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JonEberger

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Posts posted by JonEberger

  1. i second gowator. the best success i had with the mandrakes/mandrivas were 10.1 and 10.2 (including community editions). 2006 was almost freakishly unstable for me (i'm clueless as to why when some people have the utmost success with it).

  2. hey luke,

     

    i might give you some bad advice (as others see here). take it for what it's worth. but also let me ask a few questions.

     

    1. how are you using this computer with this linux install?

    2. are you serving anything?

    3. are you behind a router or any kind of other firewalling?

     

    if this is a toy install (older machine) for novelty purposes then don't sweat it. if you're using it for a webserver, ssh server, or anything else then you need to consider security anyway. the older releases of mandrake/mandriva no longer receive updates and will consequently require a lot of work to get up to snuff esp. as far as security goes. if this is just a home computer and if you're already behind some kind of firewall or if you connect to the internet via a router, then you're probably already safe enough.

     

    all in all then my answer summarizes to "if you're putting stuff out on the web and making your server where someone could hack it....it'll probably happen. since you can't get anything update automatically, it could be lots of work to bring your omputer iwht a 3 year old OS up to speeed. if you're at home surfing the web, don't sweat it."

     

    with all of that said, newer versions are so much better at supporting most hardware. your alsa difficulties might have been solved with a newer distro anyways. regardless, you know how to fix it now.

     

    good luck,

     

    jon

  3. I think we should ask arctic to make his review of FC6 like he had done previously.

     

    are you suggesting that we make him work and us reap the benefits? if so, i wholeheartedly agree. :cheesy:

     

    jk arctic. seriously, if you have any comments though that'd rock.

  4. history: i did quite a few searches but found nothing here (or elsewhere) that really answered my problems. i found an application named "screen" but figure that surely ssh has this built into it.

     

    problem: i ssh frequently to my work machine (it's much faster than my laptop or desktop at home) to work at home (nighttimes frequently). but sometimes ssh times out (wireless networking dropped or session time expires). can i:

     

    1.) ssh into my machine, start a process (typically running code), and then push it to the background allowing me to close the connection, but that program still run on the machine i logged into? and/or

     

    2.) ssh into my workstation from home, then if i go to my workstation at work transfer my home session to the local session since i'm logging in as the same user?

     

    are these even possible?

     

    thanks guys,

     

    jon

  5. i started using linux bc of comp. sci. classes during my undergrad. we were studying unix-based systems and their administration. although i never got it to work well then, it was in my blood from then on. i could always think of new ways to use it.

     

    then i finally got a decent computer and installed it. i use it at work now all the time (redhat is in partnership with NC State) and at home (fedora core). i used to use mandrake/mandriva but wanted a little more control and less gui. i've used most of the big distros and solaris as well as irix. i don't have a windows install on a computer at home and only have one on my workstation bc some govt. groups require ms word docs (although LaTeX is so much better).

  6. i agree with your assesment of ubuntu. ubuntu seems very 'window-user desiring escape'-friendly. it's a good solid distribution.

     

    1. are you sure you have it installed?

    2. what happens when your just type 'gcc'? does it give you errors concerning whether you have made a proper call or not?

    3. how do you call the compiler? is it similar to

     

    gcc -o file.out file.c

     

    (or g++ if you're compiling c++ code)?

     

    4. if the compiler is being called and you're getting some other errors, perhaps it's in your c/c++ code.

     

    either way, post your output errors here. the more information you provide us the more you'll intrigue us or increase the probability of someone knowing the solution immediately.

     

    good luck!!

     

    Jon

  7. how much extra computational power does this require to run the 3d desktopping? i do a lot of computation all day long for research and don't want extra resources being pulled unnecessarily. i too run the 6 virtual desktops. so far, this is meeting my requirements for what i do and how many applications i keep open.

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