darkoshi: (Default)
The high dose ibuprofen didn't have a noticeable effect on my teeth/bite issue. But I still think it could possibly be due to tense muscles; that still makes sense to me. So I will wait and see a while longer.

The ibuprofen didn't have any noticeable effect on my stiff fingers/hands issue either. I suspect that ibuprofen just doesn't work well on me; maybe it's something genetic.

The ibuprofen did cause my ankles to swell, however. I could barely see the ankle bumps on the inner side of my feet anymore. Oddly, that didn't happen until the day after I stopped taking it. It probably would have happened whether I continued taking it or not. It took 4 days for my ankles to go back to normal.

.

I burned Linux Mint onto a DVD, to try out on my old laptop. It takes quite a while to start up, but runs pretty good once it's up. I think I'll install it to the hard drive. I'm wondering if there's a special way I ought to do that, to be able to try out and/or install other O/S's too.

My brother left 3 computers boxed up amongst his stuff in the garage. He said I could get rid of them after clearing off the hard drives. They're over 9 years old, with WinXP. For the 2 I've looked at so far, I had to replace the motherboard button batteries, so they would even boot. I learned some things about IDE hard drive cables and connections in the process. I'm going to put Linux on one of those computers too, so my sister and niece can use it while they are at my place.

Date: 2019-02-03 05:02 pm (UTC)From: [personal profile] randomdreams
randomdreams: riding up mini slickrock (Default)
Many distros have a linux-live option, that runs off a USB drive and allows you to try out all the features without even touching the hard drive, to see if you like them.
I use Oracle's VirtualBox as a virtual machine manager. Install it and then you can install as many linux (or whatever else) operating systems in it as you want and use each one within it as a full-featured machine. Sometimes, especially if the host machine is linux, you have to do a bit of work to get all the features in the virtual machine enabled. (You have to install a second bit of software to allow you to cut and paste files from the external machine to the virtual machine, or from one vm to another, for instance.) I don't know if this particular use case is helpful, but once you have a vm set up the way you want it, you can export it (to a huuuuge file) and import it to another machine, so in theory you could have all the computers you interact with running virtualbox and then you use an identical operating system across all of them. (You'd have to spend a chunk of time setting up some sort of synchronization process across them so they'd stay identical, and that's difficult. But you get the idea.)

Date: 2019-02-04 04:47 am (UTC)From: [personal profile] randomdreams
randomdreams: riding up mini slickrock (Default)
Yeah, it installs fine on the three major OS's, and has run a lot of weird stuff for me. I like Mint. I used it heavily before switching to xubuntu.

December 2025

S M T W T F S
 12345 6
78 910111213
14151617181920
2122 23 24252627
28293031   

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Sunday, December 28th, 2025 09:51 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios