Re: So... is this thread going to be usable?
I took a month to test out different distros and I ended up using Kubuntu 6.06 LTS. The interface was intuitive, I found all the settings I needed and it worked out-of-the-box. I still had my XP installation in dual-boot, if I ever got too scared and had to run back to the bluegreen cradle of the M$oft. But Kubuntu 6.06 was my first real plunge to GNU/Linux OS.
Now, few years later, I saved some cash and got a new PC rig just for the 9.10 release. I installed the 9.04 from the original CD (you have to have one of those, 'tis beautiful!) and waited for the Koala to climb the tree. When I upgraded 9.04 --> 9.10, I lost all sound functionality, and I too had strange dialogs popping up all over the place telling me that "nnn module somewhere has crashed etc.". I whined about it on the forums for a while, read a lot of posts from similar issues and then just decided to install 9.10 clean from CD.
And it's been beautiful since then. I don't have a dualboot at all, only Kubuntu and I wouldn't have it any other way. It actually sucks to use Windows at work (writing this from xp). Only thing keeping me in Windows was Trackmania, which now runs very nicely through WINE (although there are some weird hangs when downloading/uploading).
I have nothing but praises for Kubuntu 9.10, it looks good, it's lightning fast, it's stable.
Interesting to note when people nag about some hardware not working in GNU/Linux enviroment: you have to do some research on what hardware is not supported in GNU/Linux - you shouldn't buy stuff for Windows either that doesn't have the "Certified to run on XP/Vista (or something)", only problem is that hardware doesn't yet have the sticker "Works on Open Source Software Platforms", you have to search it yourself.
I made a list of the hardware I wanted, then scraped off all the stuff that wasn't supported (usually because the manufacturer didn't release any info for the hardware). The only thing I got stuck with was my old trusty audiocard, which I intend to replace soon.
In the couple of years now that I've used GNU/Linux, everytime I've hit some snag (and it's nearly everytime from something that I did myself), I've remembered something that Linus said: "If you build an operating system for morons, then morons will use it."
So I search for the answer to the problem and fix it. Simple.
<--- before you question that by saying "yeah, but a good OS wouldn't have any problems on anything", go ahead, build an OS from ground up that works without any problems on at least 250 000 different hardware configurations including servers, laptops, desktops, workstations, scientific instruments, cash register systems, factory automation, movie production hardware (film editing systems, motion capture), audio production systems ... etc. lol.
Do you think they are running it without problems:
[img width=400 height=320]http://www.linuxjournal.com/files/linuxjournal.com/linuxjournal/articles/060/6011/6011f1.png[/img]
I took a month to test out different distros and I ended up using Kubuntu 6.06 LTS. The interface was intuitive, I found all the settings I needed and it worked out-of-the-box. I still had my XP installation in dual-boot, if I ever got too scared and had to run back to the bluegreen cradle of the M$oft. But Kubuntu 6.06 was my first real plunge to GNU/Linux OS.
Now, few years later, I saved some cash and got a new PC rig just for the 9.10 release. I installed the 9.04 from the original CD (you have to have one of those, 'tis beautiful!) and waited for the Koala to climb the tree. When I upgraded 9.04 --> 9.10, I lost all sound functionality, and I too had strange dialogs popping up all over the place telling me that "nnn module somewhere has crashed etc.". I whined about it on the forums for a while, read a lot of posts from similar issues and then just decided to install 9.10 clean from CD.
And it's been beautiful since then. I don't have a dualboot at all, only Kubuntu and I wouldn't have it any other way. It actually sucks to use Windows at work (writing this from xp). Only thing keeping me in Windows was Trackmania, which now runs very nicely through WINE (although there are some weird hangs when downloading/uploading).
I have nothing but praises for Kubuntu 9.10, it looks good, it's lightning fast, it's stable.
Interesting to note when people nag about some hardware not working in GNU/Linux enviroment: you have to do some research on what hardware is not supported in GNU/Linux - you shouldn't buy stuff for Windows either that doesn't have the "Certified to run on XP/Vista (or something)", only problem is that hardware doesn't yet have the sticker "Works on Open Source Software Platforms", you have to search it yourself.
I made a list of the hardware I wanted, then scraped off all the stuff that wasn't supported (usually because the manufacturer didn't release any info for the hardware). The only thing I got stuck with was my old trusty audiocard, which I intend to replace soon.
In the couple of years now that I've used GNU/Linux, everytime I've hit some snag (and it's nearly everytime from something that I did myself), I've remembered something that Linus said: "If you build an operating system for morons, then morons will use it."
So I search for the answer to the problem and fix it. Simple.
<--- before you question that by saying "yeah, but a good OS wouldn't have any problems on anything", go ahead, build an OS from ground up that works without any problems on at least 250 000 different hardware configurations including servers, laptops, desktops, workstations, scientific instruments, cash register systems, factory automation, movie production hardware (film editing systems, motion capture), audio production systems ... etc. lol.
Do you think they are running it without problems:
[img width=400 height=320]http://www.linuxjournal.com/files/linuxjournal.com/linuxjournal/articles/060/6011/6011f1.png[/img]
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