Hello everyone, today I am going to show you how you can install and configure an application called Burg which will remove your grub2 and install the app instead, then you will be able to choose from many different themes out there to make your booting process more appealing. The picture below shows one of the themes that will be included for burg in this tutorial, as you can see, it is more stylish than the booting menu interface of Grub2. This tutorial should work on Ubuntu 14.04 or any other Ubuntu based distribution that was based of that release, and also 12.04 but I am not completely sure (since I have not tested it in other releases other than 14.04). Installing Burg In order to install Burg, you need to open your terminal by pressing "CRTL + ALT + T" or by searching for it in your applications menu. Next, we are going to copy and paste each of the following lines separately to the terminal and press enter. sudo add-apt-repository -y ppa:n-muench/burg sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install burg burg-themes When installing, you will get something like the image presented below, you need to press the space bar and it will put an asterisk in the box. What this is doing is selecting the hard drive in which you will be installing Burg, which should be the same one where your system is installed. If you press TAB it should highlight the "<Ok>" and then press enter. This will conclude the installation process. Installing Themes Now that we have Burg already installed, we can install some themes. By default, Burg will bring a somewhat decent amount of themes, but I have found four themes that I think will look fantastic in anyone's machine because they are simple and minimalistic, yet they look great. When you download the themes from their respective devianart pages (the download is located at the right side of the page). You are going to unzip them in your desktop, from there we need to move them to the Burg themes folder. In order to do this you need to type a command like this in your terminal: sudo cp -R ~/Desktop/foldername /boot/burg/themes Where "foldername" is the name of the theme folder that you want to move. If you think you are fine with the themes given, you can skip to the next part. There should be a space between the first path and the second path.
Configuring and Testing Now that we have Burg, as well as our themes installed, we need to run the following command: sudo update-burg This command will allow Burg to find the new themes that we have installed, as well as the operating systems installed in your computer. Now we can see what our Burg will look like by using the command: sudo burg-emu Now here we can change our theme by pressing the F2 key, select a theme and press enter and the theme should change. Now, we want to restart our computer because we need to go on the real deal and change the resolution of our Burg. In order to change the resolution we need to press the F3 key when it show us where we can select our operating systems. When you get to change the resolution you will see how much better it will look. Restore Grub2 If for some odd reason your Burg does not work or you want to just go back to the good old Grub2 menu,you can re-install it by using the following command: sudo grub-install /dev/sda This will restore your old Grub2 menu. Now we are done! We should have a really fancy boot menu that you can show to your friends and family or you can brag about on /g/. If you have any questions related to this article please leave them in the comments below or contact me directly, my information is in the contact tab.
9 Comments
zlan
3/28/2015 08:11:45 am
Hi, Very good tutorial. Thank you very much !
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zlan
3/28/2015 08:22:10 am
Ok, I found alone ^^. You have to press F2, then choose Ubuntu theme, and you will have the original menu
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Benzopal
4/22/2015 12:25:42 am
typed in:
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Admin
4/22/2015 06:58:04 am
Hello, the reason for this error does not seem to be from the commands, but rather from your system. There is an issue with your /etc/sudoers file. I can not help you much with that because it is a sudo error, and not a tutorial error. Try to check this link and see if you can solve the problem:
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Benzopal
4/22/2015 09:31:11 am
This started to happen AFTER upgrade to Ubuntu 14 LTS. Probably some config files were changed in the process.
Benzopal
4/22/2015 09:48:18 am
Got it. Had worked with the /etc folder and forgot to return it to its original permissions. Fixed it with "chown -hR root:root /etc". Tested with sudo and things were back to normal (as far as I can see ...) - Sorry for the incovenience. However many guides never mention permission issues and just go about as if all is permitted ;)
Benzopal
4/22/2015 09:37:44 am
Oh ... I'm having a hunch what happened ...
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Benzopal
4/22/2015 10:04:52 am
You know about this issue?
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Admin
4/23/2015 07:20:39 am
Hello, it seems that you have a dead ppa or repository my friend. Go to "software and updates" if you are on ubutu and disable the repo with that link. It usually happens when the developer moves to a new server, or something happens to the old one, where the application is being hosted and distributed from.
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Angel MercedesElectrical Engineering student and lover of all things Open Source, 3D Printing, Electronics and Linux. Categories
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