* replace "CD" with "DVD"
* fix outdated URLs, use https where possible
* remove alternative Windows burning software, just keeping InfraRecorder
* link to the sleeve folding instructions
* add the papersleeve as WonderBrush file as a template so people
may create their own
The archive with the source to lesson 22 of "Programming with Haiku"
was misplaced intot the folder of the first book.
* moving the zip into the correct folder
* adjust naming to be the same as the archives for the first book
* adjust download link
* Converted the Hyper-V guide to markdown
Markdown does not have any syntax for spans so the span elements have been left entact.
* Re-worded the guide slightly and converted the span elements into shortcodes
* Re-wrote the Hyper-V guide.
* Added a note about the Anyboot desktop.
It is recommended to actually install Haiku onto a hard disk so that you can persist data on the OS drive (packages, user configurations etc.)
Since the version of virt-manager used in the guide is similiar to
the one in the Xen guide, the instructions are the same. and only differs
in the instructions to install KVM.
* Added "figure" and "figcaption" to shijin4.css
Use for step-by-step guides consisting mainly of concacenated
screenshots + captions. Those tend to be confusing when your
not sure if the text belongs to the screenshot above or below
it.
With figcaption, the caption is always below and is encased
with the screenshot in a bordered box.
Add style="width:[screenshotwidth+2*padding]" when used,
e.g. style="width:820px"
* Use figure/figcaption for the installation guide.
* Minor text changes.
* Moved 8-initialize-update.png to the rest of the images and replaced
unused 8-initialize.png
* Fixed 14-select-target.png to show the correct 379.9 MB source image
instead of a 7.61 GB Haiku installation.
* Optimized PNGs
* TODO: All the images should be re-taken with the Noto font and an upated
(nightly) image to show the current image size and copying packages
instead of files when installing.
Our GCI students have investigated GUI tools to write an Anyboot
image onto a USB stick. Unsurprisingly, pretty much any tool to
write an ISO image was up to the job.
Using "Etcher" as example, because it's available for Linux, MacOS
and Windows. Instead of showing several almost identical screenshots
how to click on three button, I use an animated gif.
Removed all the commandline alternatives for the different OS.
Largly rewrote "Haiku: Using Installer and DriveSetup".
Kept the 'dd' description for "Using 'dd' in Terminal".
Missed "Learning_to_Program_With_Haiku_17MenuColors.zip" a few days ago.
Also removed the Unit3 review PDF that's already in the
learning_to_program subfolder where it belongs.