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holy shit, i installed ubuntu onto a manually partitioned usb flash drive inside a vm (with usb passthrough), then rebooted my intel macbook and booted from the drive directly, and not only does it boot, but closing my laptop lid moves the login screen to my external monitor?

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‪the trackpad works, the keyboard works, it handles opening and closing the lid much faster and much better than macos… wow‬

‪the built-in speakers don't work though, aha. but the headphone jack does! and i am using an external audio interface anyway, which also works :3‬

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‪oh, when i tried to log into discord the laptop apparently entered involuntary sleep twice and the wifi adapter stopped working… but the midi editor kept playing and no data was lost. that's… interesting.‬

‪the year of the linux desktop may still be a little further away :p‬

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ok so when i set up this usb flash drive, i used a custom partitioning: ~0.5GB for the efi partition, 25GB for ubuntu, and the rest as a big ol' fat32 partition. the ubuntu installer lets you make custom partitions and set mount points, it's very cool. However…

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‪i actually wanted to use exfat for that big partition, because fat32 sucks. i couldn't do that in the installer. but i was able to reboot later into macos and reformat that partition, and only that one, as exfat.‬

‪but now,,,, ubuntu won't boot. systemd drops me to a console,‬

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so uhhh now i need to figure out how to repair a systemd configuration from the command line? because i can't just make it ignore this error and continue with a normal graphical boot, even though the partition had nothing on it.

girls… the year of the linux desktop isn't happening

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‪oh my god it tells me to type “exit” after i'm done but for the graphical target that doesn't actually work because it's “destructive” whatever that means. god. i'm glad i have some idea how computers work because this would be a nightmare for an ordinary user‬

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happy to report that vi /etc/fstab and adding a single # on the relevant line was all that was required. not happy to report that this was just a lucky guess. i was honestly expecting fstab to be autogenerated by systemd or something, which would have screwed me

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‪i may sound like i'm complaining, and i am a little, but of course i enjoy the tinkering. linux is for people who enjoy having control over their computing environment and doing silly things like running their computer off a usb stick. i just encrypted my home folder and swap‬

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