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Thread: Linux users

  1. #31
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    Now that sounds pretty good KZ, I will check that out.

  2. #32
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    Ehh... You can really get almost any hardware to work if you know where to look. Alsa for sound cards, linux-printing for printers, et cetera. I guess PCLinuxOS has better hardware detection than Ubuntu? What does it use to install? Anaconda? It's pretty nice of them to provide codecs, but how do they get around the legal issues?

    Ooh, valve is being ported to Linux? BTW, for gaming on Linux, check out linuX-gamers.net - ENJOY Linux Games. Wine is free...

  3. #33
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    Quote Originally Posted by kaptain_zero View Post
    Old School, try downloading a copy of PCLinuxOS, it's about 700megs so it fits on a CD. I've found that out of all the more popular *nix's, PClos is the most complete and friendly to set up. The downloadable cd is a live cd so you can boot to it, bring up the desktop and check things out before you actually install anything. Most of the codecs are included so if you surf to a website, no need to go looking for this and that, just to play a little video etc.
    I downloaded it and burnt it to disk, it worked first time, so thats a good start. I thought I could test drive it like Ubuntu where you run the OS from disk though it doesn't get installed, I got a little worried after making sure the image burnt correctly as it lloked like it was installing, but that was not the case thank heavens. I ran into the tiniest of problems...... It requires a username and password, now I thought it might know my windoze login info but it seems not. Any ideas on that? I would like to test drive the OS before installing.

  4. #34
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    two possibilities:

    username: guest
    password: guest

    username: root
    password: root

    root is like administrator on Windows. I suggest you login with the guest login. I'm not sure if you need to login to root to install... Wouldn't hurt to just try, and if that fails, logout of guest, login as root, and try to install. Of course that's when you're ready to install PCLinuxOS.

  5. #35
    Previously lost, now "Pasturized" kaptain_zero's Avatar
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    Yupp, username guest, password guest and username root, password root. It should be spelled out on the log in page in the top left corner if I recall correctly though I don't think it *tells you* to use them.

    Use the live cd system as guest, if you want to install it to your hard drive, there is an icon for that on the desktop. If you click on that as guest, it will ask you for the root password which at this point is of course root. When you install it on your hard drive, it will ask you to supply a root (root = Administrator) password and of course you should choose something more secure than the default root. You should also create an account for yourself and anyone else who will be using the computer but you can add and delete accounts after it's installed so just the root password and one account for yourself is all you need to get going.

    PCLinuxOS has an excellent user forum like here and the guys are pretty good to newcomers unlike some distros where it seems like they would rather discourage new users who aren't familiar with Linux.

    Christian
    "Aw nuts, now I can't remember what I forgot!" --- Kaptain "Champion of lost causes" Zero

  6. #36
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    Quote Originally Posted by kaptain_zero
    PCLinuxOS has an excellent user forum like here and the guys are pretty good to newcomers unlike some distros where it seems like they would rather discourage new users who aren't familiar with Linux.
    What forums might you be talking about? I've tried many distributions (Redhat 8-9, Fedora 3-5, Debian 1.3, Slackware, Gentoo 2004.1-2007.0, Zenwalk 1.7-2.4, Xandros, SymphonyOS, Ubuntu 5.10-7.10, OpenSUSE, SimplyMEPIS, VLOS, paldo and a few others I don't remmeber), most had their own forums. All forums I went to were friendly to newbs... Same with general linux forums such as Linuxquestions and Linuxforums.

    Just in case some people may get the wrong idea, the reason I went through so many distributions was because I got a little over-excited about Linux and what was available. I wanted to see what was out there and which one best suited me. All the distributions I tried were great, but just wasn't to my satisfaction, except Gentoo. It would be great if everyone could explore different distributions/flavors, but unfortunately most people don't have the time or hardware too. I was lucky enough to find out about linux while in high school and we had a spare hard drive.

  7. #37
    Previously lost, now "Pasturized" kaptain_zero's Avatar
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    Well, of course, I can only speak from personal experience.... I found PClinuxOS after a love/hate affair with Mandrake/Mandriva... For the record, Tex, the mastermind behind PClos also came from Mandriva and based PClos on said operating system when he first started PClos. I based my claim of noob friendly forum on the significant numbers of new users recently alienated by other distributions and who showed up on the PClos forums, and I won't name where they came from as it would be second hand information and besides, I don't want anyone to avoid any particular flavor of Linux, FreeBSD etc. just because of something I heard. I started out hacking around some 15 years ago with slakware, redhat etc. but I never found peace with the X windows desktop until Mandrake showed up, mostly due to lack of hp in the hardware I had.

    For anyone interested in alternate linux flavors, you can always check out Distrowatch.com where pretty much everything is listed and the latest news is frequently posted there with links and whatnot.

    For me, PClinuxOS has proven to be simple to install, simple to learn (I got fed up fixing an XP box for a co-worker due to viruses and spyware so I installed PClinuxOS on it and showed them how to get started and they've not called me back since... it's still working, the kids get their university work done on the box, load their mp3 players, dad gets his stuff for work done and the Mrs gets to surf and check her email and nobody seems to have any issues with something not working) and the fine gents who put it all together keep a tight grip on what's included for software and what's available from the repositories. When you find something you want to install, it pretty much goes without hickups (as in all packages are actually tested) and tend to be good working programs. I know other distributions include 87 bazillion packages and half of them don't actually install properly or they need massaging by the administrator to work. PClinuxOS is as the slogan says, is Radically Simple. Install it, upgrade to the latest updates with their excellent package manager and live happy ever after.

    I like several other distributions as well, some are very promising but I've found that PClinuxOS seems to just get MY hardware right and they don't make you go to the PLF to get codecs, proprietary drivers and all that stuff and make you do the extra work that most folks aren't interested in learning how to do.

    Regards

    Christian
    "Aw nuts, now I can't remember what I forgot!" --- Kaptain "Champion of lost causes" Zero

  8. #38
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    I currently use Debian Etch, through the years I've ran a few different distros and so far it's the one I like best. It runs just fine on my old Pentium II 350mhz. I'm actually amazed when I look back and see the progress made over the years as far as GNU/Linux goes. It seems like every year it gets more user friendly, has a larger supply of available software and just improves in every possible way.

    Years ago, I was good with computers, now adays I'm so far behind it's ridiculous, but somehow that doesn't seem to matter. At one time you had to be awfully handy with Perl and configuration to get a Linux distro to treat you well... Now it's just install and forget, GUI interfaces do all the boring work for you. :P

  9. #39
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    Oh man! A Pentium II 350 MHz!!! I've been looking for one of those for a very, very long time. Need it to make a dvd player. Kind of a side project. I found a site that sold old hardware, but I seemed to have lost the link... Oh well.

    Anyway, I seem to be doing the opposite of most people. I'm ditching the gui stuff and going more towards cli. I've got a wpm of about 100+, so it's faster for me to type something than navigate with a mouse and point and click. Like I said in earlier posts, I'm moving away from GNOME, and more towards either xmonad or awesome window managers, LaTeX instead of word processors, sage + database (most likely MySQL) instead of excel and feh instead of presentation software. Should be an interesting experience.

    And yeah, I agree. It seems with every new year, Linux improves. But they have an edge over Microsoft by having much shorter release cycles. Microsoft seems to be unable to adapt to growing technology and still has an oddly long release cycle.

  10. #40
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    Since I got back to the SRP, I thought I'd resurrect this thread and chime in with my own experience..
    Late in the summer, I picked up a brand spankin' new HP dv9000 series laptop and ofcourse, it came with Vista. Needless to say, I started looking into alternatives and decided to give Linux another shot.
    Since it's well supported and easy to work with, I went with Ubuntu (Hardy). It already came pre-packaged with OOO2.4, FF3.0 and the rest of the basics. Using the package manager was an easy way to install a few additional apps like GRASS, Google Earth and QGIS. My hardware was well-supported except for 2 items...
    1) I remember my Broadcom wireless card took a bit of time to get to work (I just used the ample info available online)
    2) For my printer (Brother MFC 7440) I decided to install the manufacturer's driver. The site had good instructions on how to compile them from source, so I had no problems with that part, either.
    The only software issue was that the native media player didn't play too well with some videos, but VLC is readily available.
    Now I'm waiting for Intrepid to come out, so I can completely eliminate the Vista partition and do a clean install.
    2 additional notes:
    1) I have a desktop machine running XP but I only turn it on when I need to run ER Mapper and/or Oasis Montaj.
    2) I tried virtualization via KVM, but it didn't play well with USB hardware, so I'll need to look into the other solutions suggested in this thread. Probably before I even install Intrepid.

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