euclid.iso
euclid.iso
XFCE 4.10 OPERATING SYSTEM
BASED ON DEBIANDOG
PULSEAUDIO
ZRAM
REMASTER IN 10 S
UEFI BOOT
SYNAPTIC
FAST, FAST,VERY FAST..
LZ4 FULL
install with unetbootin
https://ulozto.net/!8ny39BFstcNw/euclid-iso
BASED ON DEBIANDOG
PULSEAUDIO
ZRAM
REMASTER IN 10 S
UEFI BOOT
SYNAPTIC
FAST, FAST,VERY FAST..
LZ4 FULL
install with unetbootin
https://ulozto.net/!8ny39BFstcNw/euclid-iso
euclid.iso screenshots
screenshots
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- Posts: 154
- Joined: Wed 10 Aug 2011, 21:41
- Location: United States
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The debian dog website has all the main DD versions. They all run about the same. https://debiandog.github.io/doglinux/
If you need UEFI or whatever it is, having it built in is an innovation only this version has.
If you need UEFI or whatever it is, having it built in is an innovation only this version has.
UEFI is the new Windows 8 and later bios that requires specific keys etc etc to log in. If your computer didn't come with Windows 8 or later, you don't need to worry about it. If your computer did come with windows 8 or later, then search there are lots of threads on it. Mostly you can just set your computer for legacy boot.Buddy wrote:So assuming this reply was for me Dancytron...
What is the most "bar bone" version of them all?
And what is the bigger benefit of having the UEFI in a 32 bits OS?
It is very simple (much simpler than puppy) to uninstall things and remaster, so you can make it as bare bones as you want as long as the desktop still works.
The version that has the most time spent on it is the 32 bit Jessie version.
https://debiandog.github.io/doglinux/zz ... essie.html
Well I have been able to boot euclid using grub4dos. I cannot get a screen resolution higher than 800x600. This is my screen resolution in puppy.
On shutdown while it reaches 'system halt' it will not shut down. Anybody having similar problems?
Ken.
Code: Select all
Display Specifications:
• Monitor VertRefresh: 60.0 times/s
• Screen Dimensions: 1024x768 pixels (271x203 millimeters)
• Screen Depth: 24 bits (planes)
Ken.
Size is 302MB.. Grub4Dos should work.. Bookmarked..
Size is 302MB.. Grub4Dos should work.. Bookmarked..
What is important for me is the Debian apps not available in Puppy Linux because not yet compiled As GCstar. I have yet a pendrive 8GB for Xenial Dog. I had to give te whole space to XenialDog. Perhaps with grub4dos i could share it between several OS, including a Puppy.. On test.
What is important for me is the Debian apps not available in Puppy Linux because not yet compiled As GCstar. I have yet a pendrive 8GB for Xenial Dog. I had to give te whole space to XenialDog. Perhaps with grub4dos i could share it between several OS, including a Puppy.. On test.
Euclid Will Not Boot on the HP Pavillion G60 Laptop
Hi,
I burned copies of both versions of Euclid and wanted to try them. However the discs do not boot in an HP Pavillion G60 laptop. This is extremely rare for this computer, and it has run well over five different distros. It runs: Slacko, Tahrpup, Fatdog, Macpup, Wary, and several others.
I am posting this from Xenial Puppy.
Hope this helps, B'H.
I burned copies of both versions of Euclid and wanted to try them. However the discs do not boot in an HP Pavillion G60 laptop. This is extremely rare for this computer, and it has run well over five different distros. It runs: Slacko, Tahrpup, Fatdog, Macpup, Wary, and several others.
I am posting this from Xenial Puppy.
Hope this helps, B'H.
Hello All,
I think problem 2 is now solved. I reset the hardware clock and synchronised it. I could not find how to do this in euclid so I did it in lucid. I also remembered that when I had a shutdown problem before one suggested solution was to use acpi=force and this had worked. I have added this to my grub entry though I'm not sure if it's doing anything. Anyway the result of this is the laptop seems to shutdown properly though I'm now not sure that seeing the last part of this or not makes any difference. The hardware clock remains set to the correct time and the laptop does not reboot it's self so far. I hope this is it fixed though I'm not realy sure why.
Regards,
Ken
I think problem 2 is now solved. I reset the hardware clock and synchronised it. I could not find how to do this in euclid so I did it in lucid. I also remembered that when I had a shutdown problem before one suggested solution was to use acpi=force and this had worked. I have added this to my grub entry though I'm not sure if it's doing anything. Anyway the result of this is the laptop seems to shutdown properly though I'm now not sure that seeing the last part of this or not makes any difference. The hardware clock remains set to the correct time and the laptop does not reboot it's self so far. I hope this is it fixed though I'm not realy sure why.
Regards,
Ken