One other thing I forgot to mention that is important. If you do decide to use a live version of Linux and want a separate partition to install programs like Clementine or saved files you need to create the partitions on the thumb drive before you burn the .iso image of the operating system to the thumb drive. Once you install the operating system live on a thumb drive you cannot create a separate partition.
On Tuesday, March 9, 2021 at 2:15:02 PM UTC-5 Stephen LoPiano wrote: > Depends on what version of Windows 10 you have installed. I have heard > on radio talk shows about computers that the latest version of 10 is > changing compared to earlier versions of 10. 32 bit programs will no > longer be supported or usable. > I'm using build 19041 and that version runs Clementine very good. I > guess version 20H2 may be the one that no longer supports 32 bit programs, > forgot the version number they mentioned on this radio talk show. 20Hs > appears in my Windows 10 update section as available, so I would assume > this is the version. > If your computer has the latest version of 10 (whatever that may be) and > will not install Clementine, you might try installing on your computer a > version of LInux, Mint being the most popular version right now. > Clementine runs on 64 bit versions of this operating system. > You could also try a live version of LInux that runs the operating system > off a thumb drive without having to install on your computer. AV Linux > does have a live version with Clementine installed, to make using > Clementine with a Linux live version on a thumb drive or DVD easier. > Theoretically you could use any other live version of a Linux operating > system that does not include Clementine as part of the live version > operating system. Problem is every time you shut down the operating > system anything that is not pre-installed with the live version that you > could add through the software manager, software source, get-apt, dnf, or > Synaptic Package Manager will be removed since live versions do not have > the ability to add any programs to what is pre-installed as part of the > live operating system. There is one work around for this that involves > making some available gigabytes of space on the thumb drive as a separate > ext4 partition and then install the Clementine program within a > folder/directory on that partition. Most live versions of Linux require > approximately 2 to 4 gigabytes on a thumb drive to burn from an .iso > image. So a thumb drive with at least 8 gigabytes should allow you the > option of at least a 3 gigabyte separate partition, still a 16 or 32 > gigabyte thumb drive would be better for a situation where you plan to > continue using the live version instead of installing on your computer. > Eventually you may need to save any other things you create, such as > documents or other files and standalone programs added to the live > version. > You would need to go into that partition folder for Clementine any time > you re-boot to access the programs and files added since they will not ever > save or show up as part of the live operating system. > On Thursday, March 4, 2021 at 3:40:44 AM UTC-5 Babs St. wrote: > >> Is there a version for Win10 - 64-bit? >> > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Clementine Music Player" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/clementine-player/b2ff6601-3447-42ec-b9b3-395809125028n%40googlegroups.com.
