

If you mean the first time after you rebooted, and you didn't create a save file or directory after you installed Puppy, then yes. Is the windows at the start up a problem I missed to tackle?ġ. Am I able to use my netbooks features on it like the Webcam?ģ. Shall I now save session when I shut Puppy the first time? (would it imporve the starting up speed?)Ģ.

[So Puppy is now installed on the netbookġ. If it's asking you to navigate to the USB through the file system, it should be in /mnt. CD or Directory (I'm using USB) I couldnt find the sdc1 (usb) through the desktop. If I click OK (ignoring it) I click on Install Puppy to sda1: After all that I get this message Where are the puppy files?. Swapoff -aTo switch swap on again, on this computer: To switch swap off, open a terminal and type: If you want to unlock the swap partition in GParted, you will have to switch swap off. Puppy (and any other Linux distro) will now automatically use and mount the swap partition whenever you boot up.

It would probably be more inconvenient to keep running out of RAM though, so as the computer only has 512MB of RAM it would seem preferable to have a swap partition than to not have one.) What I would suggest in any case is, depending on how often you use this computer move the swap partition to the other end of the drive at some point in the future, because swap increases wear on SSD drives. (While it's tidier to have the drives in numerical order, it will work just as well if they aren't. GParted should now refresh and show sda1 next to sda4. It's easy to do in GParted: right-click on sda1 and select "Resize/Move." Then in the next window that opens, as per my screenshot below, click on the black arrow at the right of the rectangle at the top of the window, and drag it all the way to the right. I would grow sda1 to the right to fill up that 40.46MiB space though, which is what Puppy seems to be complaining about.
