![boot directly to freestyle dash 3 boot directly to freestyle dash 3](https://www.xpgamesaves.com/proxy.php?image=http%3A%2F%2Fi1196.photobucket.com%2Falbums%2Faa417%2FBMTHstanton1990%2FXPG%20Photos%2FXPGTutorialHeader.jpg)
There are issues that will cause the meter to give incorrect readings. It uses 0.3 microliters of blood to measure the amount of blood glucose present. The FreeStyle Flash is a blood glucose meter made by TheraSense. if you need help, please create your new own thread here (don't forget to indicate the URL you noted on your paper at Step6, this will give valuable information to understand your problem) It is important for a person with diabetes to monitor his blood glucose on a regular basis. You should now be able to boot into Ubuntu. Note on a paper the URL ( /XXXXXX/) that will appear. Tick the "Separate /boot partition: sdXY" option (sdXY must be your 1GB partition) or System->Administration->Boot-Repair menu (Ubuntu 10.04) the Dash (Ubuntu 11.04 and next): click the Ubuntu logo in the top-left corner of the screen, then type boot and click on the Boot-Repair icon that will appear. This is generally something like /dev/ sdXY (X is a letter, Y is a number). On a paper, note the name of this new 1GB partition. In this free space, create a 1GB partition formatted in EXT4. Important: to resize Windows Vista/7/8 partitions, don't use gParted but Windows tools instead. This free space must be located inside the first 100GB of the disk (its end must not be located at more than 100GB from the start of the disk). Reduce one of the first partitions of the disk in order to create 1GB (=1000MiB) of free space at the start of the disk where Ubuntu is installed. Step 4 - Create a 1GB partition at the start of the disk or by typing gksudo gparted in a terminal or System->Administration->gParted menu (Ubuntu 10.04) the Dash (Ubuntu 11.04 and next): click the Ubuntu logo in the top-left corner of the screen, then type gparted and click on the gParted icon that will appear.
#BOOT DIRECTLY TO FREESTYLE DASH 3 UPDATE#
Sudo add-apt-repository ppa:yannubuntu/boot-repair & sudo apt-get update
![boot directly to freestyle dash 3 boot directly to freestyle dash 3](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/-uGFtTG7qKw/maxresdefault.jpg)
Open a terminal (Ctrl+Alt+T) and type :.
#BOOT DIRECTLY TO FREESTYLE DASH 3 INSTALL#
Once in the Ubuntu live session, install Boot-Repair this way: Step 2 - Install Boot-Repair in the live-session or a Ubuntu live-CD or live-USB, choose "Try Ubuntu", then go to Step 2 below. a Linux-Secure-Remix liveCD or liveUSB, then choose "Try Ubuntu", then go directly to Step 3 below. Some situations (eg BIOS limitations, or this GRUB bug) may require to create a separate /boot partition at the start of the disk, and setup Ubuntu to use it.