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View Poll Results: Which linux distro I should try
Suse 6 25.00%
Redhat 7 29.17%
Some other Linux distro 8 33.33%
Stick with windows 3 12.50%
Voters: 24. You may not vote on this poll

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dverma75 Offline
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Going to install Linux on my desktop - January 28th, 2003, 11:45 AM

I have a spare pc.
PII 400mghz, 160ram, 50gig.

I wanna pick between suse and Redhat. I have suse ver 8.1 prof.

Or is there any other distro you will recomend.


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Last edited by dverma75; January 28th, 2003 at 11:51 AM.
   
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zaphodiv Offline
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January 28th, 2003, 12:18 PM

Try several distributions, see which one you like.

Personally I'v used SuSe for years. I'm a bit disapointed with 8.1, they
shipped a just released version of the KDE window manager that is
annoyingly slow.

I think redhat trys too hard to look like windows but may people prefer that.

Whatever you choose, remember to run the online update to patch security holes
as soon as you connect it to the internet. Redhat has got slightly better
in reccent versions but you should expect a default install to be hacked,
r00tkitted, acting as an IRC bot and a DDoS zombie within 12 hours of being
connected to the internet unless it's behind a connection sharing/NAT device.
   
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nasrules Offline
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January 28th, 2003, 12:20 PM

i tried installing mandrake 9 on my other puter but it wouldnt let me, something to do with the mount point of my partitions (?!)
   
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January 28th, 2003, 12:29 PM

>something to do with the mount point of my partitions

You will have to give more information than that if you want help.

Describe what you did step by step.
What was the _exact_ error message?
What drives are in the computer?
/What existing partitions are on the drives?
Are you trying to keep an existing windows installtion on
the machine?
   
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fernandez Offline
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January 28th, 2003, 12:30 PM

If you already have SuSE, I'd go ahead and give it a try. I've been using Mandrake for a while now, next I'll attempt a Debian install using a minimal boot image. I hope I won't mess up. As zaphodiv said, I believe you just have to try out different distributions.
   
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dverma75 Offline
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January 28th, 2003, 12:36 PM

Quote:
Originally posted by zaphodiv

Personally I'v used SuSe for years. I'm a bit disapointed with 8.1, they
shipped a just released version of the KDE window manager that is
annoyingly slow.
Which ver. of Suse would you prefer


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MoonMan Offline
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January 28th, 2003, 12:43 PM

I personally prefer Mandrake 9.0 or SuSe (any latest version) because of the ease of use and stability (but hey let's face it, all linux distros are stable.). As zaphodiv said, once you install it, go on the internet ASAP and download security patches to fix any crap that was messed up in the original distro.


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January 28th, 2003, 03:04 PM

I recently installed mandrake 9 on my other pc and had already partitioned my second hard drive to install it to. The problem I had was that It would only boot LILO and not allow me anywhere to choose which OS (my other is XP) to boot. Is there something I need to do differenly with windows or is it with Mandrake? I loved using Mandrake, but the other users of the PC needed XP to work. Thanks for any help.


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January 28th, 2003, 03:31 PM

I prefer OpenBSD myself. It's not really a version of Linux at all, rather it's another offshoot of Unix. It's very secure by default, but it is not that user-friendly.

There is KDE in this too (and other GUI desktops).
   
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January 28th, 2003, 04:56 PM

I've had Mandrake 9.0 for several months now. So far, I really like it.
   
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February 2nd, 2003, 09:49 AM

>Personally I'v used SuSe for years. I'm a bit disapointed with 8.1, they
>shipped a just released version of the KDE window manager that is
>annoyingly slow.

Oops, brainfart, I'm actually using SuSe8.0
I changed my connection sharing machine to slackware8.1
and got the two mixed up in my mind. I realised when
I got the boxed set out to install some libraries.

I just installed the kde 3.1 and xwindow seems smoother.

>Which ver. of Suse would you prefer

Since you have 8.1 you might as well give it a go.
If you have broardband KDE3.1 is probably wirth the 125meg
download.
   
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nasrules Offline
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February 2nd, 2003, 11:11 AM

Quote:
Originally posted by zaphodiv
>something to do with the mount point of my partitions

You will have to give more information than that if you want help.

Describe what you did step by step.
What was the _exact_ error message?
What drives are in the computer?
/What existing partitions are on the drives?
Are you trying to keep an existing windows installtion on
the machine?
Well i wasn't actually looking for a fix but any help would be appreciated.

HD Drives: 1 HD partitioned into three

C:\ Windows NT4 (NTFS)
D:\ Windows XP Pro (NTFS)
E:\ This is where I want to install Mandrake (NTFS)

I need to have NT4 on because the comp is 'on lease' from my Mum's work, and that's the OS they use. I could take XP Pro off, it was a test to see if I liked it before I installed it on my main comp.

Exact message:

You must have a root partition.
For this, create a partition (or click on an existing one).
Then choose action "Mount point" and set it to '/'

So, I tried changing the mount point of E:\. Then I get this message:

You need a true filesystem (ext2/ext3, reiserfs, xfs or jfs) for this mount point

What do I do now? Create a new primary partition?

Last edited by nasrules; February 2nd, 2003 at 11:22 AM.
   
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February 3rd, 2003, 01:30 PM

Does anyone have a Linux boot disk that they are willing to share b/c I was trying to install Red Hat 8 and I'm pretty sure that I had the partitions done correctly and when it got to 88% installed it just froze and didn't install correctly. I would like to know if you anyone could help.


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Ashitaka Offline
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February 6th, 2003, 03:32 PM

Quote:
Originally posted by Ghost 23
Does anyone have a Linux boot disk that they are willing to share b/c I was trying to install Red Hat 8 and I'm pretty sure that I had the partitions done correctly and when it got to 88% installed it just froze and didn't install correctly.
Ouch. Try tomsrtbt and see if you can recover it; however, I'd just try a reinstall, because 88% of an operating system isn't very useful.

If you give up on Red Hat, well, I like Debian :)
   
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Ghost 23 Offline
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February 6th, 2003, 03:57 PM

Quote:
Originally posted by Ashitaka
Ouch. Try tomsrtbt and see if you can recover it; however, I'd just try a reinstall, because 88% of an operating system isn't very useful.

If you give up on Red Hat, well, I like Debian :)
Is that link for a boot disk or this a link to a program similar to cygwin?


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