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mr_brightside

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Hey guys. I don't know what I'm doing when it comes to Linux.
But I want to dual boot with XP and play with it.

I've got Novell Linux Enterprise, Suse Linux 10.1, Gentoo Linux 2006.1 on DVD's.

Which one do I pick?

GO.
 

withoutaface

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SuSE is good because you can get step by step guides on how to get most things working, and with 10.2 you get the funky new KDE menu.

*Also posting from SuSE*
 

p4e81

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i just use live distros when playing around with linux, used knoppix, ubuntu (dont really like this..), puppy, and hiweed. i dont like installing any of them onto the hdd though. want to try suse maybe, sometime
 

bringbackshred

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I dual-boot Ubuntu with XP.

Ubuntu is pretty damn amazing, even though it may be considered a 'noob' distro. Try ubuntu first, as it is pretty popular and easy to get running as well as the stacks of help available and this sentence no longer makes sense.
 

mr_brightside

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haha. yeah I've got a copy of Ubuntu sitting on my desk looking at me, just lacking the time to install it :eek: =\
 

Hedgy

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You just wanto play around, Try knoppix.

Good luck with your fray into *nix, wait until every second distro you try decides it cant detect your hard drives Fun fun

..
Take shots when you get error's, may not solve your problems but definately alot more humourous as you get get more and more intoxicated,especialy when you have to work without a gui

..Just dont try to type shit in drunk @ the root shell ;)
 

trihornX

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Except that gnome eats shit.
true that, if you're gonna try a linux distro, either use kubuntu (the KDE environment is effing awsome) and....i forgot the name...i'll get back to you on that.
 

gabn

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(k)Ubuntu is good. community support is a big plus

gentoo has been described as the "linux for gods" but i've only seen C programmers and guys with too much time on there hands use it. If you like to complie gentoo is the linux for you.
 

poloktim

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I just use Linux through a kernal built to play nice on Windows. I dual boot, but can access it from Windows. It's kind of like a VM, except I can reboot and actually boot into Linux. It reminds me of Cygwin, except it is actually Linux.

The only thing that changes on boot is the kernel. If I'm booting linux proper, I use the normal Linux kernel, otherwise I boot from a windows exe file that is a kernel and talks with the modules on the linux partition. I can either access it using an ugly cmd.exe like screen, or use putty (the boot is given a separate network address). As for graphical programs, I either don't use them, or use them through Cygwin/X (with no root window, so all windows look like they're managed by the Microsoft shell). I thought of using it through a VNC, but having two completely different desktops at once was too much for me. I tended to ignore the VNC window and everything on the VNC desktop. :(

It's really useful! It's also fun to experiment with code from the windows Linux-exe kernel to try and tweak it.

I've also experimented with Linux on the ARM and MIPS architectures (mainly for compilation work, however). They're specialised versions, so no fancy names. :(

gabn said:
gentoo has been described as the "linux for gods" but i've only seen C programmers and guys with too much time on there hands use it. If you like to complie gentoo is the linux for you.
I used to love going through a Gentoo stage one install.

Now I want to do an LFS project! Damn you for awakening the beast!

For those who are only interested in Linux because their university course requires students to use GCC/G++ or other tools, you could try *ubuntu, but remember you need the universe and to apt-get install build-essential :) Though, I'd recommend for those people that they either try with cygwin, a mingw compiler, or use a VM with a Linux distribution pre installed. :)

That being said, not much is ever mentioned about BSD! Why is this? I've heard OpenBSD finally after all these years has an exploit... exciting times!
 
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poloktim said:
I just use Linux through a KERNAL built to play nice on Windows. I dual boot, but can access it from Windows. It's kind of like a VM, except I can reboot and actually boot into Linux. It reminds me of Cygwin, except it is actually Linux.

The only thing that changes on boot is the kernel. If I'm booting linux proper, I use the normal Linux kernel, otherwise I boot from a windows exe file that is a kernel and talks with the modules on the linux partition. I can either access it using an ugly cmd.exe like screen, or use putty (the boot is given a separate network address). As for graphical programs, I either don't use them, or use them through Cygwin/X (with no root window, so all windows look like they're managed by the Microsoft shell). I thought of using it through a VNC, but having two completely different desktops at once was too much for me. I tended to ignore the VNC window and everything on the VNC desktop. :(

It's really useful! It's also fun to experiment with code from the windows Linux-exe kernel to try and tweak it.

I've also experimented with Linux on the ARM and MIPS architectures (mainly for compilation work, however). They're specialised versions, so no fancy names. :(


I used to love going through a Gentoo stage one install.

Now I want to do an LFS project! Damn you for awakening the beast!

For those who are only interested in Linux because their university course requires students to use GCC/G++ or other tools, you could try *ubuntu, but remember you need the universe and to apt-get install build-essential :) Though, I'd recommend for those people that they either try with cygwin, a mingw compiler, or use a VM with a Linux distribution pre installed. :)

That being said, not much is ever mentioned about BSD! Why is this? I've heard OpenBSD finally after all these years has an exploit... exciting times!
I have nothing positive to contribute :santa:
 

Slidey

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Using Ubuntu dual boot to XP. Got the KDE desktop.

You do distributed systems, polok? Cyber five!
 

MaNiElla

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I dual boot with XP and fedora.......pretty cool so far, im still trying to learn more of linux.
 

mr_brightside

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hmmm posting from Ubuntu.

I can't seem to be able to access my fat32 formatted data drives. SUSE handled it no worries. :confused:
 

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