Quote:Well.. I'm a bit worried now.. Been a Win2k user for a long time now.. 98.. workgroups before that.. and now I finally think to myself I've had enough, I don't even want to touch XP, so I asked about, did a bit of research and came up with Mandrake. I was searching around to see if my beloved apps etc that I've used for so long will still work under Mandrake.. FlashFXP brought me here.
I've been told I can dual boot but no.. If I'm going to take the plunge into the world of Linux it's gotta be 100%. So maybe I'm posting this for a little reassurance that I'm doing the right thing.. finally cutting away the apron strings of mummy gates.
I would like some advice however considering I'm a complete Noob that has just printed out 300 sheets from various PDF help / starter files to try to get a grip of something I'm just about to jump into.
..erm.. this was my first post on a Board that I may become quite a regular of.. Greets to you all.
-=VB=-
Interesting forum idea. Anyways:
From someone else who has also begun the transition from Winbloat to linux.
(A testimonial/observation)
I made it to WinMe, the last version I dared trust data to. (2000/NT/XP are strict no!go areas for me)
After despairing over many years, wanting to see a reasonable operating system
(I use Unix at work upon occasion, I prefer assembly language over -any- kind of 'language')
and rather put off by the crypto-jargon elitism that pervades the 'C'/Linux crowd.
I finally took the plunge with Mandrake 9.1
I tried 9.2, but that Mandrake crowd appears to release with bugs and short on documentation to some degree.
(9.2 never made it past the second disk, on my hardware)
Nevertheless, I managed to get 9.1 to stabilize on my hdc (D:\drive)
after installing it, doing the LILO hda boot surgery necessary to get
LILO to boot exclusively from hdc, leaving my WinMe legacy on hda.
Perplexing, but doable.
The result is two different disks which are independently bootable, loosing LILO won't dorrupt WinME,
and WinME is unaware of my hdc drive.
I probably did it the hard way, there is probably a simpler method,
but the Linux community DOES NOT ORGANIZE INFORMATION VERY WELL.
Many of the Linux crowd hate and despise anyone who makes the transition,
and it seems to be some subconscious effort to hide all the appropriate documents.
A noob hazing, if you will
This is not necessarily a bad thing, as if they did make transition easier,
the world would be flooded with zillions of clueless ex-Winbloat folk (like us?).
It is better, sort of like having an AOL so that all the AOL personalities can be recognized for what they are.
(Yeah, I know, I do know a *few* intelligent persons who use AOL despite being warned, but some have no choice. Exceptions that prove the rule, I guess.)
Mandrake (I have only seen friends RedHat, buggy as well) has its flaky moments.
Installing the fixes from the Mandrake Users place helps,
but there will always be those 'I need to do what ?!?!?!' moments.
It doesn't help that Linux and 'C' are havens for cryptopathic personalities,
but once you get past the learning curve, things should improve.
At least, that's my hope.
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