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Desktop Linux: The dream is dead
Renegade:
CUPS (standards-based, open source printing system developed by Apple Inc. for Mac OS® X and other UNIX®-like operating systems) worked flawlessly on a dozen or so Linux distros I was playing with at the time ... However it could not manage to successfully toss a page from OSX to a printer in less than a half an hour. Apples "support" forum (kinda/sorta) admitted to the existence of the issue, but offered nothing useful beyond that.
-Stoic Joker (October 19, 2010, 06:58 AM)
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THAT is funny!
My major mac problems are it's inability to cleanly network with anything or to shut down cleanly (I always need to hard reset the machine). Meh...
f0dder:
5 years is a long long time in Linux land. Things really have improved.
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You mean I should try again ? I still have the old computer.-ljbirns (October 18, 2010, 11:54 AM)
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Perhaps - just don't expect miracles, the current slick and easy-to-use distributions are heavier than the distributions 5 years ago... so if the hardware is really old, you'll probably still be limited to some of the "techier" and not-so-pretty but more lightweight distros. I tried both Ubuntu and Mint (which is Ubuntu-based) on a p4-celeron 1.4GHz with... uh... "some amount" (>512meg) of RAM, and it's a clusterfsck disaster. But hey, you wouldn't expect running Vista or Win7 on that hardware (interesting idea, though, if the GPU is capable enough to get CPU work offloaded - it would make a big difference on that slow box). Even XP has a pretty hefty footprint, unless you're running a really old service pack.
The right OS for the job, and the right hardware for the OS :)
40hz:
The right OS for the job, and the right hardware for the OS :)
-f0dder (October 22, 2010, 02:21 PM)
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Amen! :Thmbsup: :Thmbsup:
Josh:
Sorry for the nostalgia, but I am reminded of this video:
Video
Eóin:
I found Zenwalk to be the best distro for my 700Mhz PIII with 128mb ram, the laptop came with Win2k, and struggled with XP. A quick check of the site shows it still holds true to those principles, and it's looks super slick.
These days though I run Ubuntu on newer machines myself.
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