Subj : Re: Bluetooth Keyboard To : Barry Martin From : Ky Moffet Date : Wed Sep 18 2024 10:08:00 BARRY MARTIN wrote: > Hi Ed! > > > There's probably an option in the BIOS/UEFI to turn off something like > > the initialization logo -- as I recall they call it different things. > > The problem is now the test scrolls by too fast to read -- what was the > > line with the red text I think said 'Failed'? > > What would probably be a lot easier is to let the computer boot and > > then look at the loggiing. For Ubuntu it's usually in /var/log/ > > (Linux uses forward slashes), though dmesg also can be helpful. And > > sometimes specific utilties will put their logs in a subdirectory of > > /var/log and sometimes they feel special and create their own area. > > You might want to copy any logs you're interested in to a ramdrive or > > temporary directory: some logs are constantly being updated -- not sure > > if "hard' on the logging to be staticly viewing while dynamically being > > updated (written to). > > EV> Documents and Settings create gobs of little bitty files. > EV> It's a Jungle out there. > > > > Yes, and there's a small problem with that: the hard drive (OK: storage > media) is partitioned into blocks of certain sizes -- in the old-old > days 1024 bytes. 1023 bytes of data, great! Use 1025, just used two > blocks and 99% of that second block is empty. I've always stored a lot > of potentially useful information on my computer just so I could have it > handy. With a 20 MB hard drive I wanted to maximize that capacity so > would spend time editing files to fit in that 1023 parameter. ...It > seemed to work, but probably in the long term not worth the time and > effort. And of course now a TB of starage - no problem! It's still 1024 bytes, or multiples thereof. NTFS filesystem stores very small files (less than one cluster) in the file table rather than in separate clusters. Probably in the same cluster as the filemane and other file information. Slack space is still a problem tho, can easily eat a good chunk of a big drive. But less with NTFS than with FAT. And nowadays... one terabyte more or less, who cares? þ RNET 2.10U: ILink: Techware BBS þ Hollywood, Ca þ www.techware2k.com --- QScan/PCB v1.20a / 01-0462 * Origin: ILink: CFBBS | cfbbs.no-ip.com | 856-933-7096 (454:1/1) .