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Sarissi

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Posts posted by Sarissi

  1. I have been playing with Mandrake since 7.0 Powerpack, and have been routinely using it since 8.2 Powerpack. I came from a loooong MSDOS and MS Windows experience, and still use Windows.

     

    Anyone who comes to Linux from the Windows world pretty much goes through the same thing. I sure did! It is somewhat easier for those with any Unix or BSD exposure. I have rarely had to resort to the console (command line) in Mandrake.

     

    Unless you are using database or Web/ftp servers, you don't need a firewall running. I only have the print and X servers running here.

     

    I hate the ever so rude 'RTFM' that total newbies get from some. If they want Linux converts, they had better learn to not be rude and help the newbies.

     

    Don't they realize, that everytime they say "RTFM," they are actually helping Microsoft????

  2. I have 2 x 2 GB swap partitions, one on my dedicated Linux hdd, and the other sharing hdd with Win2K Pro. I also have 1 GB ram at the moment, which will be going up and that is why I have my swap this way. Besides, it is like insurance: better to have it than not.

     

    Besides, I run 3D CGI apps, and those are memory intensive, particularly when rendering.

  3. It would be nice IF they mentioned which Distro and version of Linux, as well as type of Video Card (Consumer or Workstation)!! I would be willing to bet it is either Redhat or SuSE, in that order.

  4. Funny thing, but the nVidia Quadros are better than the FireGL cards for the mainstream 3D CGI applications (Maya, etc.). Tom's Hardware benchmarked the latest of the two, along with a different make, and the Quadro came out on top.

     

    I have an ATI XPert 2000 Pro AGP (32 MB) and my computer locks up running Daz Studio (in beta now) with this card. Studio uses Hardware OpenGL. Yet, with my GeForce 4 MX440SE (Lite version), Studio runs just fine.

  5. During install, Mandrake installs both nForce2 and nVidia (not nv) all by itself for my nforce2 mobo and nvidia card. I don't see how it can get any more user friendly than that.

     

    Oh, I agree that you do need to know your system's hardware, at least to a point for Linux. However, if you don't need to tweak, why bother?

     

    I am knowledgable about computer hardware and I am a computer user. I am not a software guru by any means. Linux is about choice and having control to a greater extent than Windows allows.

     

    "Linux on the Desktop is for people who like to tinker and mess with it..."

     

    I prefer to use it than mess with it.

  6. Remember alot of people who use computers, are just that: users. They are used to buying OEM systems that come with the OS preinstalled. They wouldn't know how to reinstall that OS if they had to (presuming it wasn't some hokey 'rescue' disk)! They don't even know what is inside their computers.

     

    These people just want to use their computers.

     

    Most everyone here knows what a PITA Win98SE is when it comes to installing some drivers. Sometimes you have to be real quick to swap the driver CD with the OS CD during a reboot, or you can't swap them when 98SE wants you to. That is not user friendly.

     

    On the other hand, Win2K Pro is user friendly in this department, and so much easier to install.

     

    For myself, Mandrake Linux is a breeze to install, since all of my hardware is compatible (camera doesn't count).

     

    Mandrake is very user friendly, in terms of actual usage. I don't need to boot to text mode to do anything.

     

    Actually, nobody should mess around with the OS (tweaking), unless they know what they are doing.

  7. The last time I used Partition Magic, was version 3. I did not like the idea of having to have a special partition just for the boot manager. A friend of mine turned me onto System Commander and I have never looked back. One nice thing, is that Mandrake Linux recognizes the System Commander MBR and gives you the option to install lilo/grub in the first sector of the root partition, where SC will load it from.

  8. 7.2? YUCK! 8.2 was the first truly stable (for most) version, where everything important actually worked.

     

    I started with 7.0 Powerpack Edition (nothing but powerpacks for me, with one exception, 10.0 CE download ISOs). I have skipped 9.2.

     

    I never had a stability problem with Win98 or Win98SE, except when I had a flakey RAM module installed.

  9. Most standard ATX PSUs will have more than enough power connectors for your current needs. Not sure about the one in your current computer. Besides, OEMs are notorious for including barely adequate PSUs, and they don't always work with standard mobos.

     

    You are better off getting mobo, cpu, PSU, case, fans, and such. Check to see if you can get the HDD out of your current system, or CD/DVD drive for that matter.

     

    The one Compaq that I had the misfortune to work on, did not have a BIOS. It had a stupid Setup Partition on the HDD.

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