I've been a Linux user since the late '90s, started playing around with RedHat and finally settled on Kubuntu a long time ago now. I've enjoyed the small quirks, like spending a few hours trying to get a TV card to work, a printer to install, using the command line to install stuff. I've always managed to find something, some small kernel of help in the internet that led me to a solution, and all was well with the world. I've evangelised to friends and tried to convert them, thankfully unsuccessfully.
But 18.04 has broken me. 17.04 and .10 was a bit of a struggle to install with issues being thrown up, such as having to remove a certain file from the USB because it couldn't configure apt to install additional packages.
But 18.04, you've done for me. I've spent all day and I have lost my Linux installation completely. It pains me to say this, but thank the Microsoft powers that be, because without the Windows partition I dual boot from I wouldn't have anything. As it is I'm now going to have to find some way to restore my Linux backup to my Windows partition.
What amazes me is that the apt configuration problem has been going on for many years, so why do I still find myself having to scour the internet (after an install has failed) to find the command that removes the recalcitrant file, why haven't the developers sorted this by now, because I know I'm not the only one who's been having this issue. But that one I could solve, that in itself didn't bother me, I like a challenge. But the grub error has me beat. The only suggestions I've seen are to completely wipe my hard drive, repartition manually, and start from scratch. It's UEFI's fault, says one. I may need to manually create a UEFI folder says another. But I have a UEFI partition, I managed to do all that for 17.04. What have the developers done that has completely broken a distribution for me that makes my laptop all but useless, and totally useless as far as Linux is concerned?
But no, I've had enough. I am going to re-partition, but only to give Windows back the other half of the hard disk. I don't need this hassle, of losing a whole ******g day trying to sort this mess out.
After 20 years of using Linux I'm giving up.
But 18.04 has broken me. 17.04 and .10 was a bit of a struggle to install with issues being thrown up, such as having to remove a certain file from the USB because it couldn't configure apt to install additional packages.
But 18.04, you've done for me. I've spent all day and I have lost my Linux installation completely. It pains me to say this, but thank the Microsoft powers that be, because without the Windows partition I dual boot from I wouldn't have anything. As it is I'm now going to have to find some way to restore my Linux backup to my Windows partition.
What amazes me is that the apt configuration problem has been going on for many years, so why do I still find myself having to scour the internet (after an install has failed) to find the command that removes the recalcitrant file, why haven't the developers sorted this by now, because I know I'm not the only one who's been having this issue. But that one I could solve, that in itself didn't bother me, I like a challenge. But the grub error has me beat. The only suggestions I've seen are to completely wipe my hard drive, repartition manually, and start from scratch. It's UEFI's fault, says one. I may need to manually create a UEFI folder says another. But I have a UEFI partition, I managed to do all that for 17.04. What have the developers done that has completely broken a distribution for me that makes my laptop all but useless, and totally useless as far as Linux is concerned?
But no, I've had enough. I am going to re-partition, but only to give Windows back the other half of the hard disk. I don't need this hassle, of losing a whole ******g day trying to sort this mess out.
After 20 years of using Linux I'm giving up.
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