Hello,
I've been thinking about getting Linux for some time because I'm sick of the fact that my copy of XP Pro (well, technically home modified to think that it is Pro) has been updowngraded to act more like Vista. I've asked some people who have used linux before which distro I should use and they recommended Kubuntu as being good for beginners. However, before I go ahead and install it I've got a few questions. I'd be planning to dual boot between Linux and Windows.
1. Will my system run Kubuntu well?
Specs:
Dell 9100 - Running XP SP2
3.2GHz Intel Pentium 4 HT Processor
229GB HDD, About 132GB spare.
1GB DDR2 RAM
256MB ATI Radeon X600
Sigmatel Sound Card
I've been told that support for ATI graphics cards aren't that good and it can be a pain to install the drivers. Is this true, and is the same the case for my sound card? Also, I've heard that installing Linux can cause some 'problems' for windows. Is this true?
2. How much disk space should I partition? I'm using a shared family computer, but I have asked the rest of my family if it's okay, and they said it was fine. I intend to use Linux for working, programming, chatting and mainly a small bit of gaming (assuming the game in question works on Linux). As far as I know, everyone else in my family will keep to windows. I want to keep the partition as small as possible, so is 29GB enough, or do I need more/less?
3. Assuming I get my graphics card working, which is better, KDE 3.5 or 4.0? From what I've heard KDE 4.0 is still a bit buggy, but then it does look better than 3.5 in my opinion. Also, I'm interested in getting compiz fusion. Is this is easy to install as an extra?
Aside from that, I'm not really worried about too much else. I've had a look at how the command line works, and I reckon I've got a basic grasp of how it works, though I guess I won't know until I have to use it for real. As for applications, I've used quite a bit of free software which is available for windows/linux (Open Office, XChat, Emesene & Firefox mainly) so I know what items I want to get.
I apologise if I've missed something big in the , I did look at the Useful Tips for newbies go here thread, but I'm still not 100% sure about what to do. I'd rather check than muck things up.
Thanks, Dracion
Edit: Forgot question 3!
I've been thinking about getting Linux for some time because I'm sick of the fact that my copy of XP Pro (well, technically home modified to think that it is Pro) has been updowngraded to act more like Vista. I've asked some people who have used linux before which distro I should use and they recommended Kubuntu as being good for beginners. However, before I go ahead and install it I've got a few questions. I'd be planning to dual boot between Linux and Windows.
1. Will my system run Kubuntu well?
Specs:
Dell 9100 - Running XP SP2
3.2GHz Intel Pentium 4 HT Processor
229GB HDD, About 132GB spare.
1GB DDR2 RAM
256MB ATI Radeon X600
Sigmatel Sound Card
I've been told that support for ATI graphics cards aren't that good and it can be a pain to install the drivers. Is this true, and is the same the case for my sound card? Also, I've heard that installing Linux can cause some 'problems' for windows. Is this true?
2. How much disk space should I partition? I'm using a shared family computer, but I have asked the rest of my family if it's okay, and they said it was fine. I intend to use Linux for working, programming, chatting and mainly a small bit of gaming (assuming the game in question works on Linux). As far as I know, everyone else in my family will keep to windows. I want to keep the partition as small as possible, so is 29GB enough, or do I need more/less?
3. Assuming I get my graphics card working, which is better, KDE 3.5 or 4.0? From what I've heard KDE 4.0 is still a bit buggy, but then it does look better than 3.5 in my opinion. Also, I'm interested in getting compiz fusion. Is this is easy to install as an extra?
Aside from that, I'm not really worried about too much else. I've had a look at how the command line works, and I reckon I've got a basic grasp of how it works, though I guess I won't know until I have to use it for real. As for applications, I've used quite a bit of free software which is available for windows/linux (Open Office, XChat, Emesene & Firefox mainly) so I know what items I want to get.
I apologise if I've missed something big in the , I did look at the Useful Tips for newbies go here thread, but I'm still not 100% sure about what to do. I'd rather check than muck things up.
Thanks, Dracion
Edit: Forgot question 3!
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