Interesting. I met some Norwegian guys in a pub in Spain and they thought he meant Arch. Some Finnish guys took this to mean there was something wrong with their shoes, while the Germans and Dutch wondered what everyone had against Suse. In the end, evryone agreed that Morten Kijorth could not have possibly made such a statement and must have been quoted out of context.😀
I have not compared the images yet, but was wondering why go with all that trouble with creating a VM, starting Live Image and installing it on a USB as target, since there is a ready FULL USB image (FD13FULL.img), which one can burn onto your USB stick directly (even with that Rufus or probably Balena Etcher or sth similar) and voila.... I presume they are the same with content, aren't they ?
Rufus purpose is to easily format and create Windows Installations. In the case of 11, can remove some annoyances that prevent installing on hardware now deemed obsolete by 11 and isn’t. It can also install FreeDOS as a bootable drive, and if you use the last version for under 7, MS-DOS as a bootable drive. You still need to add commands. FreeDOS is an ISO you download separately, but you can copy any commands you need to the USB from this ISO. Configuration may need some tinkering too. It’s a superb and very useful Freeware.
Yes, I'm using the default kvm virtualization on Linux. The graphical tool I used to interface with it in this video is known as "Virtual Machine Manager" and it is just a front-end to the kvm virtualization. I'm using Fedora linux, and the instructions to set that up are here: docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/quick-docs/virtualization-getting-started/ Hope that helps! :-)
Great video, thanks. Have a great weekend.
Thanks for watching! You have a wonderful weekend too! :-)
"CentOS is for the people who didn't get enough love as a child and now they're self hurting" Morten Kijorth in a video
Interesting. I met some Norwegian guys in a pub in Spain and they thought he meant Arch. Some Finnish guys took this to mean there was something wrong with their shoes, while the Germans and Dutch wondered what everyone had against Suse. In the end, evryone agreed that Morten Kijorth could not have possibly made such a statement and must have been quoted out of context.😀
He did that search for lsi 9206-16e my playhouse
I have not compared the images yet, but was wondering why go with all that trouble with creating a VM, starting Live Image and installing it on a USB as target, since there is a ready FULL USB image (FD13FULL.img), which one can burn onto your USB stick directly (even with that Rufus or probably Balena Etcher or sth similar) and voila.... I presume they are the same with content, aren't they ?
I could be wrong, but I think that's the full image installer, no? Which is basically what I used in this video.
I found a vendor stealing your photos on ebay and it's not you (will links get banned?) it has the art if server brand on the photos!
yes, I am aware. I have posted several times on here and elsewhere warning my supporters. thanks for your message!
Poor old Rufus, he doesn't know what to do,
but here comes Art of Server, he'll see the process through ! 😂😂😂
LOL
Rufus purpose is to easily format and create Windows Installations. In the case of 11, can remove some annoyances that prevent installing on hardware now deemed obsolete by 11 and isn’t. It can also install FreeDOS as a bootable drive, and if you use the last version for under 7, MS-DOS as a bootable drive. You still need to add commands.
FreeDOS is an ISO you download separately, but you can copy any commands you need to the USB from this ISO. Configuration may need some tinkering too.
It’s a superb and very useful Freeware.
Rufus is great for what it does. I'm just showing there's more to FreeDOS than what some people think based on using Rufus.
Were you running Virtual Machine from Linux? If so, what needs to be installed?
Yes, I'm using the default kvm virtualization on Linux. The graphical tool I used to interface with it in this video is known as "Virtual Machine Manager" and it is just a front-end to the kvm virtualization. I'm using Fedora linux, and the instructions to set that up are here:
docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/quick-docs/virtualization-getting-started/
Hope that helps! :-)
@@ArtofServer - Thanks for the reply and info.