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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] Need purchasing advice for a linux compatible desktop
- Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2006 12:54:51 +0900
- From: Dave M G <martin@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] Need purchasing advice for a linux compatible desktop
- References: <443B96BA.4040705@example.com>
- User-agent: Mail/News 1.5 (X11/20060309)
Joseph, Hello. I recently bought a computer, just a couple of weeks ago, and installed Ubuntu on it, so I went through some of the same considerations as you. I'm also basically just a user who aspires to use Ubuntu for a combination of web design and general home purposes like playing music and watching DVDs and so on. So maybe my perspective is something similar to yours. Hopefully my advice can help. Note that my comments are almost entirely about using Ubuntu. I'm sure you can sort out the Windows stuff. > Here's what I need to do with it: > 1. Run Ubuntu and Debian on it. > 2. Be able to use almost all the hardware There is no doubt Ubuntu and Debian will install on any computer. But saying "use all the hardware" has more depth to the issue. A lot of hardware is supported, but actually getting it to work is a different matter. For example, you could say that Wacom tablets are supported. In fact, they're supposed to be natively supported and "just work" in Ubuntu Dapper. But in my case, it took months of struggle before the drivers finally worked out. I guess I would advise caution in that being supported and working right away without any struggle are different things. > 3. Be able to play DVDs (In either GNU/Linux or Windows) > 4. Be able to burn CDs These should be no problem. There are literally dozens of applications for these tasks, and hardware support in this area is very good. > 5. Be able to use an iPod with it As others have commented, an iPod will show up as a storage device when plugged in. Whether or not applications will transfer tunes, and maintain playlists and things like that is really up to individual applications. I use Amarok, which comes with a plugin for iPod support. It probably gives most of the features you get with your iTunes software. But you should be prepared for one or two features you might like not being available until the next revision. > 6. Have working speakers, but minimally adequate speakers (=sound > comes out of them) would be fine > 7. Have a large screen, roughly 17 to 19 inches wide These should be no trouble. On the Ubuntu mailing list, I have seen a lot of talk suggesting that sound support may be flakey, and some people have troubles. I use a USB Kenwood stereo, and it works fine, which kind of surprised me because I thought it was an obscure and most likely unsupported piece of hardware. Overall, you shouldn't have trouble getting speakers and monitors to work. But you should be prepared for some funkiness with small sound details. For example, it seems to be a common issue that Flash files played within FireFox don't produce any sound. It can be fixed, but it's the kind of problem you might encounter. Or another trouble people report often is that if you have two different sound devices, like one sound card and one external device, Ubuntu/Linux seems to have trouble picking which one to use at any one time. > Here are some other things I'd like to be able to do (my wish list) > 1. Use my printer with it (Canon Pixux iP4100). I'm guessing that has > little to do with the computer and only to do with the OS, but I'll > put this here anyway since printing can be done with my wife's Windows > laptop. I have a Canon Pixus iP3100, which worked beautifully on my old computer. Installed without a hassle. Then I upgraded, and now I can't get it to print with my new computer. Both running Ubuntu. In any case, you should see this web site: http://www.techbuilder.org/recipes/showArticle.jhtml?articleId=167600449&printableArticle=true > 2. Be able to burn DVDs Burning data DVDs is no problem. A program like K3B will do it without blinking. But burning video DVDs that you can play in a standalone DVD player requires a little experimentation, dealing with formats and encodings, and the like. But, this is one thing that I can say is no worse than Windows. I tried a long time to burn DVDs in Windows using various programs, but never settled on a system that reliably worked every time. > 3. Have a dual boot setup with GNU/Linux on one partition and Windows > (any version from Windows 2000 or later) on another Definitely possible, and I do it. One piece of advice I got consistently is that it's easier in the long run to install Windows first and Linux second. The reason being that Windows, if installed second, will generally consider itself the only OS and very likely over write and multiple boot options that Linux had set. By installing Linux second, it generally plays nice and puts in GRUB, the thing that gives you the option of which OS to boot up when you start your computer. > 4. Do some simple photo editing, nothing fancy; and instant response > is not necessary I use GIMP for this. I'm a professional PhotoShop user, and I find GIMP just fine for simple photo editing tasks. It's actually quite robust. But, when it comes to printing, GIMP does not have CMYK support, so if you want to create print quality images, you may find it limiting. If you just want to edit pics for sharing or viewing on the computer or web, GIMP is well more than you need. > 5. A keyboard that is easy on fingers that do a lot of typing I went to User's Side, who have locations in Ebisu and Akihabara, to get an ergonomic English keyboard. The kind where the keys are separated in the middle and angled to match your hand positions. Very nice. Keyboard compatibility is not even an issue with Ubuntu/Linux, unless the keyboard comes with all sorts of weird non-standard things like volume control and stuff. Then it's hit and miss. My keyboard comes with a power button on the keyboard, and Ubuntu responds to it. But I think I just got lucky on that one. Despite the amount of Japanese typing I do, I got an English keyboard because I hate the tiny little space bars you get on Japanese keyboards. I'm always accidentally hitting the input switcher keys. But if you don't mind a Japanese keyboard, the new, huge, Yodobashi Camera in Akihabara has a long wall full of various keyboards, of all shape and dimension. As for where and how to buy your box, I did a lot of looking around and decided that primepc.jp was very price competitive, and although they don't ship computers pre-installed with Linux (so far as I know), they do ship computers without Windows installed, which can save some money. I think they are cheaper than dell, and offer more variety. I found that walking around and looking at most computer set ups inside computer stores was dizzying and headache inducing. Not only that, but the option sets are much less flexible when selecting from a set offered in a store. I much preferred a web interface to play with specifications and see how price was affected. But... here's the thing that was a real winning move in my book. Primepc is actually just the English arm of the Japanese company Dospara. What I did, by accidental discovery, was get a basic set up that I was happy with on the web, then took the specifications down to the Dospara shop in Akihabara, and then did a little extra configuring with the help of the clerk. There are more options you can work with that they don't make clear on the web. Also, down at the shop they have ready to go computers on special, that they are actually willing to configure a little for you. So I found a computer that was almost exactly like what I had configured on the web, with the added bonus of being a "silent" model, and had a couple other neat points. And the price was a couple thousand yen better than what I was looking at on the web. The one thing that needed upgrading was the amount of RAM, which they did for me. Then I bought a video card separately, because it seemed cheaper than the prices I saw on the web. I highly recommend going about it this way. I hope some of this information helps. -- Dave M G
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