There is no error. Only a warning about "setting GRUB_TIMEOUT to a non-zero
value when GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT is set". Just don't do that. Edit
/etc/default/grub (here with GEdit):
$ gksu gedit /etc/default/grub
Read
LVM actually eases partition resizing. LVM was created to have more flexible
partitioning schemes, more independent from the actual disks. System
administrators (in companies, institutions, etc.) usually prefer CLIs but,
yes, it would be nice to have a GUI.
As for "changing the binaries
Go ahead: http://world.std.com/~reinhold/diceware.html
That main points about XFS are covered in the thread I invited you to read.
Twice. In the last paragraph of this post for example:
https://trisquel.info/forum/partition-table-suggested-installing-three-gnulinux-systems#comment-69798
You could use an XFS filesystem for /home. It is said to be
I do not know. I only encrypt /home (one box to click in Trisquel's graphical
installer). I have not changed the system on a specific machine for many
years: I now always install Trisquel when I buy it and then upgrade to
Trisquel's next versions, when released. I guess it must not be hard
You should ideally just make a separate /home partition so that it is less
likely that your data will be lost if root goes berserk.
And it makes it easier to install another GNU/Linux system while keeping the
user data: to do so, indicate the installer that the existing partition is
where
Again: see
https://trisquel.info/forum/partition-table-suggested-installing-three-gnulinux-systems
See
https://trisquel.info/forum/partition-table-suggested-installing-three-gnulinux-systems