Showing posts with label boot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label boot. Show all posts
Tuesday, November 6, 2012
Open-source penguins, food mixers, and anime - Long post ahead!
Yep, I'm still around, still geeky, still stuck on my Audi project.
I've been slowly chipping away at the interior models, but it's proving to be rather difficult - not to mention I seem to be going through a creativity drought, and my life's been a bit hectic over the last few weeks.
As a heads-up, I also have a post about a recently completed project coming up, so keep your eyes peeled.
Anyway, on to those open-source penguins. In other words, Linux. I've now spent the better part of today configuring my desktop's Linux Mint 13 installation, which I had been putting off for several weeks. In case you're wondering (or if you're forgetful, since I've posted about this before), my desktop is a Gateway with a quad-core Intel i5-2320 at 3.0GHz, 6GB of RAM, and a EVGA nVidia GeForce GTX 560TI SC GPU.
The fun part when installing Linux is that most of the time it can't use the GPU in your system when still "out-of-the-box". You have to install the drivers for it, since Linux doesn't generally seem to be as plug-and-play as Windows 7 (which I love), which is both a pro and a con in my opinion. The problem then becomes actually getting to the desktop interface, which is made tricky by the afore-mentioned lack of display drivers.
That of course means that even the LiveDVD versions have trouble booting up properly, which is always fun. So in order to get around that, you have to first get to the Grub loader screen and modify the parameters for the Linux booting process. For nVidia GPUs, there's a specific change that needs to be made which, unless you edit the grub.cfg file itself, is temporary and resets itself when you reboot. I have no idea if this works with most common Linux distros like Ubuntu and so on, so if you're having trouble booting a Linux LiveCD/DVD or getting a newly-installed GPU working I'd recommend finding the right set of instructions for your Linux distro :)
My process, however, is as follows: when you get to the grub loader, press E over the desired option, which then brings up details concerning that particular boot process' instructions. You should see a long line of instructions about two-thirds of the way down, which should end in the words "quiet splash", or at least have those words near the end of the string. For an nVidia GPU (whether that's a GeForce 6200, which I had to deal with a few days ago, or a GTX560Ti, which is in my desktop) you have to change that "quiet splash" to "noacpi noapic nomodeset", which basically tells Linux to boot up without all the fancy GPU processes that require drivers.
Labels:
Angel Beats,
anime,
Audi,
black screen,
blank screen,
Blender,
BMesh,
boot,
gpu,
grub,
K-On,
Linux,
Steins;Gate
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