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SoulSe

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Posts posted by SoulSe

  1. You do not need to use a crossover cable as such, straight ethernet cable will also work, so long as one of the ethernet cards is newer than about three years, it will work out the pin allocation on the cable.

     

    If you are sharing an Internet between the two computers, then it would be easiest to setup Internet conenction sharing on the machine with the connection and then dynamically (automatically) get an IP Address for the other machine.

     

    Otherwise, if you have a router (and I reccommend buying one if you don't) then you can plug both machines into the router and receive dynamic addresses for both.

     

    I would also reccommend that you disable firewalls on both machines (Windows has a built-in firewall) while setting up the connection, and then turn them on again when you're done. Windows firewall is notorious for blocking network connections, even where it obviously shouldn't.

     

    As for the step-by-step, practical way of doing this, there are many websites around that can help (Google is your friend) and we're here to answer your questions along the way ;)

  2. I have a 70 gigabyte external usb drive that uses Fat32 to fill the entire drive. I have had no problems with it. The file system can certainly do anything under 100GB (in my experience) without any hassle.

     

    I'm not saying it's a good filesystem. I actually think it's crap - but it's the only one we can use seamlessly between Linux / Windows / OS X

    Reiserfs ? I think you need drivers for windows but its possible? just mentioning since it might be better in two ways...

     

    1) Its journaling so if you pull the cable by accident unlikely to be a problem (not recommending doing it deliberatly but FAT32 is really unstable for this)

    2) It makes far better use of the space, especially over 32GB

    The Window's implementation was extremely shaky the last time I checked and OS X..... actually... I haven't tried that yet lol Will look into it... I just presumed it wouldn't work :huh:

     

    I've become a fan of HFS+ since I got my powerbook :P

     

    EDIT: HFS+ is also fully supported in the 2.6 kernel tree.

  3. I have a 70 gigabyte external usb drive that uses Fat32 to fill the entire drive. I have had no problems with it. The file system can certainly do anything under 100GB (in my experience) without any hassle.

     

    I'm not saying it's a good filesystem. I actually think it's crap - but it's the only one we can use seamlessly between Linux / Windows / OS X

  4. You do need the ATI drivers if you wish to make use of special card features, such as the video out. Any generic driver would, obviously, not be able to handle this.

     

    But first, checkout the ATI website, find your card and see if that feature is supported by the drivers (specific to your card) before potentially wasting more time on it.

  5. Ubuntu's rigid insistance on Gnome is perhaps a down-side if you're a KDE fan. I personally couldn't care less. Both Gnome and KDE get the job done for me. I guess if I was forced to choose I'd go with Gnome. Kubuntu is alright from what I can tell, although I agree that the split is perhaps not in the best interests of the Ubuntu community at large.

     

    I guess you have to see where Ubuntu are coming from - the aim is to create a distro for the masses. It needs to be simple and stable, but still capable for advanced users. It seems that the choice to not provide much of a... choice... in terms of DE is a sacrifice on the side of stability and continuity for n00bier users.

  6. Sorry, I got lost somewhere in the deabte between arctic and iphitus lol

     

    So, sorry that I haven't read the whole thread, but here is my opinion:

     

    I would choose Ubuntu for the following reasons:

     

    - It's more light-weight and streamlined than Mandriva. Just one CD, with everything you need and nice choices of applications. I don't like how much Mandriva ships with and a default install will give you a ton of applications you'll never need. This is also confusing for new users (I know, because I was one :P ). That said, it can be handy having everything on disc if you don't have an Internet connection or something. Personal preference here = Ubuntu.

     

    - I prefer apt and synaptic as package managers. Urpmi is dated, slow and incumbent (my opinion, again). And I must confess that I have not used Mandriva lately (urpmi was one of the things that drove me to Gentoo).

     

    And I'll leave it at that - I do agree with iphitus that hardware detection is better in Ubuntu, although I'm talking from dated exeperience, Mandriva might be better now.

  7. For example they offer a Dell D820 or Latitude X1 which I could buy for £1099 and an IBM (Lenovo) Thinkpad T43 for £1097 (PC Magazine Editors' Choice).

    I would go with IBM (Lenovo) - the Thinkad range are robust, have good battery life and look better than any other PC laptop. Me, I'll stick with my Mac though :)

  8. Ran into some problems when trying to install it on my MDV2006 box.

    It can´t seem to find Java, although it is installed. It searches for Java in /bin/java but can´t seem to change the directorie it´s suppose to search.

     

    Any ideas?

    Try putting a dynamic link to the java libraries in the place it is looking...

     

     

    I downloaded the OS X client - it did all the downloads it needed, now it just crashes whenever I run it :unsure:

  9. Another vote for Epiphany - it doesn't get much lighter than that ;)

     

    I still use Firefox msotly, but I also had good experiences with Opera. On paper, Opera is not "light" but it certainly feels like it in use. Loads very quickly, is highly customisable and looks good (with some tweaking :P )

     

    Apple should port Safari to other platforms - definately right up there for me. I find myself using it more than Firefox of late.

  10. Macs are not more expensive, that is a miss conecption that needs to end. We (macinista.com) are busy benchmarking the MacBook Pro - the nearest PC laptop for performance is $500 more expensive.

     

    The Mac Mini is slightly more expensive than an average PC desktop, but it includes:

    - Intel Core Duo

    - WiFi

    - Bluetooth

    And a range of other things that do not come standard with a entry level PC for a few dollars less.

     

    OS X is the best Unix I have used (ducks) and the Mac hardware isn't all looks, it is clearly superior from a technology perspective.

     

    But to get back on topic:

    I have used Parallels to load Linux on a MacBook Pro. It is very straight forward and simple, although I haven't messed around with the installation much (just basically installed it and made sure it worked). My problem with Parallels is that it isn't free.

     

    But once EFI becomes more prevalent (Mac ahead of the rest, again) then you won't need much to boot Linux - it'll be just like loading it on a PC I suspect, barring the airport card which has no Linux driver (although you could perhaps use ndiswrapper to use the Windows driver from Bootcamp).

  11. I have always preferred Gnome, and GTK-based DEs and WMs in general. I liked the functionality that could be gained by Gnome's high level of customisation. KDE has pretty much caught up in that department now though.

     

    IMHO KDE has come a long way - it used to be bloated and ugly, but I tried it out again a month ago and found it to be quite different from my previous try around two years ago. I still stick to Gnome though - just feels more agile and I'm used to it. I think KDE is a far better choice for new users though, it is far more friendly... and I guess a little more intuitive... than Gnome.

     

    As for updating them - your Desktop Environment is just a collection of packages on your computer that get updated along with everything else via your package manager... if that's what you meant :)

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