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polemicz

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Posts posted by polemicz

  1. Welcome to the board.

    A couple of things: 1) 12x is generally too high, I generally go no higher than 4x, also make sure you have checked the md5sums, 2) for a general desktop three partitions are most reasonable - /, /home, and swap. It is good to have /home on its own partition so your data and settings are kept separate from everything else. How big / is will depend on what you will want to install, for my simple desktop needs 5GB is sufficient.

    Good luck.

  2. If you're using 2005 there may be no update in the repositories for Amarok. The versions of packages don't change once a distro version is out. Consider using 2006 to get a newer Amarok or check MDE to see if they have a newer version.

  3. During the installation you should select custom disk partitioning (or whatever that option is called). You will then see a layout of all your partitions. You can then delete, resize, etc. If you set up a big NTFS partition with Partition Magic and opted to install Linux on the free space you will be stuck. You should make note of what the installation partition manager says you have and report back if you remain stuck.

  4. I used to use iscan, but have settled on xsane. The newer xsane (not in 2006) has a direct save to pdf that I often use for saving documents. I used to have to save to ps then create the pdf.

  5. I use an Epson 1660 for scanning slides and negatives (generally at 2400 or more dpi) and it works very well. There are newer models and you can go to higher resolutions ( I can go up to 4800), but a slide at 2400 in PNG will be about 10MB and PNM nearly 20MB. JPG's are obviously much smaller. The scanner is well within your price range and should do all you want.

  6. I'm pretty much a KDE user and have been from my first Linux days (Mandrake 8.0). From time to time I've tried Gnome, but have never had a reason to change from KDE. I simply know how to go about using KDE and setting things up, with Gnome it's always having to figure things out, but that's a habit issue. The biggest reason I have for staying with KDE is Konqueror (I could never get to like Nautilus).

  7. /usr, etc are not on your home directory. The Linux file system is a tree structure starting with /. Software is generally installed in /usr, configuration files in /etc. /home and its subdirectories is for your personal stuff, not system stuff. A major mind switch a person needs to do when coming from Windows is to understand the file structure and permissions. When I first started with Linux I read "Running Linux," an O'Reilly book that I think is quite good, especially in understanding the basic structure of Linux. Hope this is helpful.

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