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PenguinBiker

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Posts posted by PenguinBiker


  1. what i'm useing knoppix for is installing gentoo, i decided that i would make a temporary install of knoppix on my harddrive and gave it a 2.8 GB LVM partition which i can easily swipe when i'm done installing gentoo.

     

    speaking of which does anyone know how to setup grub in knoppix???? or should i just install grub through chrooted gentoo base install and set it up to boo tknoppix that way, them when i'm done i can add the gentoo entries, does anyone know if that would work?


  2. Quote:
    You can if you do the complete stage 3 + GRP (Gentoo Reference Platform) but really, it's not worth it. If you're going to install Gentoo do the Stage 1 install. it'll take a while but you'll develop a better appreciation for what Gentoo is all about, learn a fair bit about Linux and get the satisfaction of knowing the system you're using at the end was built with your own hands to your needs and not to encompass the needs of millions of people.


    i agree, my first gentoo install was a stage 3 install. afterword i swiped it and did a stage 1 install and i liked it alot better (much faster on my system) right now i'm doing yet another stage 1 install because i screwed up my hard drive with fdisk (deleted the wrong partition then saved, instead of getting rid of an extra storage partition i killed /usr frown ) while a stage 3 or stage 3 + GRP install is faster the time you save is not (in my opinion) worth what you lose by not installing with stage 1 or at least stage 2

    however there are many people who have a stage 3 +GRP install and are just fine with it.

    also after you complete a stage 1 install you have a high chance of becoming infected with the "Gentoo Experiance"

  3. i recomend installing with knoppix over the x86 live cd's (but that's just what i prefer)

     

    i screwed up my install with fdisk so right now i'm doing a stage-1 install with knoppix because setting up a dial-up connection is ALOT easier (KPPP) also you have fully functional system while you install so you can still check your email, do your homework play a few kde games while your systems compiles (which is VERY long in my case with dial-up)

     

    it also helps to be able to see a konsole window and the install documentation side by side


  4. lets see....

     

    i started with mandrake used that for a few versions

     

    then i used SuSE 8.2 pro for almost 2 years (before i took suse off i had 421 days of uptime)

     

    then i tried redhat for about 2 days, didn't like it to much

     

    and now i'm currently run Gentoo 1.4, because gentoo is faster

     

    also somewhere in there i ran Slack and knoppix (knoppix only lasted about two days, i didn't like it-- it was too simplistic and it looked too much like windows to start out with. which it was designed to do but i didn't like it

     

    well i have to get to class.


  5. i'm recently switched from SuSE 8.2 pro to gentoo and i like it, portage is sweet

     

    i also like how fast it is, i don't know about its speed vs slackware

     

    My first install i just used the gaming sources but after a couple of days i went back and compiled my own kernel

     

    one downpoint i found is that it uses nano for the default text editor but that is easy to change

     

    also don't expect to have a quick install especially if you have dialup (it took me a little over two week of download time from a stage 2 install)

     

    but you can get it installed in one day if you do a stage 3 GRP install


  6. alot of things in windows just don't add up, literatry (ok i know thats spelled wrong. can you even tell what word it is?) like when you have a 40 gig harddrive (it even showed up as a 40 gig drive in windows) and there is 23 gigs free and 8 gigs used Where did the other 9 gigs go? (this happend to me with win xp a while ago, when i got my computer i ran dual boot win xp and mandrake each having a 40 gig hd to themselves, windows i'm proud to say hasn't touched my computer for over a year and a half) also in other ways, earlier in this thread i was talking about one of my teachers computer. one of the schools "tech people" as almost everyone calls them added ram to the computer, and when it booted up the cdrom drive worked just fine. THATS ALL HE DID, ADD MEMORY i watched him do it. Before that it thought that the cdrom was either a floppy or a corrupted cdrom drive HOW WOULD ADDING MEMORY FIX THAT? ;( ?

     

    and that is one of the hundreds of reasons why i try as hard as i can to avoid anything made by or made in part by microsoft. smile

     

    if anyone has learned anything by my ravings it should be this: windows runs about as well as an 80 year old drunk man in a 1000 meter dash

     

    i'm not done yet, only tired


  7. i like how if windows doesn't have drivers for some hardware it will use "the closest match" and that almost never works it just makes it harder to get it set up and the cycle begins (my teachers computer now thinks the cd-rom is a corrupted hd, why the hell it thinks that i have no clue its setting up a cd-rom drive so it asks you to insert the f'ing windows install cd ;( )


  8. in some cases hardware detection in linux can be better than in windows i'm currently working on my jewlry teachers computer which thinks the cdrom drive is a floppy :x but thats windows for you. lately my only hardware detection problems have only been my moniter (its a kds flat crt) i might not have bought it if at the time i had known that "KDS" stands for korean data systems.

     

    but anyway back a little bit closer to the topic

     

    i use linux simply because it is already better than everything else out there (i like it better than OSX because of its flexability)

     

    my last install of suse i would feel sorry for the newbie that touched it i had 6 partitions on my main hd (its a single user computer) and things as someone in KLUG (kalamazoo linux users group) said "were in the wrong place" because of where things were on partitions but it worked for my and i knew exactly where things were. i'm installing gentoo new becasue its the laatest and greatest shiny thing (i have other more intelligent reasons)

     

    just useing linux doesn't involve a big learning curve anymore like it used to with some distros depending on what you do you can completly avoid using the terminal (i have yet to find a user who does this)

     

    well i have to go to class now ;(


  9. i have two hard drives in my box the original purpose being useing a dual boot with linux and xp i would sujest that you force yourself to do as many things as possible on linux. i did this and after a few months i dropped xp completly i now use the 2nd hd for storage (divx movies, MP3s backups ect.) if you can force youself to move as far away from windows as possible the better off you will be.


  10. i would sugjest moving to AIM, its the biggests intant message network out there (they also have a native linux client but i would suggest useing gaim or kopete)

     

    but thats just me i personaly try to avoid anything with M$'s name on it


  11. ok i got gentoo yesterday and i stated to install it but i ran into a problem i'm a little confused on how to setup a dialup modem during the install how do you do it?

     

     

     

    gentoo linux for athlon xp

    i have a best data v.92/v.44 56k modem[/img]


  12. Linux does have a ways to go in user friendlyness but it is taking that distance in leaps and bounds (i mean suse and redhat can be downright simple to install if you don't choose more advanced options) also simple to run you just have to learn a new interface

    the people that talk about how hard suse is to just run (i'm not talking about console commands just running it) are treating it like windows

     

    microsoft is losing money and i think that they will just continue to lose more, as more and more people become aware of the better options like macs and linux.

     

    well i'm going to stop for a while before i continue to rant and rave about M$


  13. Not to be insulting but i think people who love windows are ignorent about the other options out there, if you don't want to go with linux because its to "hard" to use try going with a mac they're fast , powerful, stable, and easy to use

    as far as windows goes i refuse to use an operating system that has flaws purposely designed in it

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