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10-18-2007, 02:45 PM #1
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- Sep 2007
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Thanked: 22
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10-18-2007, 02:57 PM #2
I've got about 100 gigs left I think....that should be enough I figure. I'll keep you posted. Maybe I'll do a Boot up selection first. I can always fade Windhose out later.
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10-18-2007, 03:45 PM #3
Another option for trying out Linux would be to install it under VMWare. That way you can have Windoze and Linux running at the same time and don't have to worry about repartitioning your hard drive. I've done the opposite - installed Windoze under VMWare on my Linux box when I needed it briefly. At the moment I'm running FreeBSD under VMWare on my Linux box. As soon as I get another hard drive I'll probably switch from Linux to FreeBSD.
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10-18-2007, 03:54 PM #4
yuck! just kidding - i run linux in vmware on my os x (bsd wannabe). i don't know how the vmware for windows is these days, but judging from the mac version which always lags behind it should be excellent.
this would be an excellent choice for giving linux a spin and see how you like it. but long term you'll probably end up wanting direct linux install so that you don't waste half of your memory loaded with OS that you don't really use.
oh, and vmware cost me money (~$50 iirc) but i wanted linux which i use for any real work at the same as os x which has the best user interface i've ever seen. to me that kind of money is better spent on razorabilia than on an emulator for trying linux....Last edited by gugi; 10-18-2007 at 03:59 PM.
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10-18-2007, 05:23 PM #5
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10-18-2007, 06:17 PM #6
I just had a quikc run from the CD. It worked well enough that I'll install it. Probably later tonight or something. I'll still need to figure out how to install printers and such.
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10-18-2007, 06:27 PM #7
it's easy trust me
there is a Printers tab in the Admin menu iirc, click add printer, select the manufacturer and model... nothing to worry about (if your printer is fairly mainstream)
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10-18-2007, 02:59 PM #8
- Join Date
- Oct 2007
- Location
- Livingston, Scotland
- Posts
- 188
Thanked: 11Admittedly I've not tried it as part of an ubuntu install since I've got repartitioning tools but "usually" partitioning during a linux install is a destructive process and "special" tools are required to shrink the original windows partition so linux ones can be created.
Barney
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10-18-2007, 03:04 PM #9
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- Sep 2007
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10-18-2007, 03:29 PM #10
LX - first, congratulations
Second - I've also started with slackware on floppies learning mostly by trial and error, but the times have drastically changed. Here are couple of points on recent Ubuntus (I havent' installed the 7.10 yet, but that should be your choice and it's the default on the website).
The general process is as follows:
1.) pop in the cd.
2.) reboot the computer (interrupt at bios and set the boot options to be CD)
3.) when linux starts feel free to look around, then click the Install icon on the desktop.
4.) There are several questions that you had to answer, pretty straightforward (language, keyboard variant, name, location, password), EXCEPT ONE PART - the one about partitions
5.) The hardest part was about repartitioning the harddrive - you have to make a separate space for linux (2-4GB is plenty to start and if you do things properly we can help you expand it very easy if you need). I do not remember exactly that part and it may have changed in 7.10, but try to follow the defaults if you can - they are good. If you have to decide on the size - there is a picture with a slider - set it to 4GB. My gripe with the prev. versions is that in the process it never tells you what is goint to happen to Windows. It does the right thing and resizes the windows part, freeing the space you need and preserves Windows, but it doesn't tell you that you need not to worry about this. Hopefully they've done it better this time. The tool that does the resizing is(was) the same gparted that was suggested to you, so no need of a second cd and preparing your disk first. If you get an option of what kind of filesystem to use - ext3 should be the default and your choice if it isn't.
6.) When it asks where to install thee 'boot loader' or 'grub' go with the default and install in the harddrive. This is the correct answer. It will also make an option to boot windows, so no worries there.
7.) They usually have screenshots of the process - may want to look at them and print them out.
8.) Once it works installation of new software/updating the current one is easy. For the updates it checks every day and pops a little orange icon when there is an update, for the installs - there is an application where you just search for software by names/keywords and click 'install'.
9.) It is a scary operation if this is your only computer, but the chances are you will be fine (you read the EULA when you accepted it right)
10.) Read the instructions on their website and see what you think - ask us if you have questions.
enjoyLast edited by gugi; 10-18-2007 at 03:35 PM.