Thanks. Phillip and Lance for your help today, much appreciated. Iwill keep you posted on my progress.  I will try not try not to let you down Philly. My gol in lubuntu is to make tutorials very easy. To understand, to the people like me that did not have a computer background. 

 

Sent from my LG Escape™, an AT&T 4G LTE smartphone

 

 

 

------ Original Message ------
From: Phill Whiteside
Date: 3/8/2013 8:11 PM
To: Jose Lopez;[email protected];
Cc: [email protected];
Subject: Re: [Lubuntu-qa] Zsync

 

Hi Jose,

I can see a need for a more detailed classroom session after 13.04 is released, it is patently obvious that the current one does not explain things fully.

Thanks for pointing this out. We do require you new comers to tell us where the instructions are not clear.

I will be checking with you as I get this new session up and running once 13.04 is released, please do keep notes of all the problems and issues you are having so that we can give a good lesson for people new to it..... Oh, yes,... I expect you to be there to answer questions from new comers :)

Regards,

Phill.

On 9 March 2013 01:25, Jonathan Marsden <[email protected]> wrote:
On Fri, Mar 8, 2013, at 04:31 PM, Jose Lopez wrote:

> Ok I found it. Zsync did put it in the /home , but it made it's own
> file. now I'm going to make a copy for testing. Q. should I erase the
> one on my /home/jose/iso, and replace it with this one?

You should decide where you want the ISO.  /home/jose/iso/ is fine. You
should cd into that directory, and then run zsync in there, so that is
where it stores the ISO file.  You can then delete all other copies of
it from other places, so they do not confuse you, and so they do not
waste disk space.

> Zsync must do something that will recognize it's own, and for some
> reason it did not recognized the one I had in their. Q do I need to
> put a "s" on that directory file name (Like) /home/jose/isos?

It doesn't matter, you can use any name you like for the directory. Just
use the *same* name every time you use zsync, so you update the copy you
already have, and do not start a new one each time.  So you probably
want to do something like

  cd /home/jose/iso
  zsync
  http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/lubuntu/daily-live/current/raring-desktop-amd64.iso.zsync

in a terminal window, each time you want to update this ISO.

Jonathan
--
  Jonathan Marsden
  [email protected]



--
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/phillw
-- 
Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~lubuntu-qa
Post to     : [email protected]
Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~lubuntu-qa
More help   : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp

Reply via email to