Gigabyte Brix Linux Drivers
Stephen's answer is correct, there is an install image WITH firmware. I would have posted (version-independant) this link though:.
Strip klub erevan video. How come the Energy star certification mark and the DualBIOS logo disappear during BIOS POST?
This folder always has the latest release image. If you dont want to download the image again or have finished the installation regardless of the missing Ethernet drivers: Download the package from e.g. Extract or Install it on a different computer, copy /lib/firmware/rtl_nic/rtl8168e-3.fw to a USB drive, and manually copy it to the same place on the BRIX Filesystem. Then, once online, 'apt-get update', and install the 'real' non-free/firmware-realtek package to benefit from future firmware updates. You can do this during the installation, by using the ALT-F2 Expert Console.
But its a lot easier to just do after the installation.
I work my computers pretty hard and after about three years I usually find something is dying. If it isn't the hard disk or DVD drive it's generally something else that has finally worn out. My current Compaq 1040 is more than four years old and has been a problem for quite a while. I'm not well off any more and the budget limits me to between $300 - $400 Aussie dollars. I also find having a laptop on the desk and trying to use it with a dual monitor setup is a real pain – so when I could not put the inevitable off any more, I bought a low end Brix. I always buy low end processors.
I don't play computer games. I browse the web, play music and music videos, write simple programs (usually BASH scripts), and do a lot of photo editing and a little video editing. Much of the last two are either from the command line or using scripts I have customised for my own requirements. And of course there's the usual hack work. I design some web sites for businesses and maintain some blogs and do the usual word processing and spreadsheeting. I also only buy cheap computers.
A couple of weeks into living with the BRIX and there was one annoying problem. The thing doesn't shutdown. When choosing to shutdown, everything seems fine, then it simply reboots.
It was not happening initially but after a Linux kernel update it started happening. A bit of googling shows it is not only me with this issue, although it is not clear if it is happening with all processor variations. At any rate, with the Brix BACE-3150 it is happening. Fdor now, the only solution is to be sure to hit the main power switch (at the adapter) as soon as everything seems to have shut off. Otherwise, the light on the Brix comes back on and it reboots. Something I will mention on closing is that KODI under Linux Mint suffers the same shutdown problem as KODI under Raspbian on the Raspberry Pi. If you choose exit, instead of dropping back to Linux, it just hangs the system, often at a black screen.
Choosing Exit often does the same. So I find the best what to get out of KODI is to choose a reboot, then either work in Linux, or shutdown from Linux.
The other option is to go into KODI System > System and choose to run in Windowed mode, then close the KODI window. Be sure though to swap KODI back into Full Screen mode while you are running video or it will not play smoothly. Keygen dlya zdsimulator.