This bug is not fixed.
I am still experiencing this bug, and have been for the past year or
longer.
I am using Ubuntu Software Center 5.0.2.
My computer:
Ubuntu 64-bit
AMD Phenom X4 9550 2.2 GHz
6 GB DDR2-800 RAM
Sapphire ATI Radeon HD 5670 1 GB GDDR5 via DVI; driver: fglrx (details below)
[
How would you call this low importance? This is the only and default
burning app included with Ubuntu, and the application makes so many
mistakes, that the user can't reasonably be expected to see through
this.
My experience was that the blank CD size was wrong, and I couldn't
select my CD from
*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 545911 ***
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/545911
This bug is due to another technological advancement by Microsoft.
I reformatted and partitioned my flash drive (4 GB Mushkin) using
Windows 7, and I told it to use FAT32, but instead it used VFAT without
I think this had something to do with /dev/sr0 at one point. I've been
trying to install Ub 10.10 and Kub 10.10 and Ub 8.04 to a USB key (and a
hard drive) and the first 4 times I tried, it always threw up whenever
it tried to read the /dev/sr0 block device, and the install never
continued.
The
My backtrace too (I think I included what is useful; I'm totally new to bug
reporting, so let me know if I didn't):
Apr 7 03:32:58 ubuntu ubiquity: Searching for available drivers...
Apr 7 03:32:58 ubuntu ubiquity[9849]: Step_before = stepPrepare
Apr 7 03:32:58 ubuntu activate-dmraid: No
This should be promoted to critical, because it happens every time, and
many people simply want a full portable version of Linux to run on guest
computers when they don't have rights or the computers are configured
improperly (or compromised), such as school computers (very few decent
pieces of
I meant I was trying to install Ub 10.04 to a key---not Ub 8.04 .
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/660942
Title:
parted_server crashes during installation onto USB key.
--
OK. I like the idea of identifying them graphically. I had an idea
though.
Instead of using a bitmap on top (like a stamp), why not use a pre-rendered
drop shadow that uses a gradient that is representative of the operating
system. Windows would be
Red Green
Blue Yellow
as such--just make