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Questions Before I Begin My Journey Into Linux :)
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Thread : Questions Before I Begin My Journey Into Linux :)
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Profile: newbie
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Ok. First off, I'd like to say that I have never even SEEN linux, just heard about it (This may explain my stupidity). I am a comp. science freshman and figured it would be good to learn this now. My plan is to build a semi-cheap computer as I already have a bad ass bertha one. I plan on getting a Duron (700, 800, maybe the new 900), an Asus board (probably a7v as can't take advantage of a7v133 too much) , something like a 20GB Hard Drive, 256 PC133 Ram, no sound. Ok I think those should be alright to run Linux on, please tell me if I'm wrong. Two of my questions are, can i burn CD's in Linux? I have a Creative 12x10x32 CD-RW Blaster. Also, will my old voodoo3 2000 card work in Linux? I don't plan on buying a new card for it. If no, what card will? Also, I am not sure which distrubition to get. It seems to be a matter of preference. Although Redhat and Mandrake have been recommended to me as a beginner. And no I don't want to install a dual-boot, I want a new computer! Any input would be great, thanks in advance.
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Profile: Ancient Poster
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I only have limited experience with Linux, but it was good experience. You'll do ok with all of that and Redhat. More than likely, you'll be buying a $40 sb live down the road, but don't sweat it until your ready. Games are aren't as widespread with Linux, and you'll be able to make that decision in a snap. Mandrake is optimized for pentium, but i'm not sure about athlon. Since you are starting out, you might go one of two routes. Download the installation cd's, and take a trip to the local book shop to pick up one of the 'bibles' for Linux. Or you can get the OS from the computer store, and use the manuals that come with it. The 'bible' can range from an unabridged dictionary size (>3inches) to 1 inch. I went with the largest, which cost $45.
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Profile: old hand
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After a few days of Linux, I don't seem to know any programs that are able to burn CDs. Just to tell you.
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there is a program called 'cdrecord' that burns cd's.
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I would reccomend getting a shrink-wrap distribution for your first install. It comes with manuals, and ussually 30+ days of installation support. Once you become a linux guru, you can download all your updates for free :-)
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Profile: addict
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I had lots of problems with Linux and My Radeon CArd so don't put those to 2gether.
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Profile: Honorary Poster
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I can burn CD's with both OS with no problems. Mandrake 7.2 comes with several CD burning utilities. The only way I ever make coasters in Windows is by using Adaptec's software. However CloneCD and Nero are by far better than anything Linux has to offer right now.
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Profile: Honorary Poster
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One more thing, try and get the latest and greatest kernal out, I think it has better support for the newer chipsets. I've ran in to several configuration problems in Linux with Via chipset. (Intel and Amd).
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Profile: member
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Well for a newbie i would have to recomend SuSE or Mandrake. Personally i like SuSE but Mandrake is my second choice and not by to far.
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Profile: Ancient Poster
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Profile: old hand
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I guess more people would spend their time USING their operating systems than TWEAKING it, so, Windows still wins over Linux.
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Profile: member
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"I guess more people would spend their time USING their operating systems than TWEAKING it, so, Windows still wins over Linux."
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I too have been planning a separate Linux machine on a budget and the only thing my research has uncovered that might be worth adding to the above comments is the following: Linux sees to like memory - lots of RAM which you are planning for - but also lots of cache in the CPU. I got this clear impression from reading the rare kernel compile bencmarks on THG. So I have decided to go for an Athelon or a PIII as opposed to a Duron or Celeron. I too am a Linux newbie and stand to be corrrected on this point...I'm happy to go Duron too if there is no significant difference.
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Profile: newbie
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Well, I think people make Windows out to be crappier than it is. I think people in the computer community like to be part of an "elitist group" and using Linux sets them apart from the rest of the pack. I find most people that use Linux is just for this reason, just to be "cool." I want to learn it because I see it comes up a lot in classifieds for jobs which I will be applying for once I graduate. I never get a BSOD. Well, not NEVER, but rarely, and it's when I'm totally overloading the system and the computer has been running for a long time. For the average home PC user, Windows is the best they can get. Oh, and yea, post if the Duron won't be good enough for Linux. I can get a new 1.33 Ghz instead and throw my current 900 T-Bird in the linux machine.
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Profile: Honorary Poster
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Whatever CPU is good enough depends on what you're doing. If you're just using Linux for basic fileserving (i.e. a web server that sits headless in a corner), an extremely old CPU like a PPro 200 or perhaps older does fine. This applies to NFS, SMB, FTP, HTTP, LDAP, etc.
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>I guess more people would spend their time USING their
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Profile: Faithful Poster
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Pre-newbie, I have a via chipset kx133 motherboard and an Athlon 800 sitting in my closit begging to be used. First question is will linux work on it with little problems? Which version would be best? What graphics card would you recommend for linux? I have a cable modem to a Win2K machine, will I be able to network to the internet via the W2k machine? using ethernet? |
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Profile: Honorary Poster
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I've currently got an Athlon 800 on a Via KX133 board right now. It runs Linux and Win2K just fine.
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>I'd recommend SuSE 7.1 as a distro, simply because it has
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Profile: Forum Veteran
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This forum is full of people who love to tweak. That's one of the main reasons why we build our own systems; to tweak them. I think the last thing you'll see in here is a bunch of people buying compaq/hp pcs with windows preinstalled. For some, once we've tweaked the hardware as far as it'll go, we start to want to tweak the software. Enter Linux.
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Profile: Honorary Poster
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