Ubuntu Linux
I installed Ubuntu Linux on a computer that a friend gave me. It installed easily, works great and comes with Open Office and Firefox. Free computer and free OS plus browser and office suite. Nice! Trying music apps next.
They have a version for an AMD 64. Compaq AMD 64 computers are so cheap it is tempting me.
They have a version for an AMD 64. Compaq AMD 64 computers are so cheap it is tempting me.
- BingoTheClowno
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- BingoTheClowno
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Of course. On my laptop, a Ubuntu boot program loads first that has my Windows partition as an option. I also have a small FAT 32 partition which can be seen by both OSes and can be used to access files from both.On 2006-05-02 06:17, braincell wrote:
Bingo, if I install it and tell it not to delete the current OS will it install a boot menu allowing me to boot either OS at startup? If so I will install it on my laptop as well.
- BingoTheClowno
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You can try this for NTFS support within Linux:
http://www.linux-ntfs.org/
Haven't tried it since I don't run Linux on any of my machines at home, so I don't know how well it works.
Some distributions might also come with some read-only NTFS module that's disabled by default.
Also check http://www.demudi.org/ for a nice music/audio-specialized Linux distribution. I think they have a LiveCD version, so you can try it before installing it on your machine.
http://www.linux-ntfs.org/
Haven't tried it since I don't run Linux on any of my machines at home, so I don't know how well it works.
Some distributions might also come with some read-only NTFS module that's disabled by default.
Also check http://www.demudi.org/ for a nice music/audio-specialized Linux distribution. I think they have a LiveCD version, so you can try it before installing it on your machine.
- BingoTheClowno
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It would not install on my laptop, I just got a black screen before installing finished but my friend got it installed on his older laptop. The funny thing is he has a Sony VAIO and it said it couldn't install some time zone thing during the Ubuntu installation which I figured was the DRM on the DVD player. It now won't play most DVDs. I noticed that it is not as easy to use as a Mac or XP either. If I was making a computer for someone who is new to computers and just wants to surf the web, email and use Open Office. I would give them Unbuntu.
- BingoTheClowno
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DVD region can be changed in the Device Manager in Windows. However that can only be changed a couple of times (see the image).

<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: BingoTheClowno on 2006-05-08 18:58 ]</font>

That could be the time synchronization module, that fails on my laptop too because I am not connected to the Internet. I wish I knew how to disable that.The funny thing is he has a Sony VAIO and it said it couldn't install some time zone thing during the Ubuntu installation which I figured was the DRM on the DVD player
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: BingoTheClowno on 2006-05-08 18:58 ]</font>