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Absolute beginner question...

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Unidyne...
Posted: Sat Oct 10, 2009 6:30 pm
Guest
(deep breath) Okay, here it goes...

After being a happy Macintosh user for about 5 years (and a somewhat
happy Windows user for about 7 years before that), I've discovered the
OS I have been using is now outdated, and I need to either buy a new
computer or install a curcuit board to use the news OS.

I've been reading about the Linux OS and how there are so many free
programs for it, that I've decided to make the jump to Linux. So, I post
these questions for anyone who is interested to answer for me:

1) I would like to have Windows on stand-by in case I need it (say, the
commercial income tax programs) so what should I look for in buying a
new PC?

2) Are there printer & scanner programs/drivers that will allow me to
use my existing peripherals?

3) Which is best for a total beginner: Red Hat or Unbuntu?

My thanks in advance.

Yours,

Steven F. Scharff
Henderson, Nevada, USA
 
Bit Twister...
Posted: Sat Oct 10, 2009 6:30 pm
Guest
On Sat, 10 Oct 2009 17:30:55 -0700, Unidyne wrote:

Quote:
1) I would like to have Windows on stand-by in case I need it

Most major distributions create a boot menu option to boot Windows

Quote:
(say, the commercial income tax programs) so what should I look for
in buying a new PC?

I would buy a 2 GHz cpu 4gig of memory pc if it were me.
That would allow you to install Virtual Box and run virtual machines
within your install. Example you could install windoze in a virtual
machine and run doze while you are still running linux. :)


Quote:
2) Are there printer & scanner programs/drivers that will allow me to
use my existing peripherals?

My crystal ball is out being polished for the upcoming Karnack convention.
We have no idea what peripherals you currently have.

I have a All-in-One HP scanner/printer and have no problem setting it up.

Quote:
3) Which is best for a total beginner: Red Hat or Unbuntu?

Depends on what kind of user you are and want to become.

Also depends if you can find a usenet news group with helpful subject
matter experts who enjoy helping newbies.

If you are the normal Windoze user who use your computer like an
appliance then go with ubuntu.

If you are a windows power user and like to tinker under the hood and
you want windows like single menu control for tweaking your
computer and configuring your desktop, I'll suggest Mandriva Linux.

I suggest you download a Live CD for a few distribution you want
to choose from. Run it on your system to get familiar with the one you
want. Take a few to a store and run on the system close to what you
want to buy.

Live CDs allow you to run linux from the cd without installing.
Note: they run very slow since cd drive is slower than a disk drive
and the programs have to be uncompressed before running.

Current schedule shows Monday is the date
mandriva-linux-one-2010.0-rc2-KDE4-europe1-americas-cdrom-i586.iso
should be ready for download from the following:

ftp://carroll.cac.psu.edu/pub/linux/distributions/mandrivalinux/devel/iso/2010.0/rc2/

The free dvd iso has a tremendous amount of software for a power user.
Want to see install screen shots for a custom install on a windows system.
http://www.howtoforge.com/perfect-server-mandriva-2009.0-i386


For the One CD install, you just click Install and answer a few questions.
 
J.O. Aho...
Posted: Sat Oct 10, 2009 11:41 pm
Guest
Unidyne wrote:

Quote:
1) I would like to have Windows on stand-by in case I need it (say, the
commercial income tax programs) so what should I look for in buying a
new PC?

You can run qemu, it will not be fast but it works, I recommend you use an
older version of microsoft as it has less CPU usage and requires less ram.


Quote:
2) Are there printer & scanner programs/drivers that will allow me to
use my existing peripherals?

Yes


Quote:
3) Which is best for a total beginner: Red Hat or Unbuntu?

Ubuntu don't support PowerPC.
RedHat only supports PowerPC on their free and experimental version, called
Fedora.

There are other options like Gentoo (may require a bit more skill to install,
but has a quite nice community which is helpful and can be reached via itc at
freenode #Gentoo-PowerPC)

Yellow Dog, originally a PowerPC version of RedHat, but has evolved since then
to an own product.

Debian still has PowerPC support, so if you want to run "ubuntu", then this is
the way to go as ubuntu isn't much more than a repackaged debian.


When it comes to questions like "which is best..", it so much depends on your
taste and what you want to do, so it's the question which no one else than you
can answer, if you feel unsure, try different distributions and get your own
opinion.

--

//Aho
 
philo...
Posted: Sun Oct 11, 2009 3:42 am
Guest
J.O. Aho wrote:
Quote:
Unidyne wrote:

1) I would like to have Windows on stand-by in case I need it (say, the
commercial income tax programs) so what should I look for in buying a
new PC?

You can run qemu, it will not be fast but it works, I recommend you use an
older version of microsoft as it has less CPU usage and requires less ram.


2) Are there printer & scanner programs/drivers that will allow me to
use my existing peripherals?

Yes


3) Which is best for a total beginner: Red Hat or Unbuntu?

Ubuntu don't support PowerPC.


I have definitely used Ubuntu to resurrect a few Mac's


http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/ports/releases/9.04/release/


Used it on Mac's before I ever switched over to it on my PC.


I think Ubuntu is a great choice...

but as stated elsewhere , though Wine is quite good, there are still a
few apps where Windows is needed.

All in all I have been using Linux essentially full time since The first
of the year...
only rarely do I need to turn on my Windows machine.

I have two main machines here...one with Ubuntu 9.04
the other with XP and use a KVM to switch over when I need to...
but I only need to turn on my XP machine occasionally.







Quote:
RedHat only supports PowerPC on their free and experimental version, called
Fedora.

There are other options like Gentoo (may require a bit more skill to install,
but has a quite nice community which is helpful and can be reached via itc at
freenode #Gentoo-PowerPC)

Yellow Dog, originally a PowerPC version of RedHat, but has evolved since then
to an own product.

Debian still has PowerPC support, so if you want to run "ubuntu", then this is
the way to go as ubuntu isn't much more than a repackaged debian.


When it comes to questions like "which is best..", it so much depends on your
taste and what you want to do, so it's the question which no one else than you
can answer, if you feel unsure, try different distributions and get your own
opinion.
 
J.O. Aho...
Posted: Sun Oct 11, 2009 4:49 am
Guest
philo wrote:
Quote:
J.O. Aho wrote:
Unidyne wrote:

3) Which is best for a total beginner: Red Hat or Unbuntu?
Ubuntu don't support PowerPC.
I have definitely used Ubuntu to resurrect a few Mac's
http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/ports/releases/9.04/release/

From the Ubuntu PPC FAQ:
"Ubuntu 6.10 was the last officially supported PowerPC version of Ubuntu."

The release isn't supported by ubuntu, but the ubuntu powerpc community.


--

//Aho
 
philo...
Posted: Sun Oct 11, 2009 6:15 am
Guest
J.O. Aho wrote:
Quote:
philo wrote:
J.O. Aho wrote:
Unidyne wrote:

3) Which is best for a total beginner: Red Hat or Unbuntu?
Ubuntu don't support PowerPC.
I have definitely used Ubuntu to resurrect a few Mac's
http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/ports/releases/9.04/release/

From the Ubuntu PPC FAQ:
"Ubuntu 6.10 was the last officially supported PowerPC version of Ubuntu."

The release isn't supported by ubuntu, but the ubuntu powerpc community.




Irrelevant whether or not it's "officially" supported...
bottom line is : it works
 
Steven F. Scharff...
Posted: Tue Oct 13, 2009 5:00 pm
Guest
On Oct 13, 7:28 pm, Oscar Dres <od... at (no spam) xs4all.nl> wrote:
Quote:
philo wrote:
J.O. Aho wrote:
philo wrote:
J.O. Aho wrote:
Unidyne wrote:

3) Which is best for a total beginner: Red Hat or Unbuntu?
Ubuntu don't support PowerPC.
I have definitely used Ubuntu to resurrect a few Mac's
http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/ports/releases/9.04/release/

From the Ubuntu PPC FAQ:
"Ubuntu 6.10 was the last officially supported PowerPC version of
Ubuntu."

The release isn't supported by ubuntu, but the ubuntu powerpc community.

Irrelevant whether or not it's "officially" supported...
bottom line is : it works

Hmm, I have Gentoo Linux running on my PPC (Ibook G4) works like a charm.
Too bad Gentoo is not something for the beginner otherwise I would
recommend that, I would then probably go for fedora as they still have
support for the latter systems (Fedora 11 on PPC) as Ubuntu does not
And basically Fedora is Redhat just more "fancy" and targeted on end-users

Greeting Oscar

Please forgive my ignorance (I'm the one who started this thread) but
I was unaware that Linux could be run on a Mac. Exactly what version
of Linux can run on a Power PC (G3)? That's the type of Mac I
currently have.

Steven F. Scharff
(Who is going to visit the Las Vegas Linux Users Group in person this
Saturday)
Henderson, Nevada
 
Oscar Dres...
Posted: Tue Oct 13, 2009 8:28 pm
Guest
philo wrote:

Quote:
J.O. Aho wrote:
philo wrote:
J.O. Aho wrote:
Unidyne wrote:

3) Which is best for a total beginner: Red Hat or Unbuntu?
Ubuntu don't support PowerPC.
I have definitely used Ubuntu to resurrect a few Mac's
http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/ports/releases/9.04/release/

From the Ubuntu PPC FAQ:
"Ubuntu 6.10 was the last officially supported PowerPC version of
Ubuntu."

The release isn't supported by ubuntu, but the ubuntu powerpc community.




Irrelevant whether or not it's "officially" supported...
bottom line is : it works

Hmm, I have Gentoo Linux running on my PPC (Ibook G4) works like a charm.
Too bad Gentoo is not something for the beginner otherwise I would
recommend that, I would then probably go for fedora as they still have
support for the latter systems (Fedora 11 on PPC) as Ubuntu does not
And basically Fedora is Redhat just more "fancy" and targeted on end-users

Greeting Oscar
 
J.O. Aho...
Posted: Wed Oct 14, 2009 9:18 am
Guest
Oscar Dres wrote:

Quote:
Hmm, I have Gentoo Linux running on my PPC (Ibook G4) works like a charm.
Too bad Gentoo is not something for the beginner otherwise I would
recommend that, I would then probably go for fedora as they still have
support for the latter systems (Fedora 11 on PPC) as Ubuntu does not
And basically Fedora is Redhat just more "fancy" and targeted on end-users

I'm not sure you should be so scared of recommending Gentoo for a beginner, as
long as they know how to read and follow instructions, they will manage to
install Gentoo in a fly.

--

//Aho
 
J.O. Aho...
Posted: Wed Oct 14, 2009 9:23 am
Guest
Steven F. Scharff wrote:

Quote:
Please forgive my ignorance (I'm the one who started this thread) but
I was unaware that Linux could be run on a Mac.

Linux runs more or less on anything you can find out there with enough memory
to load the kernel and have a little bit in spare.


Quote:
Exactly what version
of Linux can run on a Power PC (G3)? That's the type of Mac I
currently have.

Yellow Dog is the one that I could recommend, in case you don't want to run
Gentoo (really good help by the developers if you drop in at the
#Gentoo-PowerPC at freenode).

There are a number of other distributions which has PowerPC support as debian,
fedora, mandrivia and there are some which has unofficial ports to powerpc,
but then you don't know how fast they will be on patching bugs and security holes.

--

//Aho
 
philo...
Posted: Wed Oct 14, 2009 4:10 pm
Guest
Steven F. Scharff wrote:
Quote:
On Oct 13, 7:28 pm, Oscar Dres <od... at (no spam) xs4all.nl> wrote:
philo wrote:
J.O. Aho wrote:
philo wrote:
J.O. Aho wrote:
Unidyne wrote:
3) Which is best for a total beginner: Red Hat or Unbuntu?
Ubuntu don't support PowerPC.
I have definitely used Ubuntu to resurrect a few Mac's
http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/ports/releases/9.04/release/
From the Ubuntu PPC FAQ:
"Ubuntu 6.10 was the last officially supported PowerPC version of
Ubuntu."
The release isn't supported by ubuntu, but the ubuntu powerpc community.
Irrelevant whether or not it's "officially" supported...
bottom line is : it works
Hmm, I have Gentoo Linux running on my PPC (Ibook G4) works like a charm.
Too bad Gentoo is not something for the beginner otherwise I would
recommend that, I would then probably go for fedora as they still have
support for the latter systems (Fedora 11 on PPC) as Ubuntu does not
And basically Fedora is Redhat just more "fancy" and targeted on end-users

Greeting Oscar

Please forgive my ignorance (I'm the one who started this thread) but
I was unaware that Linux could be run on a Mac. Exactly what version
of Linux can run on a Power PC (G3)? That's the type of Mac I
currently have.

Steven F. Scharff
(Who is going to visit the Las Vegas Linux Users Group in person this
Saturday)
Henderson, Nevada



here's the link


http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/ports/releases/jaunty/release/
 
 
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