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@  yordan : (19 June 2013 - 02:28 PM) Long Life To Asta New Era
@  agyat : (19 June 2013 - 01:58 PM) New Era Start At Asta Or Asta Start In New Era. :unsure:
@  yordan : (16 June 2013 - 05:41 PM) You're Welcome, Agyat!
@  agyat : (16 June 2013 - 07:38 AM) Thanks Yordan...
@  velma : (16 June 2013 - 12:06 AM) I Have Asked Opa To Check For A Backup.. He'll Let Me Know Soon :)
@  velma : (16 June 2013 - 12:05 AM) T_T It Seems That Someone Has Deleted That Topic Since I Found The Url Of The Topic But It Gives Me An Error
@  yordan : (15 June 2013 - 10:31 PM) @velma : It's A Tuto On How To Create A Login Program.
@  yordan : (15 June 2013 - 10:31 PM) Happy Birthday To Youuuuuu Agyat!
@  yordan : (15 June 2013 - 10:31 PM) Ba$
@  agyat : (15 June 2013 - 04:41 PM) :(
@  agyat : (15 June 2013 - 04:41 PM) Where The Hall I Were? 15Th Is Almost At End And No-One Wished Me "happy Birthday"!!!
@  velma : (14 June 2013 - 10:39 AM) Which Tutorial Is He Searching For?
@  velma : (14 June 2013 - 10:38 AM) Which Tutorial Is He Searching For?
@  yordan : (14 June 2013 - 07:47 AM) Ok, Have A Look Tomorrow.
@  yordan : (13 June 2013 - 03:19 PM) @velma, Can You Have A Look At Feelay's Problem? Seems That His Tutorial Is Not Searchable Today.
@  Feelay : (13 June 2013 - 08:11 AM) Oh, Haha
@  velma : (12 June 2013 - 05:39 PM) T_T Lately My Levels Of Procrastination..... **sigh**
@  velma : (12 June 2013 - 05:38 PM) I'll Do It Later
@  velma : (12 June 2013 - 05:38 PM) Procrastinators.. People Who Keep Saying "i'll Do This In A Bit"
@  Feelay : (12 June 2013 - 02:05 PM) Deal Punishments To What?

Replying to A Guide To Linux Flavours


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Topic Summary

MajesticTreeFrog

Posted 27 December 2004 - 03:44 AM

What I would love to be a part of is an effort to make linux user friendly and not have these issues. Then I could just use linux without ever worrying about the BS. Not only that, but sprucing up linux would make it more attractive to both customers(for use) and corporations(more customers but also in order to make it user friendly it would need a more standardized GUI and human interface guidelines, which would make writing software easier as well).

Sadly, I don't know of anywhere that I could work that would pay me to help with this(the best solution) nor of any online attempt to make it happen that is real(which would still be pretty cool).

Oh yeah, 200th post!!

qwijibow

Posted 27 December 2004 - 02:21 AM

half the reason why I prefer Gentoo but I was talking about their usability for newbs.



dont get me wrong.. i love gentoo, been using it for years.. but ive recently migrated to the AMD64 platform...

No newb could have done what i had to do to create a fully 64bit OS with my hardware.

the 64bit gentoo boot cd refused to boot because of a buggy IDE-CD driver losing the interupt. however a simple fix for this is to use scsi emulation on the ide device, but that cnanges the hardware address, and the boot cd thinks its own cdrom has vanished of the face of the earch.

you can only compile and run 64bit binary's on a 64bit OS, so i couldnt install entoo from my 32bit Knoppix.

i had to build a 32bit stage3 partiton, rip the kernel and initrd and he drivers from the 64bit install cd, boot the 64bit Kenrnel into a 32bit root partiton with 32bit emulation, then chroot into my desired 64bit stage1, then install from there.

the bad thing about linux.. if it goes wrong, and you dont know what you are doing, you are screwed...

the good thing, if it goes wrong, and your a bit of a computer nerd haXor Zero cool, Cerial Killer (as in fruit loops, but he does know stuff) Acid Burn, Crash Override... then you can rpobably fix it.

and when tempting fate with the latest hardware, and a DIY distro like Gentoo, you are just asking for trouble.

MajesticTreeFrog

Posted 25 December 2004 - 06:15 AM

well yeah, but when I first tried linux, I tried redhat and the dependency BS just got annoying and I decided that(since I knew how to keep my windows box secure/virus free) it wasn't worth it at the time. Redhat and mandrake have both improved significantly over the last few years, so things may be much better.

coder2000

Posted 25 December 2004 - 03:25 AM

half the reason why I prefer Gentoo but I was talking about their usability for newbs.

MajesticTreeFrog

Posted 24 December 2004 - 11:11 PM

except both Fedora and Mandrake use RPM based stuff, which puts you in dependency hell. Portage and Apt-get get around this problem.

coder2000

Posted 24 December 2004 - 08:20 PM

I like gentoo. Mostly for the ability of having an os optimized for your computer. Most operating systems are compiled so they will run on a wide variety of machines while with portage you can get software that will run only on your machine making it work that much better. Sure it takes longer because you have to compile it but I think the results are worth it. Fedora Core 3 or Mandrake 10 are good distrobutions as well they provide easy to use installation interfaces that allow newbies to linux to install and start using it without much hassle similar to windows.

MajesticTreeFrog

Posted 23 December 2004 - 05:18 AM

I also am downloading a copy of mandrake, in case ubuntu/gnoppix doesn't work out.

Here is to hoping.

wwheeler

Posted 23 December 2004 - 04:31 AM

I use mandrake and redhat on two of my machines....

I am really just getting into the linux area, so it is all new to me, and I am trying to lear about it.

but I am really happy with Mandrake 10.0 Community, and Red Hat (somenumber) I can't remeber)

I am just too new to get anything done with them...

MajesticTreeFrog

Posted 23 December 2004 - 04:21 AM

No, i am not planning on Gaming. I intend to keep a 40GB windows install for gaming/stuff that I need windows for(like photoshop, until I can get that running perfectly under wine).

I think I will just go for / and /swap. I use a ton of personal data, but I also tend to install lots of stuff, and I don't like the idea of figuring out how much of each I intend to do. So, since I will be running linux(and therefore shouldn't NEED to worry about massive system failure) I will just use those partitions. Well, maybe another partition called /backup for things I want to have backed up just-in-case(thats what my D:\ drive was for in windows).

qwijibow

Posted 23 December 2004 - 03:57 AM

the only advantage of using a seperate /home partiton is that you can change distro's or do complete forat and reinstall without losing yor data or having to backup.

anyways... the rule of thumb is to have twice as much swap as RAM...
however i have half a gig or ram, and my swap partiton is never needed.
sio i dont want to waste 1gig disk.

i have 512 megs of swap, but only so i can suspend to swap, and get ultra fash power on's (no need to boot)

as for the /home partiton... ive explained the advantage, now the disadvantage...
changing partiton sizes is anoying... and takes a few minutes, plus you will need a rescue cd (knoppix) because you cant resize a mounted partiton.

so you want to avoid a home partiton that is too small, and you will fill up..
however, if you make your home partiton too big, you are wasting root partiton size, which is used fr application install's

How much personal data / Mp3's / work / ripped DVD / movie / saved emails space do you need ?

use all the rest of the free space as / (root partiton)

oh, and before you jump into this... are you planning on gaming ?
check to see if there is a linux driver for your card (from ATI, not an open source driver)

i know ATI support linux... but the drivers are not as easy to install as Nvidia's ^_^

Review the complete topic (launches new window)