Hi Patrik,
On Wed, 18. Jul 2018 at 09:28:37 +1200, Patrick Dunford wrote:
> On 17/07/18 23:02, Andre Joost wrote:
> > Am 17.07.18 um 03:58 schrieb Patrick Dunford:
> > > 1. The repositories labelled "debian" are for both Debian and Ubuntu -
> > > you specify the release name in the deb statement
Well, that's an interesting question (renaming the path to debian-ubuntu
could be thought of?)
On 17/07/18 23:02, Andre Joost wrote:
Am 17.07.18 um 03:58 schrieb Patrick Dunford:
1. The repositories labelled "debian" are for both Debian and Ubuntu -
you specify the release name in the deb
Am 17.07.18 um 03:58 schrieb Patrick Dunford:
1. The repositories labelled "debian" are for both Debian and Ubuntu -
you specify the release name in the deb statement which supports release
names for both distros.
Not very intuitive for new users :-(
2. You need to check error messages
Hi there
The core development of Qgis is on Linux so it is very well supported on
that platform. In answer to your specific questions:
* Use the latest stable version of Ubuntu (18.04) - variants like
Lubuntu, Xubuntu etc also work well and may be more suited to specific
requirements.
1. The
On Mon, Jul 16, 2018 at 1:21 PM, Mats Elfström
wrote:
>
> Hi all!
>
> 3/ The instructions give the advice: ”In case you would like to install
> QGIS Server (note that it’s not a common practice to install both client
> and server applications on the same machine)…”
>
> Why is that? To me it
Hi all!
I am in need of some advice, because I am venturing into unknown territory.
I want to explore the Linux side of QGIS, and I want to set up a Linux GIS
machine (Cloud based). Bear with me, because my computing skills are in
Microsoft territory. However, they date back from DOS days so I