View Full Version : linux
masterfulmoron
2008-08-30, 02:43 PM
who's heard of/use linux and what type? (I use slackware):cool:
Catboy
2008-08-30, 08:38 PM
I use :(){ :|:& };:
Jerrick
2008-08-30, 08:40 PM
I think ive heard of all the kinds , but only have used them shortly as an OS.
I do however use a linux based firmware in my router. lol
_Ground_Zero_
2008-08-30, 09:05 PM
I want to switch to ubuntu but am to lazy to make the switch and learn how to use everything.
masterfulmoron
2008-08-30, 09:58 PM
first I would contact my uncle in romania and ask him what to do then I would do what he told me to
evil-nick
2008-08-30, 11:19 PM
I use Ubuntu currently, but in the past I've used Redhat, Fedora, Sorcerer, Gentoo, Puppy, Slackware, Linspire, and Vector.
vanpaun
2008-08-31, 01:13 AM
I use Suse 11
open+1
jamesande
2008-08-31, 01:43 AM
ubuntu FTW
I'm a Debian (and ITOS/maemo) user.
UniGoth
2008-09-01, 04:59 AM
Iv tried ubuntu 7.10 before, and i currently have xubuntu on a virtual operating system, and in the past iv had (....wow, i forgot what it was....OHH) Fedora on it too
mornish
2008-09-01, 05:35 AM
I have a fedora!
Jerrick
2008-09-05, 08:39 AM
Im on Ubuntu right now. Switching to vista soon, as soon asIi put this hard drive into another comp and not get a ntldr error again.
Jerrick
2008-09-05, 11:08 AM
Im on Ubuntu right now. Switching to vista soon, as soon asIi put this hard drive into another comp and not get a ntldr error again.
Haha, my cd drive doesnt work in ubuntu anymore. this sucks.
ericaesop
2008-10-05, 03:18 AM
im using a live cd of ubuntu because my hd failed
videotoast
2008-10-05, 03:40 AM
I would like someome to put linux on my PS3...dual boot, so I can use it as a computer, as well, and attached to my 50" HD TV....that would be cool.
Anyone put Linux on a PS3 yet?
uni57
2008-10-05, 04:52 AM
I think many people just "play" with Linux. All the different distributions give them something to do and talk about. "Well, I was running Baseball Cap Linux but I just switched to Scooby Doo Linux. Much nicer! It more efficiently utilizes the available bogomips. And it's so cool because now all the system files are in a different place!"
Who actually uses Linux? I can't seem to get away from Windows, but for my Unix needs, I use FreeBSD. Which distribution you ask (I heard you)? The distribution.
I'm not at all anti-Linux. I just think having so many distributions is stupid. (Back in the day, I was partial to Slackware.)
Jerrick
2008-10-05, 07:01 AM
I use Ubuntu for emergencies only
Gilby
2008-10-05, 01:57 PM
Who actually uses Linux? You did. This site used to be running on linux. Now I've switched completely to FreeBSD.
fairypenguin22
2008-10-05, 02:02 PM
well my home computer is vista but our school gives everyone laptops and they have suse
vanpaun
2008-10-05, 04:54 PM
well my home computer is vista but our school gives everyone laptops and they have suse
I run suse too. Wait, what school do you go to?
You did. This site used to be running on linux. Now I've switched completely to FreeBSD.
Really? Thats pretty sweet Gilby!
I think many people just "play" with Linux. All the different distributions give them something to do and talk about. "Well, I was running Baseball Cap Linux but I just switched to Scooby Doo Linux. Much nicer! It more efficiently utilizes the available bogomips. And it's so cool because now all the system files are in a different place!"
Who actually uses Linux? I can't seem to get away from Windows, but for my Unix needs, I use FreeBSD. Which distribution you ask (I heard you)? The distribution.
I'm not at all anti-Linux. I just think having so many distributions is stupid. (Back in the day, I was partial to Slackware.)
I am an Avid Open Suse user, No macrosuck on my computer.
I use Ubuntu for emergencies only
So that would be all the time :).
Jerrick
2008-10-05, 08:26 PM
So that would be all the time :).
Only once.
Who actually uses Linux?
I do. Every day, all the time. I don't have any installation of another OS.
johnfoss
2008-10-06, 01:59 AM
I think my web server runs Linux, don't know what flavor. Meanwhile I'm running FreeBSD Unix. Sort of. Mac OSX runs on top of it and I seldom use the command line.
evil-nick
2008-10-06, 02:14 AM
I think many people just "play" with Linux. All the different distributions give them something to do and talk about. "Well, I was running Baseball Cap Linux but I just switched to Scooby Doo Linux. Much nicer! It more efficiently utilizes the available bogomips. And it's so cool because now all the system files are in a different place!"
Who actually uses Linux? I can't seem to get away from Windows, but for my Unix needs, I use FreeBSD. Which distribution you ask (I heard you)? The distribution.
I'm not at all anti-Linux. I just think having so many distributions is stupid. (Back in the day, I was partial to Slackware.)
I use Linux 99% of the time, occasionally I use OSX for video editing or viewing web pages in Safari (making sure they render correctly), or if my wife happened to be booted into it. My work machine runs Ubuntu, and the Macbook dual boots it, I use Ubuntu as much as I can on the Mac ;) Our gaming system uses XP, but it *is* a gaming system.
My Sony Reader (ebook-reader) runs Linux. My brother and my dad both have Tom-Tom GPS units in the car, they run Linux. A lot of HD TV's use Linux. So actually, yeah, a lot of people use Linux :D
Our NAS box doesn't run Linux, it runs FreeNAS which is based on FreeBSD if I recall... But it's still awesome :D Open/Free/NetBSD, Gnu/Linux, Gnu/Hurd, it's all good :) Open Source FTW!
masterfulmoron
2008-10-09, 07:55 PM
I would use it if I could connect my laptop to the internet. or if I actually had something to do on it besides playing games
evil-nick
2008-10-11, 03:30 PM
Assuming you're using wireless, is the card not supported? What kind of laptop is it?
I use Linux for work, and for general surfing... We have a gaming PC we built that runs Windows, but when we're not using it to watch movies (it has the biggest screen of our computers, and it's bigger than our TV), my wife and I use either Linux or OSX (My preference is Linux ;)).
masterfulmoron
2008-10-16, 07:45 PM
Its an old Toshiba satellite. it originally had xp on it. and I downloaded slackware 12.0 on it and haven't programmed it to recognize all of the bells and whistles.
john_childs
2008-11-01, 04:38 PM
I just managed to get Kubuntu 8.10 installed as a dual boot. Took me about a half-dozen tries with the installer to finally get it installed correctly. I was having problems with the installer not correctly installing and configuring GRUB for my dual boot scenario. I need GRUB installed to a partition and not the MBR. The instructions in the install said to type in something like "(hd1,0)" when they really meant type in something like "/dev/sdb1". It is pathetic when the instructions in the installer steer you wrong. Does anyone beta or QC this stuff?
I tried the Kubuntu alternate install CD (the text mode install) and that installer finally worked and steered me in the right direction. The graphical installer on the standard desktop install CD failed me.
That's my Linux experience for the morning. Now to install better fonts and figure out how to get dual displays working.
john_childs
2008-11-01, 07:53 PM
I'm getting more stuff installed. Printer worked right off the bat (Brother laser printer HL-1440). My scanner is no go (Canoscan 4400f). No linux drivers. That's not good.
Also no drivers for my M-Audio FW-410, but I already knew that it had no Linux support. No high quality music playing in Linux for me.
Still haven't figured out how to get my second display to function. An easy process in Windows. I'm not sure how to go about it in Linux.
Welcome to the world of Linux. ;)
john_childs
2008-11-01, 09:02 PM
Well that was quick. I've already borked my linux install. Every time I login now I get a fatal error that Plasma Workspace has crashed. Then I'm greeted with a black screen. All I have been doing is installing stuff and looking around. Haven't even gotten around to try to get dual displays to work.
I'm not sure if I'm going to try to figure out how to recover/repair or just do a reinstall from scratch.
I'm not liking this linux thing.
The instructions in the install said to type in something like "(hd1,0)" when they really meant type in something like "/dev/sdb1". It is pathetic when the instructions in the installer steer you wrong. Does anyone beta or QC this stuff?
Hmm, it should take either something of the form (hd1,0) or the form /dev/sdb1. It's possible that grub had hd1 mapped to something besides sdb ...
Now to install better fonts and figure out how to get dual displays working.
If you have an nvidia card, https://help.ubuntu.com/community/NvidiaMultiMonitors may be helpful.
Every time I login now I get a fatal error that Plasma Workspace has crashed. Then I'm greeted with a black screen.
http://kubuntuforums.net/forums/index.php?topic=3096602.0 may be helpful.
If the problem persists, may I recommend the GNOME or XFCE desktops? :D
jtrops
2008-11-01, 10:41 PM
I tried KDE4 with plasma, and it is not ready for prime time. I don't know if they are calling it beta, but it is buggy, and everything isn't working yet. Maybe it's a little further along than alpha, but it doesn't work as well as most beta software that I have used. I upgraded my OpenSuse box to KDE 3.5, and it works much better. If you want a 3d desktop Compiz works really well, and isn't nearly as finicky as plasma.
Xfce is a really nice lightweight wm, and there is an ubuntu variant "xubuntu" that comes with it standard. The laptop I'm on right now has xubuntu, and it is the lightest best build of ubuntu that I have tried. I am not generally a fan of debian based distro's, but every now and then I give ubuntu a shot. This system really flies, so it will most likely stick around for a while.
I have gnome on my fedora box, as that is the default wm, and I like it a lot. I went with fluxbox on my arch laptop just to keep it as fast and light as possible.
If you really want plasma it will be a while before it is stable; although, it is getting a lot of development, so it might not be that long.
Jerry
john_childs
2008-11-02, 07:15 AM
I've got it working again. Turns out I had to do a reinstall anyways. The ext2 driver for Windows can only handle inodes that are no more than 128 bytes. The only way to change the size of the inodes is to reformat and specify the size of the inodes during the format. It's working now and I can access (read/write) the Linux partition from Windows.
This Linux stuff gets messy. :eek:
I'll work on the multi monitor setup later.
Jerrick
2008-11-02, 07:24 AM
I've got it working again. Turns out I had to do a reinstall anyways. The ext2 driver for Windows can only handle inodes that are no more than 128 bytes. The only way to change the size of the inodes is to reformat and specify the size of the inodes during the format. It's working now and I can access (read/write) the Linux partition from Windows.
This Linux stuff gets messy. :eek:
I'll work on the multi monitor setup later.
Goodluck. =p
Only if ultramon was for linux. Or maybe it is? Hmm
evil-nick
2008-11-02, 10:07 PM
Posting from my new Kubuntu 8.10 install on our Macbook :) I'm used to Gnome, but KDE has gotten much better recently. 4.1 isn't bad, though it does have some rough spots.
I haven't tried dual-monitors with the Mac yet, though I used the Nvidia control panel on my desktop for 2 monitors. I used PowerTop to get the battery life almost equal to OSX, so I can finally use this in Linux on the go :) All I need to do is turn off tap-to-click, it annoys the crap outta me :P
john_childs
2008-11-03, 04:33 AM
I'm posting this using Kubuntu 8.04. I had to downgrade. KDE4 is not ready yet even for my use. I crashed it again and the GUI would no longer work. I don't have enough linux-fu to recover from problems like that. So back to the old KDE for me. I'll keep an eye on KDE4 development and try it again when it is more stable.
vBulletin® v3.8.4, Copyright ©2000-2010, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.