lungster wrote:- The NIC is PCI - an Intel part. I used it under Windows because its drivers were always MP-stable. Not sure if it's supported by typical Linux distros. I should have a spare Linksys somewhere I can drop in; or I'll go with your recommendation on the RTL based NIC.
lungster wrote:- The Nvidia AGP card is no longer an issue. I dropped it into one of my kid's systems to get better game performance there. I'm now stuck with an old Matrox MGA PCI card! No games here but that's ok for now. I assume the MGA will be easily supported. I think I've got another video card sitting in my parts box somewhere. Parts just seem to grow on their own
lungster wrote:- The ISA sound card problem didn't surprise me either. If anything I was surprised that SuSE found it. And it's not one of the Aureal Vortex cards. The Malibu is based on a Crystal chip. It's actually delivers decently high quality audio which is why I'd like to keep it; but is ISA nonetheless. Oh well. I'll probably just get a generic Cmedia 8738 card. Are these generally supported under Linux distros ?
lungster wrote:- I'll give Xandros a try. Thanks !
cavity wrote:I just installed xandros on my bp6, and I am impressed. everything worked right away, I didnt have to mess around with anything. I am fairly new to linux, but its easier than windows to understand.
lungster wrote:Just a quick update. I received a Chaintech 8738 based 6-channel sound card from Newegg ($13.50), dropped it into the last PCI slot, pulled the old Malibu and not only is the sound working but the network works great now !
hugoc wrote:I'd cast a vote for Yoper (http://www.yoper.com/). It's very fast, which is great for older hardware like the BP6. It seems every bit as snappy as WinXP on my system. It's scratchbuilt and not based on another distro although it does use some other distros systems, like Kudzu. All my hardware was automatically detected without any problems, and my system is fairly stuffed.
One CD only and not many extras - no Gnome, OpenOffice or KOffice or (bizarrely) XMMS, but you can install those after the fact. Personally, I prefer a lighter distro I can add to than a bloated one that bogs my hard drive with multiple office suites and other gobbledygook.
you should consider that it will only run on 686 processors or better so while it will work on a BP6, it won't run on anything less that that so it isn't all *good* for older hardware
But other than that I must agree that Yoper is nice...
hugoc wrote:It brings a tear to my eye to say it, but the BP6 is older hardware now.Certainly Yoper won't work on a pre-P6 machine, but how many hardware enthusiasts are running one of those? Certainly if they are, it'd probably be for a non-X firewall/router or fileserver.
hugoc wrote:Regarding your other points, I'd fully agree that Xandros or even something like Linspire (if you don't mind paying for it) is better for a Linux newbie. However, Yoper doesn't need more than basic knowledge - certainly nothing like what Slackware or Debian need - and so it's worth considering in a few months, when you know the basics.
hugoc wrote:I like where it's going. I think it's a good idea to have a fast, pretty and desktop-oriented Linux. Certainly Fedora and Mandrake are trying to go in that direction, but neither can touch Yoper for speed, and one of the key disappointments when Windows users move to Linux is that X is so damnably slow. I think their next release should have OpenOffice and/or KOffice and XMMS, though, for Pete's sake. Cut-down systems are great, but desktop users need and expect an office suite and decent media player.
the hardware is a K6-2 500MHz. That processor is a 586 processor and not 686. However, it is headless/X-less and running Debian
However, what a distro like Xandros does for you is configure printers, network (Samba, NFS etc) all during the install process, similar to Windows. I doubt Yoper does that!
have never liked Mandrake and I think Fedora is a step in the wrong direction. What they are trying to do is to be a second Debian.
Btw, what do you mean when you say X is slow?
hugoc wrote:Truthfully, I don't know. It did detect all the hardware I had perfectly, got my cable internet (via Ethernet) set up just fine with no configuration necessary, etc. The only thing I had a problem with was Xinerama, but then that gave me headaches on every distro.
hugoc wrote:I don't think that's the case. Debian is definitely an experienced users system, whereas Mandrake and Fedora are trying to set themselves up as hand-holding beginners systems. I think Mandrake and Fedora want to be like MacOS X, however, what they haven't realised is that Apple has loads of personnel and millions of dollars allocated to useability and ergonomics, which they don't. As a result, I find Mandrake and Fedora easy in some respects but counter-intuitive and full of kludges in others. It's probably not their fault, Linux is by nature kludgy, it's a necessary evil of open-source. Everybody wants to code new features, nobody wants to streamline and design better interfaces.
hugoc wrote:I probably mis-spoke. X itself is only part of the problem as it uses a lot of overhead on things like network-transparent windowing which are utterly useless to the desktop/home user and become cycle-suckers in a standalone environment. The kernel itself is evidently causing a problem as we saw when the optimisations in 2.6 sped the whole thing up considerably, but most of the trouble as I see it is in window managers like Gnome and KDE. The problem is that you can either have loads of features, but slow system response, or a stripped-down window manager (like XFCE) with little to none of the features that home users want (like desktop icons). The problem with that is that Windows XP offers both.
hugoc wrote:Possibly a good avenue that GNU/Linux should go down is to specialise, as Windows has, into desktop/workstation/server/enterprise models. At the moment, everybody gets to use the enterprise-level system, which is complete overkill for the home user.
What you are saying that there are a lot of features built into X that slow the desktop down. But you are actually speaking of 3 different things here
I probably mis-spoke. X itself is only part of the problem
This is an X feature and it has been since pretty much day one. You say this feature is useless which makes me surprised.
network-transparent windowing which are utterly useless to the desktop/home user
Well, kernel and X have nothing to do with featuritis in Gnome and KDE.
At the end of the day, Linux is about choice.
This is what we don't want! Why mimic Windows?
And I don't agree that everybody uses an enterprise-level system at home.
Btw, this is what Xandros, Linspire etc will give you. A desktop system. Nothing more, nothing less. You can install an ftp server or Apache, sure but it is not there by default (on Xandros anyway). So all in all, I think that we are already seeing what you say is missing!
purrkur wrote:Thanks for the update Lungster. Just FYI, I checked the Xandros website and there is indeed a forum there for support where users help each other solve problems in the usual Linux spirit. the site is found here.
You have to register (of course) to post, but you may find answers there to your DHCP problems and if you don't find them then you may find someone who has "been there/done that"
Cool to hear that you are moving to Linux!
hugoc wrote:Things like the network-transparency in X need to be optional. These are enterprise-level features and are just bloat in a desktop system.
hugoc wrote:Great, that's what we need more of. However, Linux is still crying out for some basic changes in the system. For instance, a unified installation model like Installshield will do wonders.
Billl wrote:I was curious what you think about RPM based packages in general? I read an article over at http://www.distrowatch.com/dwres.php?re ... rticle-rpm a couple weeks back about going with Source based distro's versus RPM based. It would seem from the article that source seems the way to go? I particularly liked Sorcerer http://www.distrowatch.com/dwres.php?re ... w-sorcerer . The idea of it constantly updating itself is pretty neat.
Billl wrote:I've been a Windows user since the first version. But I have to say I'm ready to change. I don't much like the direction Gate's and company are headed. Although I'll be a newbie at Linux I should pick it up fairly easily. Since I have a strong background in hardware. Been building my own machines for over 10 years now. Any thoughts you have on this would be appreciated.
I can mention a whole list of things that are bloatware in Windows that should be optional but they are not (I mean DirectX in Windows Server products?? *hellooooooo*).
If all your desktop needs are found in Windows, why bother with Linux?
If you think that Linux is trying to replace Windows then that is only a fraction of what people are using it to do.
Installshield?? The bloatware product that is so unbelivably poor on flexibility that my company was forced to build our own installation tool for Windows (while standard tools in Solaris and Linux do just fine)?? I don't agree with you here.
I think the next step we need is to meet and grab a beer over this discussion I have always wanted to make my way to Canada
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