Wine for ubuntu 9.10 free download
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Wine for ubuntu 9.10 free downloadWine for ubuntu 9.10 free download.The Perfect Desktop - Ubuntu 9.10 (Karmic Koala)
Post by dimesio » Mon May 24, pm. Post by Jim Hall » Mon May 24, pm. Post by desconocido » Mon May 24, pm. Post by Gert van den Berg » Mon May 24, pm. Post by desconocido » Thu May 27, pm. Post by Mugsy » Thu May 27, pm. Privacy Terms. Quick links. How can I install Wine on a computer without internet access Open forum for end-user questions about Wine.
Before asking questions, check out the Wiki as a first step. Forum Rules. How can I install Wine on a computer without internet access Post by desconocido » Mon Apr 26, am Hi, Couldn't find the answer searching the forum. I would like install Wine on a system that has Ubuntu 9. I have another system with Ubuntu 8. What happens if Wine wants more libraries? Thanks if you can help me at all, Bob. Post by Altair » Mon Apr 26, am Download the source code or de packages of your distribution for all programs you need.
Burn a CD with this and go to the computer without a Internet. You can also use the binary and install it with dpkg or gdebi. It opened with GDebi 0. I understand a bit about Synaptic, but not how to source stuff from a disk. Basic requirements: You need to have the X11 development include files installed called xlib6g-dev in Debian and XFreedevel in Red Hat. Of course you also need "make" most likely GNU make. You also need flex version 2. Anyone know where I can get a package with these in it?
Done Building dependency tree Reading state information Done libaudio2 is already the newest version. Re: How can I install Wine on a computer without internet ac Post by dimesio » Fri May 21, pm desconocido wrote: I tried this binary as well. I put it on my non-internet computer and double-clicked it.
Is there a version of Wine that works out of the box with with a non-upgraded install of Ubuntu Karmic 9. Post by dimesio » Mon May 24, pm desconocido wrote: Hmm, this could go on for ever, especially as there is a two day turn round time getting a new library onto the non-internet computer.
This has the advantage that you can test how Ubuntu works on your hardware before you finally install it. Double-click the Install Ubuntu 9. Now we come to the partitioning of our hard disk. Usually Erase and use the entire disk is a good choice, unless you need custom partitions and know what you're doing. Type in your real name, your desired username along with a password, and click on Forward :. The next screen shows us a summary of the installation settings. Click on Install to start the installation:.
After the installation, you will be asked to reboot the system. Click on Restart Now :. Your new Ubuntu system starts. Log in to the desktop with the username and password you provided during the installation:.
Your tutorials are clear, concise. Personally I feel these "Perfect Desktop's" should be considered suggestions for picking and chosing software to add to the standard Ubuntu install.
Good stuff, thanks! Another nice how-to, thanks! I have followed this one a couple of times building machines and every time I have had to manually download the jdk-6udocs. You'll have to answer a couple of questions re: language etc. I have installed this on an older Shuttle-fx box, and on a Lenovo Atom based netbook installed the netbook remix. Both have worked fine. I had no network issues, and can manage my router from either. I don't understand the DSL complaint.
Thereafter, all boxes that I had to connect were just connected to a private network. I didn't try that hard to make sure I had known working hardware, but the first place I would look would be that I didn't have known problem hardware. I do agree with the comment regarding WINE, sort of.
If the goal is a complete break from Windows, then maybe not, but if I wanted to deliver a box that worked for a friend or client, then WINE should be installed for the software that has no close enough replacement.
IrfanView springs to mind immediately. Couldn't agree more! I tried every Ubuntu release since Feisty and since Gutsy there is always something to destroy a possibly positive experience with ubuntu. This release this is broken, that release that is broken and the next release this and that and the other is broken.
Quite a shame! With almost all of my computers Karmic works great out of the box. I have troubles only with an Intel G41 based motherboard. I think it's always like this with Linux: you have to wait some months before the kernel supports the newest hardware I just spent 2 full days trying all the applications you mentioned would work with an iPod.
My Nano would not show up in any of them but RythymBox I can drop music in there but the iPod itself shows 0 songs. Did you just copy and paste off some report they gave you as to what each application was suppose to do without trying them yourself?
You're saying this is how you fully replace a Windows desktop, but in that case I'm missing one important piece of software that does something Linux can't do by itself:. Wine - to be able to run other miscellaneous, legacy or unported software the user might run. This doesn't mean Photoshop or anything, just those things that don't have a Linux equivalent - possibly a game, or some special application, or I think now I got some guidance from here.
Thanks for sharing. After upgrade - no sound, no screen brightness control so dim, I could hardly see anything , no DSL connection. Sitting for hours before the computer and dual booting into Windows to get to the Internet, I finally could get sound back and eventually found a hack note, not a normal solution, which should've been coded in there years ago, but a hack to fix the screen brightness.
My network manager app does not work and after trying to apply suggested fixes it simply deleted all of my connections and stopped recognizing any network at all. This happens to all systems, but in this exact case I would say Karmic release was definitely rushed, creating lots of problems for its users and producing very bad publicity.
For my personal needs, Ubuntu lacks one thing to convince me to leave Windows forever: an automatic form filler like Roboform. Give me that, and my XP cd gets thrown away. I switched from RoboForm to LastPass lastpass. I think LastPass might be a better choice from a functional perspective and it has good platform support.
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