I don't do Crapple spyware.
nanook
@danielquinn @Showroom7561 The differences between Ubuntu and Debian is trivial, however, Debian does do some things more securely, in a business environment that might be more of a consideration, things like requiring a signed kernel and modules, require that debian packages be signed, but if you're learning, going to be compiling your own kernel, packages, Ubuntu is the better choice, as those things won't get in the way and also the support for PPA's is useful.
Truth hurts but it has far more value than lies.
Funny how allergic people are to basic truths.
@doomsdayrs @theorangeninja Not entirely correct, most will have shutdown scripts that call systemd, but that is a direct way to accomplish it.
Yes. set your CD in the VM to a linux distro iso like Linux, set boot from the CD in the vm, then you can use all the tools on your ISO to do whatever you want to the vm.
@orcrist @Cris_Color You needn't be unkind to have integrity, and if your ideas aren't at least considered without force, they're probably wrong.
Hating successful people is the best way to insure your own failure.
Linux will run fine with secure boot you just have to have it set for other OS not Windows specifically, however, it is a pain in the ass and if you have physical control over your machine I see no good reason to enable it, it significantly compliciates things like building your own kernels.
If you're going to install Linux, Dell and IBM are generally very compatible. I've got a Dell 1500 series that runs Linux beautifully except the battery has given up the ghost and I need to replace it, also going to swap out the hard drive for an ssd. But Mate runs well on it, even the touch screen features work.
What I don't like about brave is it's a rip-off of creators. It does not simply block ads, but replaces ads with it's own, so it profits, the creators get fucked, and in the end you get less quality content as a result, you get fucked. The ethics that went into that make Google look good.
Because I see people struggle here trying to get Mac or iPhones to talk to other operating systems and the reason they struggle is that Apple intentionally places as many barriers as possible in the way. This not only hurts Apple users, it hurts the entire ecosphere.