Have you considered that they may have used a 32bit UEFI bios combined with 64bit processor?
Try a distro that supports 32bit UEFI.
Have you considered that they may have used a 32bit UEFI bios combined with 64bit processor?
Try a distro that supports 32bit UEFI.
About 25 years for me.
For most people it’s a better option to use a local print shop for the odd times that they need something printed.
More options for printing too.
Have you tried running the laptop down until it shuts off then charging it?
Install RockBox onto it and continue using it as a music player.
Edit: apparently this is a device that can’t use RockBox.
It’s not so much both computers being able to access it.
From what I have experienced Timeshift tends to lock a drive when it is doing a backup.
If computer 1 is doing a backup and computer 2 tries to start it’s backup it may fail without you noticing.
Giving each computer their own partition on the drive should alleviate the problem.
A partition for each one the drive should work alright, but it may turn to custard if they both try to access the drive at the same time.
To be honest I haven’t had the need or the time to delve that deeply into how Timeshift works sorry.
You should be able to highlight the ones that you want to remove then click on the delete button.
From what I understand is that each backup is just the difference between the original backup and the current system.
Have a look at XNview MP
I can definitely say that it is avery good photo management program.
I am only using about 20% of it’s features and it is my go to image software.
What I do is start up Firefox first to create all the first start files then close it and delete everything in the Firefox folder then copy across everything from the original pc.
Seems to work alright.
Logitech does not support Linux.
Most of the current compatibility of Logitech devices comes from, Linux devs reverse engineering their software, USB standards or from default programing stored in the device.