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I have a 6 year old laptop which through the years lost a CD drive and doesn't have any options to boot using a USB stick.

I somehow managed to install Ubuntu using pxe boot taking the Ubuntu distro from us.archive.ubuntu.com.

When I start my system, I see that there is no UI available and when I do a uname I get the following:

Linux machinename 2.6.31-23-generic #75-Ubuntu SMP

I want to install Ubuntu with Gnome on my machine, and I have an .iso image of Ubuntu 10.04.

Is there a way to install another Ubuntu version (fresh install on a partition would also work) from within Ubuntu using .iso image?

Any help is greatly appreciated.

PS: Much better for me would be to install the Ubuntu netbook version or its better to install a simple Ubuntu desktop version?

Neeraj
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  • Try and see what works best for you. Maybe [**this link**](https://askubuntu.com/questions/1053990/lubuntu-vs-xubuntu-for-development#1053990) can give you some tips. You can try Ubuntu community flavours with light desktop environment (instead of the netbook version, which is no longer developed. – sudodus Jul 10 '18 at 22:24

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Since your old laptop has working network connectivity, it would probably be easier to install from the network:

sudo apt-get install ubuntu-desktop

Note that since the introduction of Unity, there is no longer a distinction between Ubuntu "netbook" and "desktop" editions.

Riccardo Murri
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