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How many printed sides of paper are there in the Help Manual (1 page = 2 printed sides)?
The reason I ask is that I want to buy a display book with plastic pockets so I can refer to the Manual
away from my PC, but need to estimate the size of display book I need to purchase...
Thanks
Mike
64bit OS (32-bit on
Samsung[i] netbook) installed in [i]Legacy mode on MBR-formatted SSDs (except
pi which uses a micro SDHC card):
2017 -
Raspberry pi 3B (4cores) ~
[email protected] -
LibreElec, used for upgrading our Samsung TV (excellent for the task)
2012 -
Lenovo G580 2689 (2cores; 4threads] ~
[email protected] -
LL3.8/Win8.1 dual-boot (LL working smoothly)
2011 -
Samsung NP-N145 Plus (1core; 2threads) ~ Intel Atom
[email protected] -
LL 3.8 32-bit (64-bit too 'laggy')
2008 -
Asus X71Q (2cores) ~ Intel
[email protected] -
LL4.6/Win8.1 dual-boot, LL works fine with kernel 4.15
2007 -
Dell Latitude D630 (2cores) ~ Intel
[email protected] -
LL4.6, works well with kernel 4.4; 4.15 doesn't work
(This post was last modified: 04-16-2016, 07:20 PM by
m654321.)
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Choose Print from your Browser menu and it should show you the number of pages to print.
Sent from my Nexus 6 using Tapatalk
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Thanks Jerry - I've got the answer - quite a tome with a grand total of 238 printed sides!
For what it's worth to anyone interested, the breakdown for the number of printed sides for each section
of the LL user manual, was as follows:
Start = 15; Install = 38; Network = 14; Software = 51; Hardware = 45; Tutorials = 28; Customize = 40
Glossary = 7
I notice user manuals have been published for Ubuntu and Linux Mint and you can find these on Amazon.
In a similar vein, why not publish the Linux Lite manual - it would be a great way of getting the distro out
there to the target audience. It would also be easier to have a neatly bound publication than to print out
238 sides spread over three display books - just an idea, though I think I know already what you will say
to this...
Mike
64bit OS (32-bit on
Samsung[i] netbook) installed in [i]Legacy mode on MBR-formatted SSDs (except
pi which uses a micro SDHC card):
2017 -
Raspberry pi 3B (4cores) ~
[email protected] -
LibreElec, used for upgrading our Samsung TV (excellent for the task)
2012 -
Lenovo G580 2689 (2cores; 4threads] ~
[email protected] -
LL3.8/Win8.1 dual-boot (LL working smoothly)
2011 -
Samsung NP-N145 Plus (1core; 2threads) ~ Intel Atom
[email protected] -
LL 3.8 32-bit (64-bit too 'laggy')
2008 -
Asus X71Q (2cores) ~ Intel
[email protected] -
LL4.6/Win8.1 dual-boot, LL works fine with kernel 4.15
2007 -
Dell Latitude D630 (2cores) ~ Intel
[email protected] -
LL4.6, works well with kernel 4.4; 4.15 doesn't work
(This post was last modified: 04-16-2016, 07:21 PM by
m654321.)
Posts: 9,112
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Joined: Feb 2014
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16
I'll see what I can do ;)
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Maybe going of on a tangent here..!!
This got me thinking and reading(no pun intended) about eBooks...
A bit of Googling turned up something else, html to pdf converter.
Could something like this converter
HTML to PDF make it any easier to manage..??
Looks like you put in website address and it outputs a pdf file..??
Upgrades WIP 2.6 to 2.8 - (6 X 2.6 to 2.8 completed on: 20/02/16 All O.K )
Linux Lite 3.0 Humming on a ASRock N3070 Mobo ~ btrfs RAID 10 Install on 4 Disks :)
Computers Early days:
ZX Spectrum(1982) , HP-150 MS-DOS(1983) , Amstrad CPC464(1984) , BBC Micro B+64(1985) , My First PC HP-Vectra(1987)