Not bad all in all, except some minor annoyances.
Had to run the update to get the wifi driver, so had to tether a device. Shouldn't have to do that. They need to fix it.
Questions:
How do I modify windows to point-to-raise instead of click-to-raise?
To resize a window, the border area to grab is tiniest I've ever seen, any way to increase that? Meaning the side of it or the bottom right corner.
Is there any way to access settings without having to go into the menu, like pin Settings or create an icon. It's tedious always having to go to the menu.
How do I add a desktop switcher, meaning I want to have 1x4 virtual desktops and switch between either using the switching tool or Control-right-arrow. This is the XFCE manager, it looks like they made some changes to it since I used it last.
Also I configured LVM during the install but instead of giving the choice of setting partition (LVOL) sizes, it created just one LVOL and put everything in it. To be completely honest, I don't dislike it. It's simple to manage for sure. But I always configured LVOLs as such, /var got 200GB, /home got 100GB, /usr got 400GB ... created some extra work with no apparent benefit.
Had to run the update to get the wifi driver, so had to tether a device. Shouldn't have to do that. They need to fix it.
Questions:
How do I modify windows to point-to-raise instead of click-to-raise?
To resize a window, the border area to grab is tiniest I've ever seen, any way to increase that? Meaning the side of it or the bottom right corner.
Is there any way to access settings without having to go into the menu, like pin Settings or create an icon. It's tedious always having to go to the menu.
How do I add a desktop switcher, meaning I want to have 1x4 virtual desktops and switch between either using the switching tool or Control-right-arrow. This is the XFCE manager, it looks like they made some changes to it since I used it last.
Also I configured LVM during the install but instead of giving the choice of setting partition (LVOL) sizes, it created just one LVOL and put everything in it. To be completely honest, I don't dislike it. It's simple to manage for sure. But I always configured LVOLs as such, /var got 200GB, /home got 100GB, /usr got 400GB ... created some extra work with no apparent benefit.
Code:
# /usr/sbin/lvmdiskscan | grep LVM
/dev/sdb2 [ <1.82 TiB] LVM physical volume
0 LVM physical volume whole disks
1 LVM physical volume
# pvs
PV VG Fmt Attr PSize PFree
/dev/sdb2 vgxubuntu lvm2 a-- <1.82t 0
# vgs
VG #PV #LV #SN Attr VSize VFree
vgxubuntu 1 2 0 wz--n- <1.82t 0
# lvs
LV VG Attr LSize Pool Origin Data% Meta% Move Log Cpy%Sync Convert
root vgxubuntu -wi-ao---- <1.82t
swap_1 vgxubuntu -wi-ao---- <1.91g
Last edited: