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- Subject: Tiresome not-even-newbie question
- From: peter@example.com
- Date: Sun, 25 Feb 2001 15:42:23 +0900
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Hello, all. I'm new to this list (which was recommended to me by at least one fellow-subscriber to N-Computing). I've never used Linux, FreeBSD, etc., or any other Unix derivative, let alone on my own computer. But I'd like to do so. And if possible I'd like to do so on a laptop. This is going to be a longish message. Sorry about that. But it will be a long mumbling-out-loud preamble to a simple question: Which Linux should I attempt to install on which of the two laptops at my disposal? [Yes, idiot newbie asks cliche question number 3. . . .] If it's relevant: I want Linux in order to familiarize myself with it so that later, when I *need* it for something, I'll be ready. Of course I don't intend to use a laptop as a webserver, or similar. However, I would like to be able to handle Japanese. I guess I'd use it for mail, websurfing, and maybe gimp. (And Abiword, perhaps, but StarOffice doesn't tempt me.) And I've got, or can easily get hold of, Red Hat 6.2J and 7.01J on CD, and have books on Red Hat 6.2US and 7.0US. I'm not too bright, but I can follow simple instructions. The various books I've borrowed and bought make the installation process sound very straightforward. However, firsthand reports of installing on a laptop -- particularly one that lacks a CD-ROM drive -- make it sound a lot less so. For example, I've read http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~jwb/notebook.html , in which Jim Breen talks of the hours he put into installing Red Hat 6.2 on Toshiba Satellite 2800 -- but (a) the machine has a built-in CD-ROM drive, and (b) he's experienced. What I've just bought is a Toshiba Portege [silly name!] 7220CTe. It now has a single WinY2K partition of a modest 2GB, plus 10GB of inviting wilderness. I'd rather like to have 4GB-worth of Linux -- and leave the rest of the space for joint-use data files and [blush!] more WinY2K stuff. I have already learnt that I have to throttle down the PCMCIA driver in order for cards to be readable. Moreover, http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~pb/T7140CT.html#S0750 gives the general impression that this computer is bleeding-edge, even for people who obviously know what they're doing -- and I of course do not. One reason for getting this Toshiba is that I've outgrown the hard drive capacity (1.3 GB or so) of *this* laptop, a Fujitsu FMV-5133NU6/W (Pentium 133, 32MB RAM). As the Fujitsu isn't mine, I'm not authorized to open it up and change the hard drive -- but I can do absolutely anything I want with software, e.g. nuking Windows and putting Linux in its place. I got Red Hat because it's well known and . . . yes, I suppose I was amused by the logo. I got 7.0 because I thought it would have better support than 6.2 for USB, PCMCIA, etc. But it requires 2.5 GB of hard drive space, and installation on the new laptop promises to be a nightmare. Therefore I'm starting to wonder about deferring plans to add 7.0 to the new laptop and in the meantime nuking Windows from the old one (built-in hard drive, extremely blunt-edge technology) and putting 6.2J in its place. Ladies and gentlemen, your comments? ++++++++++++++++ Peter Evans mailto:peter@example.com
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