10-07-2007, 15:41 | #11 |
The Night Worker
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 5,228
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OK then, either i have moved completely into geek world or that is just as cool as ****. Being honest I've known i was a geek for years but just denied it. Bollocks to that geeks will now inherit the earth so **** it i am on board. Linux is on my to-do list & i have a very small to-do list. This thread inspires me to learn it Now rather than later. Totally cool,, as cool as *** in fact Possibly the coolest thing i have Ever read on the interweb, definitely the coolest thing I've read this year. |
03-01-2008, 15:28 | #12 |
The Stig
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Swad!
Posts: 10,713
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I took this a little further today
I bought a new 4GB stick over Chrimbo as the 1GB just wasn't enough for what I wanted. After some playing around and bootloader fighting, I now have the best of all worlds (imo). If I plug it into a Windows system I get to use it as normal - I'll keep portable firefox and pocketputty on there etc. But it will still also boot into Ubuntu (Gutsy now, always had trouble with Feisty on USB). I ended up missing having some portable storage for windows and drastically cut down what the ubuntu install could do. Not now though, it's got a good 1GB of space for changes, has the entire contents of the live cd as standard, and left me with about 2GB of space for win32 stuff that mounts automatically on it's own (previously the partition was second or third down the disk, and Windows wont bother attempting to mount anything other than the first, so I had to give it a letter myself). Happy (geeky) Darren. It's a proper little swiss army knife
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03-01-2008, 21:05 | #13 |
Preparing more tumbleweed
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Hawaii
Posts: 6,038
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Next task: Ditch Windows all together
I well and truly b0rked up my Ubuntu workstation today, fiddling about with xen, to the point where the entire team were going "WTF?! How did you manage that?!", and I made the decision to rebuild (/home is on a separate partition so safe) All we had kicking around was a Debian Etch minimal install disk... thankfully bandwidth isn't much of an issue when you work for an ISP (100Mb link to our office, usually sits around 40Mb/s usage from normal stuff so a reasonable amount of spare bandwidth for installs) I'm impressed. Its moved on a fair bit since I last used it, and it was a pain free installation, and apart from the usual niggles of getting ATI drivers to work (apt-get install fglrx-whatever-it-was just doesn't work out of the box, no matter what people say) I soon had the box back up and running nicely. Some of the software is slightly older versions than under Ubuntu but that's to be expected. Runs faster and smoother than Gutsy was with a definite lack of bloat on a standard install in comparison. I'm going to stick with it for a couple of weeks for now and see how comfortable I get with it. Being Debian it'd be a fairly simple task to upgrade it to Gutsy if I really need to anyway.
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03-01-2008, 21:22 | #14 |
The Mouse King of Denmark
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: The Winchester
Posts: 6,476
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Mine has porn on lol
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03-01-2008, 21:28 | #15 |
I'm going for a scuttle...
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 2,021
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I got backtrack2 working in the end after my last post in this thread on a 2Gb drive. When 8Gb drives hit the curve and I have a spare few quid I will have a full BT2 and another linux on there as well as a few ISOs of various things.
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03-01-2008, 21:50 | #16 |
The Stig
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Swad!
Posts: 10,713
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Heh, I wish!
Seriously though, I've always said I couldn't live without either and that's still the case
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04-01-2008, 01:34 | #17 |
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Location: Hawaii
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I reached the stage a few months back where literally the only reason I keep Windows installed on any of my PCs is because I like to play games. For everything else I prefer Linux.
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Mal: Define "interesting"? Wash: "Oh, God, oh, God, we're all gonna die"? |
04-01-2008, 09:32 | #18 |
Stan, Stan the FLASHER MAN!
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: In bed with your sister
Posts: 5,483
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This made me LOL
Amidst all the geekiness, Belmit, the voice of reason, brings things back to a level we can all understand
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04-01-2008, 10:22 | #19 |
HOMO-Sapien
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Chelmsford
Posts: 6,692
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Sound good mate. However, I've never quite seen the attraction of Linux. I understand it's free and flexible but if you can't run anything on it, what's the point?? Even windows files sharing has to be done through a Samba share. Seems like a lot of hassle. Maybe you can enlighten me.
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I just got lost in thought.. It was very unfamiliar territory. Techie Talk | My gaming Blog | PC spec | The Admirals log |
04-01-2008, 11:26 | #20 | ||
The Stig
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Swad!
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Quote:
Quote:
Other than play games newer games (and even then there are ways and means), there is nothing I couldn't do in my Linux environments. Some things are more convenient in Windows, which I why I still use and rely on it, but there's no limitation if you're willing to get your hands dirty with some of the more Windows centric few things. The main reason I like Linux is the power it gives me. From a Linux shell I can do whatever I need to very quickly - if there are problems I can find the information I need to troubleshoot it very easily, if I need to make configuration changes I can make them and apply them quickly and without downtime like rebooting. It just lets me do my job I've never had anything come close to it in Windows. Maybe Powershell will change that over time, we'll just have to see. It's also of course a superior recovery environment. If I'm stuck in a server room at 3:30 in the morning facing a dead server I can pull something out of my pocket to let me get at the data if it's in one piece, or even diagnose hardware problems. [edit]Dont get me wrong, I'm not a Linux fanboy per se, just an enthusiast. There are things both Linux and Windows give me and I dont see why someone should have to choose.... so I dont. I have both a Windows and Linux server at home and use them both for different things - playing to each of their strengths as I see fit. My Windows box (a VM uner Linux) gives me Exchange, authentication and media sharing, the Linux box looks after file sharing, VPN access to my home LAN, media conversion/ripping (with no gui I should add), web and sql gump and lots of automated stuff - backups and shifting data around. I could do all of them on either but I choose the best platform for the service and have the best of all worlds.
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