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Year I stick with what I have and not waste time or money on inefficient or incompatible crap.
I've been playing with Mint for about 2 weeks. Coming from Slackware and lean OSes like TinyCore, DSL, and Puppy, I really like it. Get the Cinnamon UI version of 14 if you have a choice.
Personally, I think it's a lot more efficient and faster than XP on the same hardware (Pentium M @ 1.7 GHz, 2 GB DDR2, 80 GB 5400 RPM laptop HDD, Intel GMA 915). I switched because I was getting lots of BSODs that were seemingly related to the laptop's video driver and Intel hasn't shipped a new one in years. It idles at about 200 MB of RAM used and where XP couldn't handle full screen YouTubes at 320, Mint seems happy at full screen 480. You can try the live disc, but you'll feel lots of lag if you do it from optical media that you won't see if you install it to a hard disk.
Ubuntu is free, easy to use, fits ALL my computing needs, and is enjoyable. Windows 8 only contributes to the dumbing down of computing.
Is a modern Linux distro (say Mint 14) any faster than Win 7 or Win 8? If price were not an issue which one would you choose? Windows certainly doesn't lack in quality freeware so that's really not an argument for me.
Thanks. The whole Cinnamon, Mate, KDE, Gnome thing confuses me, it seems more like a religious debate as I can't even find a decent answer about whats better. Just when I think I have the answer I'll come across someone who says use XFCE or Enlightenment or one of the other window managers![]()
I find unity demeaning. But fortunately you can change that interface.I've been using Linux for about 4 years; I started with Linux Mint which made the transition easy. Although I have a Windows machine, I haven't had to turn it on for 2 years. Even my 70 year old parents use Ubuntu. I was sick and tired of fixing various errors so I put Ubuntu on for them; I haven't had any IT calls since- everything works like a champ.
Windows 8 acts like a curtain on a stage. Sure the curtain looks great, but it hides how the computer functions and makes it akin to magic. I say, open the curtain and stop treating me like an idiot! Those stupid squares on Windows 8 is all but calling you a two year old! Don't you find them demeaning?
Ubuntu is free, easy to use, fits ALL my computing needs, and is enjoyable. Windows 8 only contributes to the dumbing down of computing.
In my experience, Gnome is the simplest to use, but I think it's just a matter of what you want to learn first. Commands such as installing a new software in terminal is as such: "sudo apt-get install wireshark"
'sudo' is a reference to you being root (having the administrative authority to install; incidentally, that one of the reasons linux is resistant to viruses), 'apt-get' is a standard Gnome command to get a application, 'install' is to install the program, and 'wireshark' is the program (a pretty cool one at that).
FYI, you don't need to learn the commands if you don't want to anymore. Just go into the software center and search for the program you want, then click on install. Linux has become so simple to use. No discs needed for drivers or programs. Just connect the machine to the internet and go. I highly suggest Linux Mint Cinnamon for new users. It's similar to the Windows 7 interface and very stable. You can run the OS off the disc or a usb drive without installing it if you want to try it out.
There is such a great community of users that any question about a particular OS will have an answer with a quick google search.
apt-get actually has nothing to do with GNOME. apt-get is a command-line utility that Debian-based distros (Debian, Ubuntu, Mint and their derivatives) use for package management. If you were using GNOME on Fedora, you would use yum instead.
I find unity demeaning. But fortunately you can change that interface.
oh this story again.
its just funny at this point.
Yup, my thoughts exactly, seems every time a new windows os comes out, it is going to be the year for linux!
Zarathustra[H];1039483565 said:Yeah, or you can just use Mint, which is pre-packaged with Cinnamon and Mate, (both different approaches at trying to reproduce the Gnome 2 experience, one based on Gnome 2 code, and the other based on modified Gnome 3 code) and still uses all the ease of install, and hardware compatibility advances of Ubuntu as it is based on the same Ubuntu repositories and codebase.
That being said, just like Windows 8, Unity would probably be great in touch/tablet form. I just don't want it on my desktop.
Well that's the thing. Microsoft's approach to Windows 8, was Ubuntu's approach to a Linux GUI. So Microsoft is actually ripping off Ubuntu's strategy. Although Microsoft's version is less desktop friendly than Unity.
Well that's the thing. Microsoft's approach to Windows 8, was Ubuntu's approach to a Linux GUI. So Microsoft is actually ripping off Ubuntu's strategy. Although Microsoft's version is less desktop friendly than Unity.
I don't know. Unity is basically OS X with the dock configured on the left. Disabling the global menus makes it much less obnoxious. Windows 7 is very similar... except with the dock / launcher on the bottom... and a cascading app menu, rather than a dashboard.
I don't know why people compare Unity with Windows 8, Unity isn't a hybrid design. As for desktop friendliness, Unity might be a bit better, haven't touched it in a while, but on the desktop is suffers the same issues as Windows 8 as the apps used on a desktop tend not to be touch friendly.
I don't know why people compare Unity with Windows 8, Unity isn't a hybrid design. As for desktop friendliness, Unity might be a bit better, haven't touched it in a while, but on the desktop is suffers the same issues as Windows 8 as the apps used on a desktop tend not to be touch friendly.
haven't touched it in a while
Never in my life thought I'd see Unity apologists. It's almost like seeing people viciously defending Windows Me.
80% Windows in my home, if you exclude the Android devices. Got a MythBuntu DVR hooked up to the big screen (I need to put Steam on there -- anyone try the beta?). It took some tinkering to get it where I wanted it, but less tinkering than I was expecting.
There are still some significant barriers to switching: games and Netflix chief among them.
apt-get actually has nothing to do with GNOME. apt-get is a command-line utility that Debian-based distros (Debian, Ubuntu, Mint and their derivatives) use for package management. If you were using GNOME on Fedora, you would use yum instead.
Aptitude and Yum suck compared to YAST.
Aptitude and Yum suck compared to YAST.
Aptitude and Yum suck compared to YAST.
Thanks. The whole Cinnamon, Mate, KDE, Gnome thing confuses me, it seems more like a religious debate as I can't even find a decent answer about whats better. Just when I think I have the answer I'll come across someone who says use XFCE or Enlightenment or one of the other window managers![]()
It's already been said before, but the window manager is a matter of taste. I never really like Gnome and preferred KDE, but Cinnamon is Gnome-ish and I really like it. I disliked IceWM, but liked FluxBox.
Overall though, I think Cinnamon is a pretty good balance that gets a lot of stuff right. It seems pretty familiar for people who are used to the Windows UI so the transition isn't as jarring as it could be. The best suggestion I can make is to try stuff out before actually installing anything to a hard drive. You'll get a good idea if stuff like your NIC and GPU are properly supported out of the box or if you're gonna hafta roll up some sleeves to make it all work. Either that, or dump it on a spare computer. I wouldn't dedicate my super-important-must-function or plays-all-my-games system to Linux without having a lot of time to get used to it first. in fact, it's possible to use Linux for a long time and still pretty much be a novice. That's completely true in my case.![]()
Sadly, technology is not about advancement, it's about money, and there's no money in Linux.