Grub not installing when Xubuntu installs

Ryan Gauger rtgkid at gmail.com
Thu Jun 14 20:03:11 UTC 2012


I’m not that new, I am an experienced Linux user, and do not want to be
treated as if I am dust. I suppose the people who say stuff like that
(saying that I am lying when I am not) are trying to make me the centre of
attention. Now, this has absolutely NOTHING to do with Ubuntu technical
support, and this list is not for general discussion. I’m not a mod, but I
am tired of seeing this type of stuff land in my inbox.

The original question was: (as the subject suggests) GRUB does not install
when Xubuntu installs. It probably installs, but there is most-likely a
problem where GRUB is not seeing Xubuntu. This can be caused by a lot of
reasons.

Sent from my Windows 8 PC <http://windows.microsoft.com/consumer-preview>

 *From:* Liam Proven <lproven at gmail.com>
*Sent:* Thursday, June 14, 2012 2:52:15 PM
*To:* bstanle at wowway.com,Ubuntu user technical support, not for general
discussions
*Subject:* Re: Grub not installing when Xubuntu installs

On 14 June 2012 16:53, Bill Stanley <bstanle at wowway.com> wrote:
>
> since I don't know his history on this mailing list, I do not know how
> reliable his advice is.

He's new, young and enthusiastic, but he has a habit of making claims
that are not true - such as "I'm on the Unity development team", when
actually, he's just a member of the mailing list. He has yet to learn
a lot of stuff, including not volunteering information that one does
not know to be correct.

>   Maybe the moderators can look up the history of his
> replies.  It is interesting to note all the ad-hominun  references to me
> being a newbie.  I can assure you, I have been using Linux on and off
since
> 1998.  If anybody out there (even Linus himself) says he knows all there
is
> about Linux, he is a liar.  When I run into something that has never
> happened before I ask for other opinions to see if there is something
going
> wrong.  It does turn out that the default of sdb as the location for Grub
is
> just such an example.

No, that's fair enough, and it was a reasonable question. If you will
forgive me making the observation, your occasionally erratic
spelling/capitalisation and so on (e.g. "ad hominun" for "ad hominem",
or Grub for GRUB, or starting your reply with a small "s") could give
someone the impression that you were rather young and inexperienced
yourself, and it's tricky to strike a balance between clear simple
advice for a young rookie - like "try such-and-such a recovery disk" -
and straightforward high-level diagnostic steps for an expert - like
"OK, boot off your live CD, but edit the kernel boot parms to leave
the initrd but point to your installed system as the root FS". The
latter would have worked fine and enabled you to boot your system and
then reinstall GRUB by hand, but only if you already know what boot
parameters are, how to edit them, what your root filesystem is and
what the device number of it is and so on.

I suspected from your posts that you would not have understood
something like this. Partly, because if you knew how to do that, you
probably wouldn't have asked in the first place. Was I wrong? If so, I
apologise unreservedly.

You might well respond, "well, why not just spell out these steps in
ways that a non-expert would understand." That is understandable, but
the thing is, doing that takes a lot of time and effort, irritates
those who don't need it spelled out and is very confusing and
difficult for those who /do/ need it spelled out. For them, there are
shorter, easier ways, such as using a GRUB recovery CD.

> Maybe the moderators should watch the replies for the quality of the
reply.
>  Maybe a rating system to let the users know about the quality of another
> users responses.

That would be handy, but as this is a mailing list and not a web
forum, it doesn't really support stuff like that.

> There is such a thing as Internet trolls and inaccurate
> replies from them can cause a lot of grief if you follow their advice.

Absolutely.

>  Also, applying labels to another user is not good because this is
supposed
> to be a place to go to for advice and not to be called names or given bad
> advice.

You're right, that's true and I am as guilty as anyone of occasionally
getting carried away and saying things I should not.

> If you suspect there is a troll out there just "don't feed the trolls".
> It's time for me to get off my soapbox now and just try to learn about
Linux
> in peace!

--
Liam Proven • Profile: http://lproven.livejournal.com/profile
Email: lproven at cix.co.uk • GMail/G+/Twitter/Flickr/Facebook: lproven
MSN: lproven at hotmail.com • Skype/AIM/Yahoo/LinkedIn: liamproven
Tel: +44 20-8685-0498 • Cell: +44 7939-087884

--
ubuntu-users mailing list
ubuntu-users at lists.ubuntu.com
Modify settings or unsubscribe at:
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-users
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-users/attachments/20120614/24eaddd4/attachment.html>


More information about the ubuntu-users mailing list