[03:42] [telegram] Anyone have any experience with gpg4usb in Linux? I just had a USB stick with my old keys and try to start it and it tells me it's an executable file even though I double click the Linux option not the exe. [03:46] [telegram] Or sometimes I double click start _linux_64bit option and gpg runs but with none of my keys. Is there a software I am missing to read my key files? [09:07] [telegram] if you mean a .exe file then no that is Windows not Linux. The linux 64 bit option is the only option for Linux. As for why it isnt loading a keyring you'd probably want to report that as a bug to that project or read their docs to see if you missed a step (re @AngryAutos: Anyone have any experience with gpg4usb in Linux? I just had a USB stick with my old keys and try to start it and it tells me it's an executable file even though [12:57] AngryAutos: The latest release of GPG4USB dates back to 2016. You can be certain that this contains known security vulnerabilities - I would not recommend using this software today. The included linux amd64 build is most likely not going to be usable on a current Linux distribution without tweaking anyways. [12:59] see also the developers' note at https://github.com/gpg4usb/gpg4usb#note [13:02] https://dyne.org/software/tomb/ is a similar software, which appears to be still maintained. [16:40] I am going to try to update from 20.04 LTS to 22.04 LTS; however before I do, I want to verify that my graphics drivers will work on my new system. Here is my plan: do a fresh install of 22.04 on a spare partition and install the drivers; if it works correctly, proceed with upgrading the main partition. Does that sound reasonable? [16:41] [telegram] So you would recommend this project over gpg4usb? (re @lubuntu_bot: (irc) https://dyne.org/software/tomb/ is a similar software, which appears to be still maintained.) [16:41] [telegram] I tried clicking on the linux 64 bit option and it still says its exe (re @teward001: if you mean a .exe file then no that is Windows not Linux. The linux 64 bit option is the only option for Linux. As for why it isnt loading a keyring you'd probably want to report that as a bug to that project or read their docs to see if you missed a step) [16:49] AngryAutos: yes, i would [16:58] I guess they left.. looks like tomb is in the repos https://repology.org/project/tomb/versions [18:10] Hello. I'm interested in upgrading from 20.04 LTS to 22.04 LTS. However, the latter doesn't have support for my graphics driver, and I am experiencing graphics glitches. On 20.04, I use nvidia-graphics-drivers-340, but this is not available for 22.04. (https://launchpad.net/%7Egraphics-drivers/+archive/ubuntu/ppa?field.series_filter=jammy) [18:11] What would you recommend to do for graphics card support? [18:12] from nvidia's website (The Linux 340.* legacy driver series is the last to support the G8x, G9x, and GT2xx GPUs, and motherboard chipsets based on them. Support for X.Org xserver version 1.20 was added to the 340.* legacy driver series with version 340.107, and support for Linux kernels up to Linux 5.4 was added with version 340.108. No further releases from the 340.* series are planned.) [18:12] Does this imply that I should convert from lubuntu 20.04 LTS to ubuntu 20.04 LTS? [18:13] or is it possible to install the 5.4 kernel and nvidia driver in lubuntu 22.04 [18:23] I am having more "thrashing" issues with the computer freezing. I assume it is nouveau bc that is the main thing different/broken