![]() ![]() Pick your method of installation below: Virtual Machine (Recommended) You only need to follow one of these sets of instructions or none of them if you are already using MacOS, Ubuntu, or an official flavor of Ubuntu as your operating system. We cannot help you set up a developer environment on a RaspberryPi or any other device. This curriculum only supports using a laptop, desktop or supported Chromebook. We do not recommend installing an OS that is only based on Ubuntu (like Mint, Pop!_OS, ElementaryOS, etc). Our instructions have been tested with MacOS, Ubuntu, and official flavors of Ubuntu. If it works for you and you don't mind it cluttering up your device lists with all those loop devices, one per application, and it keeping you jailed at /home, go for it.We can only support the operating systems indicated above. And installing Arch was staightforward, as it is well-documented on the Arch Wiki.+ ![]() Manjaro (and Ubuntu) failed to install at the time. When I installed Arch on this new system I built using the latest motherboard, Threadripper, and all, only Arch worked. So I dropped Ubuntu and went to Arch, with a very brief step though Manjaro - only because so many were bitching that installing Arch was "hard". A very genteel blow-off, if I ever saw one. I approached the developers behind Snap a few years back, and they indicated that it's a "known problem", and they would "get around" to "addressing it" later. Only file permissions and ownership should matter, not whether it's running out of /home. And Canonical seems to want to run all applications out of snaps, including the browsers. Since we are talking Ubuntu here, this was a continual problem I ran into with Snap applications. And the one on my desktop at work is assigned by policy. I don't always use the same username everywhere, nor should I have to. My workflow proceeds from a /development directory, which is "cannon" across the various desktops, laptops, and the like that I work on. I use WhatSie, which appears to be a container to run WhatsApp Web, and with it, I am - apparently - only able to upload documents and images from within the /home directory - which is, BTW, also the same problem with Snaps. I suspect it is more than just a permissions issue. There seems to be no practical advantage to using Wayland, some applications like Eclipse run much faster using X11 - essentially you get your old 20.04 machine back again which just works. ![]() In the meantime if you make sure you know your user password and logout, and then start to login again, when the password box appears there is a little gear icon at the bottom right of the screen - click on it and it will offer you the choice of Wayland or Xorg (X11) - select X11 and it will remember the setting for that user and multiple problems will disappear. This is going to negatively impact Ubuntu and re-inforce the "Linux only suitable for techie nerds" label that I thought we had left behind. My recommendation would be that the use of Wayland as a default should be reversed to re-enable X11 by default as Wayland seems to be causing many problems. Perhaps someone more competent than me can report it as a bug. It can be fixed by disabling Wayland and using X11 instead - this restores normal functionality.Ĭlearly a Wayland problem but I can't report it as a bug on ubuntu because when I run the tool it says I don't have Wayland installed - because it is disabled and I'm not about to re-enable it because it is VERY flakey and is causing multiple problems. This happens across a wide range of websites, all of which worked correctly with these browsers before the upgrade. Sometimes it works the first time you try it in a session. Using Brave or Edge or Chrome browser since upgrading to 22.04 drag and drop to a file upload pane does not work 95% of the time. ![]()
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