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Switching to Linux for a week
40hz:
There is an excellent article recently posted on the zmogo website. In a series of seven posts, Linux newcomer Ash Pringle shares his experiences with Linux:
The plan: Ring in the new year by switching over to Linux for a week, documenting each day of the transition.
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It's a great read that provides one of the most balanced and candid articles I have ever read about the whole Linux Experience. Well worth the fifteen or so minutes it takes to read all seven installments.
8)
My impressions of the Linux operating system are coloured by memories of the first time my computer-whiz friend unveiled his sort-of-new copy of Redhat Linux to me. “Check this out!” he said. “This OS doesn’t suck like everything Microsoft makes!” It came in an over-sized jewel case with 4 CDs, handed down second-hand from another computer-whiz friend who recommended we try it.
Upon installing it we were greeted with an unceremonious command console that might as well have been written in the ancient tongue of the long-dead tribe of Gnitth Shhta Star-God worshippers. We had no idea what to do, and it was exciting. Linux had that combination of sparseness, functionality and seriousness that gave it the feel of being a real operating system, unlike that flighty Windows 95. In short, Linux seemed cool.
But that was my first and last encounter with Linux. In the ten or fifteen years since that first Linux install other operating systems have shown up, like XP and OSX, that have mostly pulled my attention away from Linux. Now my impression of Linux is bundled up with old memories of screwing around with the config.sys file on my DOS computer in order to allocate enough virtual memory to get Ultima running. In short, Linux to me has always been synonymous with “command console,” and although command consoles may work well, they definitely aren’t easy to use.
All these year later, now that those newer and simpler operating systems are available, I find myself wondering: why use Linux at all? Why go through all the trouble of installing an operating system that’s difficult to use, when almost everyone has a perfectly fine operating system already installed on their PC? I’ve never seen the reason to make the switch.
But I’ve also heard all the reports about how Linux is different nowadays. “It’s easy to use!” they say. “It’s even easy to install, and it’s way more stable than Windows!” they insist. “It’s not like the old days; Linux has changed, man! Just give a try, all the cool and smart and handsome people are using it!” Linux still has that indie cred that I experienced all those years ago that makes it seem just a little bit more elite than its competitors, and power-nerds everywhere seem to be cajoling me into trying it.
Lucky for them I have an incredibly weak will. So I’ve decided to give in to peer pressure, light me up some Linux, and trip my way through the alternative operating system carnival in the sky.
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Link: http://www.zmogo.com/gear/the-new-year-linux-resolution-switching-to-linux-for-a-week/
cranioscopical:
Thanks for the link 40hz
Like many others I dip into Linux every now and again.
I *have* to use Windows for a few things and so cannot find the motivation to run a second OS.
What I have satisfies what I need and I can't make a complete break.
My days of tinkering just for the heck of it are more or less over (been there, done that).
That said, I'll be interested to read the article. Thanks again for the post :)
Darwin:
Excellent! Thanks for that, 40hz :Thmbsup:
I'm *just* coming out of my tinkering for the halibut stage. Until about two weeks ago, I had an iBook running Tiger, a notebook running Win2k, a notebook running Ubuntu 8.04, a notebook running XP Pro and a notebook running Vista 64 Ultimate all networked together and crowding my (physical) desktop. I also had, and still have, the Vista machine running a WfW 3.11 client and Win2k client. I've since added Win7 as a client on that machine. Crowded. Very crowded. I've pared down to the XP and Vista notebooks on my physical desktop and find that I don't have much time or inclination to faff about with the client OS on my Vista machine. All in all, it SERIOUSLY cuts into my "productivity". I"m toying with the idea of removing XP Pro machine from my desktop and the client OSes from the Vista computer and actually using my notebook for its intended purpose: being productive. What a novel idea!
Still, like Chris, I'll read the article with interest, even if I'm cringing a bit resisting the temptation to follow the author's lead!
40hz:
I"m toying with the idea of removing XP Pro machine from my desktop and the client OSes from the Vista computer and actually using my notebook for its intended purpose: being productive. What a novel idea!-Darwin (January 13, 2009, 11:39 AM)
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I hear you. Despite all the machines, appliance boxes, and servers I ditz around with, I still keep one little laptop (an antique Compaq Armada M300 no less) loaded with CrunchBang Linux or WinXP (I just swap the drives) for when I actually need to get some real work done.
And I spend almost half my time on it too! ;D
Still, like Chris, I'll read the article with interest, even if I'm cringing a bit resisting the temptation to follow the author's lead!
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Well... you could always just read it and live vicariously.
Kidding aside, I really liked the article because it was written by somebody who went into it with absolutely no agenda other than to see what Linux was about.
Furthermore this wasn't somebody pretending to be a "clueless noob" (ala all those WSJ and NYT articles) nor a techno-wonker. It's just the observations and impressions of one reasonably intelligent and technically savvy individual who decided he wanted to see at first hand what the deal was. I think Ash Pringle is more representative of the people who get into Linux than the stereotyped dummies or geeks most news articles portray them as being.
And it reads like a breath of fresh air. No FOSS political rants, Microsoft propaganda, or endless hairsplitting over file systems and kernal optimizations like you run into in so many "tell all" articles.
What can I say? I did a "copy & paste" of all 7 installments and saved it. 8)
housetier:
hmm I can't open that page, I get error messages from wordpress.
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