No the Security edition isnt more “unproblematic” it is just that home edition is lighter and have no tools but beside that, there is no differences. The creation of the usb stick using dd seems fine to me, what you can try (It wont change much to my opinion) is to use etcher, this is the recommended way of creating usb live of parrot.įor the update story, you shouldn’t have storage issues if we go with a simple install, by the way how much space did you left for parrot ? I have also tried the grub repair, as described in the gparted help, but without success. Also I do not want to use it, because of the bad maintainability of lvm. But after upgrading parrot, the disk was full. But after 2 boots, this did work no more. I have tried several methods( standard, Gtk, standard partition, custom etc.) With several usb sticks (Sandisk, transcend) and an USB attached harddisk.
The Live-USB image works well, but the installation does not boot. Unfortunately, I have no luck booting an installed parrot.
But I have some experience with the terminal on os x. I must say, that I am new to Linux at all.
Its running on a multiboot system with mac os x 10.10.5 and windows 7, but I have also tried installation with absolutely no disk attached.Īn new Ubuntu installation with the latest amd64 runs well. Gigabyte z-97 Motherboard, Intel 4690K, only IGP, 16 GB Ram, several ssd and hd