
              antiX docs are definitely above average).

              As a tech writer, I mostly did docs for scanners, routers, and wireless
              networking equipment, as well as related software — simple stuff, compared to
              any Unix-like OS. (I also had managers who would sit me down and lecture me if
              my understanding of something was incorrect.)

              Having been a tech writer actually doesn’t mean much. When I started, I had
              learned some BASIC and could read hex dumps and patch binaries to change
              keystrokes and printer codes, but some folks with the same job title literally
              didn’t know a bit from a byte (and wrote in ways that made it hard to believe
              they’d completed college).

              Not that I’m such a great writer myself. I can’t even convince Linux users
              that the reasons I use Linux are valid! (Hint: My main interest is user
              interface design, and I feel that Linux is our only hope of a renaissance in
              this area. The Golden Age was 1979-1981, and we have been in the Dark Ages
              since then.)

              Regards,
              Dan Strychalski
              Hsinchu, Taiwan, ROC

              On the Mac, Ctrl didn't exist; in Windows, Ctrl-A through Ctrl-Z did virtually nothing. From 1985 on, the choice was clear: you could get the full benefit of the most basic standard of computing, or you could use a GUI and a crippled keyboard and become this or that vendor's slave. I chose WordStar. LIVE FREE OR DIE.

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