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Papa-san -> RE: What is the best Linux distro? (4/8/2008 10:29:57 PM)
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I believe that Ubuntu would be a good choice as well. The community is really amazing, and if you run into problems, they are great with helping you get through the transition. Ubuntu is on it's way to being as easy as Windows to use, but we have to deal with the difficulty of proprietary hardware drivers. Networking tends to be the toughest nut to crack, but many computers are fully supported right off the bat. I just bought my wife a Dell Inspiron 1525, and I loaded Ubuntu on it as a second OS (Dual booting with the Vista Virus.) Installed, re-booted, and everything just worked. Ubuntu has mostly GUI's (Graphical user interfaces, like windows) so you can refrain from using the command line to do stuff. That's prolly the hardest adjustment to make; Windows users tend to be afraid to use a Terminal (command line), but I can assure you that once you get the hang of it, you will begin to use it rather than the GUI's! I would also suggest just sticking with Gnome for a while. KDE has more eye candy, but can get a little stickier when you have an issue. Once you get the hang of it, then it's a simple change.http://www.psychocats.net/ubuntu/installing Try to find out what wireless card you are using, and begin to do your research on it. You can also do a Live session of Ubuntu and see if everything works or not. (Just insert the CD and re-boot... It runs in memory with a tiny swap partition on your HD that is eliminated once you log out.) That way you can see if there are any issues you'll need to correct. This is an excellent how-to page for installing... Use the guided partitioning at first. Then, after you have decided to keep using it, re-install it using the manual partitioning tool. Then you will make a "/" (root) partition (for the nuts-n-bolts parts), a swap partition 2x the size of your machines memory, and a "home" partition for all your data. Doing it this way allows for you to change to different versions (or re-install if you break it!) and you get to keep all your photos and documents and stuff... Anyways... try a few distros as 'Live' sessions, and choose what you like best! Good luck!
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