Somehow, either because of my installation of Service Pack 3 for Windows XP, or because I accidently removed a driver, my XP installation on my desktop computer was refusing to start up. Just prior to loading Windows, it complained about something like "a corrupt or missing file C:\WINDOWS\INF\BIOSINFO.INF ...". According to Google results, this can be repaired by booting from the XP installation CD and running the Recovery Console. Unfortunately I could not provide the administrator password the Recovery Console was looking for.
However, although I don't actually have my desktop dual-booting, I could use my Ubuntu 9.10 install disc to run Ubuntu from the CD. Ubuntu is able to access my XP partitions, and thus I could copy the BIOSINFO.INF file from the XP install CD to the C:\WINDOWS\INF\ folder!
Sunday, February 28, 2010
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Zimbra Desktop and managing your free webmail accounts
Zimbra Desktop is useful for aggregating your various webmail accounts. You know those email accounts that you check so seldomly? Zimbra can help keep track of them. Assuming Yahoo Mail, Gmail, and Hotmail are the leading free webmail providers, Zimbra has support for all of them.
As far as I know, it is the only desktop software that is able to sync with a free Yahoo account. There is no problem with Gmail since Google openly allows POP and IMAP access to Gmail (Zimbra also has a pre-configured Gmail set-up for convenience). Finally, Microsoft does seem to allow Hotmail access over POP; here are the settings to use. One annoying thing for Hotmail in Zimbra is that your mail is deleted from the Hotmail server's mailbox after you've downloaded from the Hotmail server to Zimbra, and folders you may have created in Hotmail are not sync'd to Zimbra.
You can also add your work or ISP mail accounts to Zimbra Desktop as long as you know the POP or IMAP and SMTP settings to use. Zimbra itself is a decent email client so it's ideal as a one-stop-shop for your email.
As far as I know, it is the only desktop software that is able to sync with a free Yahoo account. There is no problem with Gmail since Google openly allows POP and IMAP access to Gmail (Zimbra also has a pre-configured Gmail set-up for convenience). Finally, Microsoft does seem to allow Hotmail access over POP; here are the settings to use. One annoying thing for Hotmail in Zimbra is that your mail is deleted from the Hotmail server's mailbox after you've downloaded from the Hotmail server to Zimbra, and folders you may have created in Hotmail are not sync'd to Zimbra.
You can also add your work or ISP mail accounts to Zimbra Desktop as long as you know the POP or IMAP and SMTP settings to use. Zimbra itself is a decent email client so it's ideal as a one-stop-shop for your email.
Sunday, February 14, 2010
Windows 7 Ultimate and Ubuntu 9.10
About a week ago, after booting into Vista, the keyboard and touchpad on my Acer laptop stopped responding. Editing the Bios settings or using the Ubuntu Live CD, the keyboard/touchpad worked fine so it wasn't a hardware problem. After trying to dual boot Ubuntu and Vista, I arrived at a Grub "No filesystem found" error. May be due to the OEM partitioning which was consuming a lot of hard disk space unnecessarily too. So it was quite easy to resolve to do a clean install. The Ubuntu Live CD allowed me to access the Windows partitions to back up the little data I hadn't already backed up.
- Loosely following the instructions here, I first ran Gparted and created one primary partition for Windows and one extended partition for Linux. In the extended partition, I created two logical partitions, one formatted ext4 for / (root), /home, etc. and one formatted linux-swap (2 GB) for swapping. Note that unlike the instructions described at ubuntuguide.org, I did NOT require a small partition for storing Grub files
- Since I have a valid MSDN license, I downloaded Windows 7 Ultimate and burned a DVD with the .iso image. During the Windows 7 installation, I choose a "Custom" installation, which allowed me to choose which partition to install Windows into. Yes, this Windows 7 installation does play nicely. Also, with a clean install, Windows 7 takes a little over 15 GB in hard disk space, compared to the OEM Vista installation. This is because I don't have the OEM hidden partition containing the recovery media, nor the Windows XP Embedded partition, nor the Acer OEM software, none of which was really that useful.
- After testing that Windows 7 was installed properly, I ran the Ubuntu 9.10 CD. By default, the Ubuntu installation ignored the two partitions that I had already created for Linux purposes. Instead it proposed to create a fourth partition for Ubuntu exclusively. However, choosing the manual/advanced option, I could specify where to mount each partition (i.e. for root and for swap purposes) so that the partitions that I created earlier could be put to use.
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Virtual PC 2007, Vista Home Premium and Linux distributions
Wanted to have access to a Linux environment on my Vista laptop. Although Virtual PC 2007 is not officially supported on Vista Home Premium, I gave it a try and so far it appears to run fine. Attempted to install Ubuntu 9.10 within Virtual PC but there were some display problems and eventually it appears that it started Ubuntu in the demo mode. That is, not installed to (virtual) hard disk. Moved to the second most popular Linux distribution according to DistroWatch which is Fedora 12. This had display problems after the initial boot-up. So came to Open Suse, which I have installed before without problems. The current version, 11.2, also installed without too many problems (two seemingly corrupted files?). Access to internet and Gnome GUI desktop environment within virtual environment.
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