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authorrbuj <[email protected]>2018-10-03 22:55:56 +0200
committerraveit65 <[email protected]>2018-10-04 09:52:01 +0200
commit8d94f956ed87877887c1f90df0d46aa1fb9dfee6 (patch)
tree3fcf18fbefd5339bfe511887557e04eab3bdaea0
parentaaa6859f0d3d538aaa9a1ce6aa7445b6d5155010 (diff)
downloadmate-applets-8d94f956ed87877887c1f90df0d46aa1fb9dfee6.tar.bz2
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Manual: Linux and UNIX systems -> Linux and other Unix-like systems
-rw-r--r--drivemount/help/C/index.docbook4
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/drivemount/help/C/index.docbook b/drivemount/help/C/index.docbook
index 26147262..8b224303 100644
--- a/drivemount/help/C/index.docbook
+++ b/drivemount/help/C/index.docbook
@@ -243,13 +243,13 @@
<sect2 id="drivemount-intro-mount">
<title>Manually Mounting and Unmounting File Systems</title>
<para>
- Many file systems on Linux and UNIX systems must be manually mounted and unmounted.
+ Many file systems on Linux and other Unix-like systems must be manually mounted and unmounted.
</para>
<para>
When a file system is mounted, you can read and write to the file system. When you finish working with a file system, you should unmount the file system.
</para>
<para>
- You must unmount removable drives, such as floppy disks and Zip disks, before you remove the media, because Linux and UNIX systems do not always write the changes immediately. Such systems typically buffer the changes to the disk, to improve the speed of the system.
+ You must unmount removable drives, such as floppy disks and Zip disks, before you remove the media, because Linux and other Unix-like systems do not always write the changes immediately. Such systems typically buffer the changes to the disk, to improve the speed of the system.
</para>
<para>
Partitions on fixed drives, such as your hard drive, are typically mounted automatically when your computer boots, and unmounted when your computer shuts down. Removable media must be mounted and unmounted manually, for example by using the &app;.