

I'll have to keep bashing away at Unity and may need to call in support from (ugh) the vendor. I expected trouble that didn't emerge with my 10G NIC, sound gear etc. I got as far as Unity failing to work properly (a bug with the Unity Hub maybe) before I gave up for the night.Īside from the NVIDIA situation hardware support seems pretty good this time around. The never-ending ideology wars between the FOSS devotees and closed source villains made this more painful than it needed to be, but I expected that. This worked really well out of the box and grub managed to not f*** everything up for me this time.
Spat boots windows#
Last night I managed to get Debian+Cinnamon stood up alongside Windows in a dual-boot configuration with a dedicated drive per OS. I have financial incentive and time to learn and customise the OS 95% of what I was doing was available natively in Linux

Both options reliably caused some of the features I needed to fail I was toying with running Windows Server as a workstation desktop environment I was building custom Windows installers to remove the growing list of OS features and changes I didn't want

I've got about 8 months until my next bill from Bill arrives, should be plenty of time to decide just how much I need my MS blankie! ) that I'm missing lemmino.Īnyway I'll detail my no doubt hilarious noob adventures here before I (inevitably?) switch back to the Empire. If there's a big reason to (Mint, Arch, Fedora. Plan is to try and dual-boot Windows and go from there.
Spat boots install#
Given that Unity supports Ubuntu I'm looking at trying a Debian install - am not a fan of the whole tracking thing that Canonical pulled and it feels like Ubuntu is just Debian+bloat anyway.
Spat boots code#
I've decided I'm going to take another swing at playing on the Rebel faction I game on my PC surprisingly little lately and mostly am either in a Chromium browser, Unity, or Visual Studio (and for the work I'm doing, VS Code will do just fine). Recently Unity announced support for Linux - specifically, Ubuntu and CentOS. Anyway, it’s always refreshing to know that another maker can do a spat boot as it is not something that you will commonly find in a factory’s repertoire.Title probably hyperbole, but I've done this every now and again since the mid 90s so I dunno. It has a great last, with a nice casual feel about it, something that for me would go amazingly well underneath a nice pair of jeans or maybe some moleskin trousers with a nice big cuff….now I am starting to dream…. Nevertheless, I do like the way in which it was designed. So in reality, while I would never request the zipper, I can’t blame him…. And let me tell you that from what I hear, a traditional spat boot with button hooks and all is anything but easy put on. The only thing that let me personally down, was the zipper, but after finding out a bit more, it was not done because they were not capable of doing a traditional spat boot but rather because the customer requested that it be easy to put on. Usually you find that spat boots come in simple cap or plain toe variations with little to no brogueing, but this number here (by Ed Et Al) breaks all of those norms and looks quite cool doing it. We all know how much I love a spat boot, and these beauties are an amazingly fresh version within the spat boot arena, not only for the colors but for all of the brogueing that comes with it.
