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Nope, they are formatted as FAT32 (for compatibility with the devices I use them in), and they still mount as read-only. In all other computers they are writable, just not #! on this laptop. And the issue isn't hardware, they are usable in other distros and OS's on the same machine...
I have a strange query - on my Dell Inspiron 9300, SD cards always seem to mount as read-only. If I format it with gparted, it will show as read-write after remounting it, but after removing it from the internal SD card reader, or the USB card reader, and reinserting, it goes back to read-only.
Any ideas? I don't seem to have this issue on a vanilla Debian install...
Nothing stands out when running that command, but the issue also seems to have vanished. I havn't even rebooted my machine since posting, only gone into suspend for a while...
This topic may not have been needed at all!
Just installed #! on my old Dell Inspiron 9300, and so far I'm really impressed. Flies through tasks that xubuntu would regularily choke on. I have one issue though, that is starting to get frustrating - music doesn't fully mute.
When there is audio playing, the sound won't fully mute. I use the volume control to turn the volume down or mute it, then the majority of the sound reduces, but there is still heavy low bass coming through the speakers.
Never had anything like this with other distros, so not really sure where to start. Anybody had similar issues?
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