I am an experienced phone flasher and flash phones for a living at my store in Dover, De. I have flashed well over 100 phones to pageplus and most I have just got the 1x data and didnt do a HA AAA password clone from a verizon donor phone. I knew I would only get 1x data. Now my question is this: Does anyone know of a reson why data would suddenly stop working on my Galaxy SIII.
Before I pulled the plug on my EVO 3D, I diligently backed up my data from several apps that I use on a regular basis. I backed up to my SD card and just assumed that once I inserted the SD card into the S4, it would be as simple as using the various apps restore command. For some reason, the apps are not able to locate the data files on the SD card.
Hello All,
I currently have a dual-boot system handled by GRUB. Windows 7 and BT5. I have posted a picture taken in gparted of my partition table. I would like to take space from the Windows partition and add it to the BT5 partition. Then I think I would have to create a Logical Volume in the extended BT partition and Install Ubuntu there.
I am on Slip CM9 using sd2ext+ on a 2gb memory card with a 512mb ext partition.
I just got an 8gb kingston card, gonna make a 1gb ext partition on it. Need to know how I can transfer all Apps and data from one card to the other? I DONT HAVE A CARD READER!!!
Does debian take care of the partition for you though? From what I understand (I have not tried this though) grub2 is actually lvm aware. So you can put all partitions within the lvm, including boot. If this is the case, I see no reason why you would not also be able to put the 2MB bios boot partition in there as well. I am not a grub user at all, but I know that grub appar
In a Linux computer, partition table and superblock are two most important data structures. The superblock keeps record of the file system characteristics including its size, empty and filled block, location and size of Inode tables, block size and status. The partition tables stores all required information about hard drive primary partitions.
I have 2 partitions on my computer:
one is "64 GB ext4" (with Ubuntu 10.10 64-bit)
and the other one is "Data 436 GB NTFS" (just for storing files)
On startup the second partition is not mounted before I click on "Locais" - this is in Portuguese (the button between Applications and System on the top bar) > "Data".
How do I make Ubuntu mount this partit
This article states reasons about why the data in SD card becomes inaccessible and tips about how to fix SD card error and recover the lost data including pictures, video, audio and documents from SD card.
I have a couple system-on-usbs that have a ext2 boot partition, ext4 root, and a ntfs data partition. This works well. I can boot any computer with it, move data around, from the harddisk to the data partition, then read that data partition from any OS.Just make sure the data partition is the first one on the usb, or windows will not read it.
Trilby
https://bbs.archlinux