Vincent wrote:
The problem was solved by download the .iso file using another computer.
The corrupted file was downloaded using Kget this utility some how it
got activated, because originally wasn't there this is the only visible
thing different. I like to remove Kget or disable but I do not
The problem was solved by download the .iso file using another computer.
The corrupted file was downloaded using Kget this utility some how it
got activated, because originally wasn't there this is the only visible
thing different. I like to remove Kget or disable but I do not know
how.
here
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Le 12/11/2010 22:20, Vincent a écrit :
Hello All'
I downloaded fedora-14-i386-dvd.iso several time included bitorrent. The
dvd disk were burned from two different computer, they all show error
during the test.
I had problems like this several
When you burn the iso image, make sure the computer isn't trying to do
too many other things. This is less of a problem now, but in the good
old days the computer could be so busy that it wouldn't get data to the
burner fast enough, and that would result in a bad copy (also known as a
coaster, as
Hello All'
I downloaded fedora-14-i386-dvd.iso several time included bitorrent. The
dvd disk were burned from two different computer, they all show error
during the test. The installation were tested on 3 different computer.
The bittorrent when downloaded made a directory fedora-14-i386-dvd in
I
in a terminal window, cd to the directory with the bittorrent files
(example: cd Download/Fedora-14-i386-DVD) and enter: sha256sum -c
*CHECKSUM
(This is the lazy man's way to do it. The system will try to find all
the CDs too, and fail them, but who cares? Just so the DVD you're
interested in
On 12/11/10 22:06, William Stock wrote:
in a terminal window, cd to the directory with the bittorrent files
(example: cd Download/Fedora-14-i386-DVD) and enter: sha256sum -c
*CHECKSUM
(This is the lazy man's way to do it. The system will try to find all
the CDs too, and fail them, but who