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Zeropaid Regular
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Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: The little Apple
Age: 28
Reputation Power: 92
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Mandrake Is Good -
June 18th, 2002, 10:51 AM
Welcome to the linux relm. If you want to join try Mandrake [www.mandrakelinux.com]. Good software for new users. Good support for it to (that waht i'm using) There are others out there. Corel had something out there but ive never tried it. I've just heard it is pretty good. Look on the Net. There are millions out there. Check out [www.linuxformat.com] htey might have some things. Hope this helps. ;-)
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Zeropaid Regular
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Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Florida
Reputation Power: 279
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Re: linux distribution -
July 17th, 2002, 09:02 AM
Quote:
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Zeropaid Regular
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Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: So Cal
Reputation Power: 205
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Here is a interesting project -
July 17th, 2002, 12:24 PM
check this website out, it's for a project called demolinux.
http://demolinux.org You can download the iso there but the interesting thing about this project is you can run linux off a cdrom and even install it if you decide you want to. It was created to promote linux and make it easy for people to experience linux before they install one of the various installation packages. check it out, it's free. :-) |
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Zeropaid Regular
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Join Date: Apr 2002
Reputation Power: 0
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Linux distribution -
July 23rd, 2002, 05:17 AM
I originally had Mandrake installed on my system but have moved on to Gentoo and Debian. Debian is great for security and reliability. Gentoo is great for system optimization and bleeding edge programs. Both Debian and Gentoo have what I consider to be the best package management systems available. I recommend you start with a newbie distro (like Mandrake), until you feel confident enough to install a distro catered to the experts (like Debian, or Gentoo). The benefit of installing a distro like Debian and Gentoo is that you only install only what you need (by default) and upgrading all of the software to the newest version is easily done by typing two short lines. For example, do you want Limewire on your Gentoo box? No problem, simply type "emerge limewire", wait about five minutes for it to compile, and voila! It's there. No configuration necessary (that includes Java configuration as well). Do you have an outdated distro of Gentoo and want to update it? No problem, simply type "emerge --update world", wait a few hours, and bam, you're up to date.
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Registered User
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Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Atlanta, GA
Age: 39
Reputation Power: 0
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August 12th, 2002, 07:49 PM
The first Linux distro that I tried was Red Hat, but after getting Suse, I would say that Suse is the best choice, of course it costs money for the full versions, unlike most other Linux distros. It was worth paying for.
Want to know which one is right for you? Download VmWare or Virtual PC, install the ones that interest you and find out for yourself. There is no single distro that is right for everyone, it just depends on your taste and level of patience. Personally, I hate Mandrake. Whatever you do, don't get rid of Windows until your comfortable running and maintaining Linux. It took myself about 2 weeks to dump Windows, would have only been a week except I had to transfer a shitload of files over to my Linux partitions. Good luck. Thugged Out |
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Zeropaid Regular
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Join Date: Apr 2002
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August 13th, 2002, 10:08 AM
Don't be scared to try different distributions either. If you set your box up correctly with your partitions, you can install a different distribution each week and not loose any info or personal settings (just have to make sure that you don't wipe out your /home partition). Try one of the big three (known for their ease of installation), Red Hat, Mandrake, or Suse to get you started. Then once you learn more about running Linux, experiment with different distributions. Just remember, there will ALWAYS be a flaw in the distribution you use, and there will ALWAYS be a feature in some other distribution that you don't have in yours.
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