
However, I am having some problems with persistence. The machine I'm testing the new Salix live out on has Ubuntu on it, in a huge partition sda1 formatted with ext4 (no separate home), with an extended partition sda2 containing sda5 swap. Gparted within Salix live recognises none of this, seeing just an unformatted disk the size of the whole thing.
The persistence sees sda1 - but doesn't seem to work at all. From inside Ubuntu, I can see the persistence file, which is 1GB as I chose. I then looked at Gparted because my first hunch is maybe Salix can't read ext4 yet? But in that case, how did it save the persistence file?
My next step is to try a different machine, for instance the one downstairs that has Salix on it already (and almost Caffeine). But if there *is* a problem with ext4, it might be helpful to others to solve it. I imagine the most common scenario is ntfs.
A separate point, and just a minor gripe: the persistence setup program asks you to select a mount point. In my case, there was only the one, and it wasn't obvious that you needed to highlight it. I didn't, and clicked OK, and the window just closed. That meant two reboots before I realised it hadn't worked. Would it be possible to make it refuse to let you click on OK till you have selected something, or produce an error message, or maybe just change the wording slightly? I know it already says something like "select", but if you have one option and a button that says OK, the tendency is to just click

UPDATE The machine with Salix installed on it seems to have the same problem with persistence for Salix Live 13.1.1, i.e. it doesn't work. Interestingly, the login screen is skipped on this machine.
I don't think this is a corrupt download. The md5sums check out, and also because I was having some problems with burning I downloaded from a mirror as well as torrent, and the two files are identical (using diff). Also, everything else works.