My little 40 GiBs hdd is kind of small by current standards. When I start running out of space, I always wondered what else I could do with those hundreds of music videos? Put 'em on dvd!
But 11.3 doesn’t detect the dvd-rom, much less the disc. 11.4 did and the sound was much better than with my other Linux os. How can we fix this?
I mean that when I put a previously burned disk in the dvd there is no response. But also the same with a blank disk as well. No response. On the left column of the file browser, the dvd-rom isn’t listed. The dvd I installed with doesn’t show up in the installed system.
Computer
Summary
Computer
Processor Intel(R) Pentium(R) 4 CPU 1.80GHz
Memory 1030MB (414MB used)
Operating System openSUSE 11.3 (i586)
User Name randall (Randall)
Date/Time Sun 10 Apr 2011 05:28:41 AM EDT
Display
Resolution 1920x1440 pixels
OpenGL Renderer GeForce FX 5500/AGP/SSE2
X11 Vendor The X.Org Foundation
Multimedia
Audio Adapter ICH4 - Intel 82801DB-ICH4
Audio Adapter USB-Audio - USB Device 0x46d
Input Devices
AT Translated Set 2 keyboard
Microsoft Microsoft Wheel Mouse Optical®
Sleep Button
Power Button
PC Speaker
UVC Camera (046d:08c9)
Printers
No printers found
SCSI Disks
ATA Maxtor 2F040J1
ATA MAXTOR 6L040J2
SAMSUNG DVD-ROM SD-616E
HL-DT-ST CD-RW GCE-8483B
There was a bug in 11.2 or 11.3 whereby you needed the workaround of adding yourself to the group cdrom in Yast → security and users → user and group management → edit your username → details → additional groups → and put a tick in the group cdrom.
But I’m very hazy about it, long time ago. Try it out.
Also, I have KDE and you have Gnome so maybe you need a Gnome user to look at this too.
But I note that the password listed (six bullets - no actual characters) is not my root password. In fact, I don’t know what the six bullets represent. I didn’t change anything, though, lest I screw something up. When I got there, the only group ticked was “vboxusers,” but I didn’t put it there. Could it have been done automatically with the install of virtualbox?
I have a handful of incidental questions – should I start new threads for all of them, or can I run some by you now?
There are some other things that I’m accustomed to seeing in the left column of the file browser that aren’t there, either. I’m very hazy on this, but I think I once read that that might have to do with some uninstalled samba stuff. So anyway, I went to: The Perfect Desktop - OpenSUSE 11.3 (GNOME) | HowtoForge - Linux … and installed everything suggested, thinking that whatever I need that I don’t have would be included in the whole potpourri. That’s how I got virtualbox. But I’m wondering if virtualbox will work on this computer because it (this computer) doesn’t have hardware virtualization? What do you think?
Should I change the password to my root password. What changes can I expect if I tick the root group?
As always your (you as well as the SuSE community) help is much appreciated. Thank you.
On 2011-04-10 22:36, Randymanme wrote:
>
> Thank you.
>
> I followed those directions; no change.
>
> But I note that the password listed (six bullets - no actual
> characters) is not my root password.
Where? Password for what?
–
Cheers / Saludos,
Carlos E. R.
(from 11.2 x86_64 “Emerald” at Telcontar)
There are some other things that I’m accustomed to seeing in the left column of the file browser that aren’t there, either. I’m very hazy on this, but I think I once read that that might have to do with some uninstalled samba stuff. So anyway, I went to: The Perfect Desktop - OpenSUSE 11.3 (GNOME) | HowtoForge - Linux … and installed everything suggested, thinking that whatever I need that I don’t have would be included in the whole potpourri. That’s how I got virtualbox. But I’m wondering if virtualbox will work on this computer because it (this computer) doesn’t have hardware virtualization? What do you think?
Virtualbox you need to try it to see if it works – but only if you need to run another distro inside of openSUSE, otherwise I’d uninstall it.
Regarding file browser – I don’t have Gnome – so maybe these extra questions should be on dedicated threads.
I can’t help you any further re the CDROM problem
Except I would mount it by making a folder e.g. /mnt/cdrom and mounting the cdrom with
su -c 'mount /dev/sr0 /mnt/cdrom'
but that’s not the good answer (and it mightn’t work).
Computer>Yast>Security and Users>User and Group Management>User and Group Administration,
and then under the Users tab is me. At the bottom, left, of the page are three buttons: add, edit, and delete. When I click on edit, it takes me to User Data, which lists in a column of boxes, User’s full name:, Username:, Password:, and Confirm Password:.
I was introduced to openSUSE at the 2009 Ohio LinuxFest with the receipt of a couple of free, Novell-produced, DVDs. Neither, as I recall, was the then-current openSUSE release, but older (10.3, and 11.0, I think). I was impressed and comfortable with them. I liked 10.3 the more. But I’d also gotten an OpenSUSE Magazine that held several articles on how to set-up and optimize the openSUSE release extant with the magazine issue (11.1, I think). [If memory servers me correctly, an article in that magazine suggested ticking on the “ennable desktop effects” box even if it said your system didn’t support it – that desktop effects might work anyway – and they did. Remembering that is what led me to do that with this computer which is what led to forums.opensuse.org/english/get-technical-help-here/install-boot-login/457489-rescue-login.html – that advice was cool for 11.1 but not for 11.3].
Based on all that positive experience, it was only logical for me to upgrade to 11.2 – but that’s where the odyssy ended. It seems to me, now, that during the first three months of the release cycle, the last release is the stable one while the current is too cutting edge for newbie me.
On 2011-04-10 12:06, Randymanme wrote:
>
> I mean that when I put a previously burned disk in the dvd there is no
> response. But also the same with a blank disk as well. No response.
> On the left column of the file browser, the dvd-rom isn’t listed. The
> dvd I installed with doesn’t show up in the installed system.
On a terminal do:
su -
tailf /var/log/messages
and leave it there. Then put a DVD in the reader; you should see some new
lines in the terminal, is that so?
If not, try, on another terminal (xterm, gnome-term, whatever):
su -
file -s /dev/sr0
ls -l /dev/dvd*
–
Cheers / Saludos,
Carlos E. R.
(from 11.2 x86_64 “Emerald” at Telcontar)
On 2011-04-11 04:06, Randymanme wrote:
> Based on all that positive experience, it was only logical for me to
> upgrade to 11.2 – but that’s where the odyssy ended. It seems to me,
> now, that during the first three months of the release cycle, the last
> release is the stable one while the current is too cutting edge for
> newbie me.
That is correct. My work system I keep with the “old” version, and keep
testing the new one on a spare partition till all the problems I see are
solved. Then I upgrade.
–
Cheers / Saludos,
Carlos E. R.
(from 11.2 x86_64 “Emerald” at Telcontar)
On 2011-04-11 03:36, Randymanme wrote:
>
> @robin_listas
>
> Computer>Yast>Security and Users>User and Group Management>User and
> Group Administration,
>
> and then under the Users tab is me. At the bottom, left, of the page
> are three buttons: add, edit, and delete. When I click on edit, it
> takes me to User Data, which lists in a column of boxes, User’s full
> name:, Username:, Password:, and Confirm Password:.
Then that’s your user’s password, not root’s - although you can use the
same for both.
–
Cheers / Saludos,
Carlos E. R.
(from 11.2 x86_64 “Emerald” at Telcontar)
Thanks for those directions. No, however, that didn’t work for me in Gnome terminal and I didn’t try with xterm because it didn’t have an edit tab.
I put in an 11.4 KDE live cd to whether or not it could see the dvd-rom. But the font was too small; since the live cd couldn’t enlarge the font, I installed (I just love that opening desktop display). 11.4 KDE recognized the cd-rw (and contents) but not the dvd-rom.
My primary concern with (that) 11.4 install, though, was that it wouldn’t connect to the internet, nor allow me to configure for a wired connection manually – all the tabs except for VPN were grayed out. So it had to go.
11.4 KDE did, however, enable desktop effects (and, wow, did they look good with the Obsidian Coast theme!). For some reason unknown to me, Ubuntu stopped enabling desktop effects [although when I had Linux Mint 9Xfce installed, both systems enabled desktop effects, but now Ubuntu doesn’t and says my computer doesn’t support desktop effects and SuSE (until 11.4 KDE) never did].
(KDE just informed me that it has suspended compositing because it was too slow. I’m okay with that – I was going to disable it myself when I finished this – I’m impressed – I mean, this isn’t Star Trek.) Overall, I find KDE4 a tad confusing. But I do like the potential of getting familiar with it. I was at an Open Source Club meeting at The Ohio State University a couple of weeks ago where 6 members did presentations of different window managers. I was impressed with KDE then but assumed that the person illustrating KDE was just good at it (I normally don’t go there because I’ve already been forwarned that they are mostly grad students with engineering degrees). Oh, by the way, this system does see the dvd-rom and everything I’m accustomed to seeing in the left column of the file manager is there, too. Kaffeine needs some more support installed from repositories I haven’t yet added before it can play the music videos. I’m going to look for an OpenSUSE Magazine article for 11.3 KDE, first, though.
On 2011-04-12 14:06, Randymanme wrote:
> Thanks for those directions. No, however, that didn’t work for me in
> Gnome terminal and I didn’t try with xterm because it didn’t have an
> edit tab.
You have to try. It is not a solution, is data I need for diagnosis.
–
Cheers / Saludos,
Carlos E. R.
(from 11.2 x86_64 “Emerald” at Telcontar)
Sorry about that – I’m just getting back and didn’t see your last post until just now. Since then, I upgraded to 11.4 (had problems – which I knew I would; but since I was getting rid of 11.3 anyway, I did a practice run of zypper dup), I’ve tried 11.3 KDE (had shortcomings, but it did work), upgraded it to 11.4 (serious problems – at least for me), burned a 11.4 KDE live cd and have it installed now. I love it. But I’ll need to start a new thread.