legatic All American 7481 Posts user info edit post |
I'm looking to switch from a single boot XP system to dual boot with some flavor of linux, but I have a few issues.
I'm not quite sure which distro to use. I'm fairly unexperienced with Linux, but I've played around with Knoppix so I was thinking of going that route. Is there a better starting distro?
Also, all of my drives are formatted to NTFS. I've heard partition magic can convert a drive back to fat32, but it seems perilous at best. How do you guys deal with NTFS? by avoiding it? 9/24/2006 11:16:40 PM |
kramit Veteran 251 Posts user info edit post |
I recommend Ubuntu, its pretty straight-forward and easy to use.
Linux has the ability to read from NTFS, but write support is not very stable. 9/24/2006 11:25:08 PM |
jab All American 795 Posts user info edit post |
you can get read access for ntfs with linux pretty easily. Writing to ntfs drives is not so easy and not really suggested. Leave your windows partition as is. Switching to fat32 is the best solution. partition magic can do it for you and it is really easy. takes all of 10 minutes. if you don't have a copy you can also use gparted livecd. it'll do the same things as P.M. and its free. This way you'll be able to have read/write support for the drive with windows and linux. 9/24/2006 11:29:34 PM |
rosschilen All American 1025 Posts user info edit post |
The easiest solution is to have an additional fat32 partition where you store your personal data/music so both windows and linux can read from it. Also I'd recommend ubuntu. 9/25/2006 12:30:30 AM |
SandSanta All American 22435 Posts user info edit post |
Linux + NTFS is a failure.
Reformat in Fat32. 9/25/2006 1:51:50 AM |
Perlith All American 7620 Posts user info edit post |
This really depends on how many hard drives you have as to how you are going to pull this off. If you want to mess around with resizing your partitions, you can use Partition Magic, or download GParted LiveCD. If you have more than one hard drive, put Linux on the non-Windows hard drive. Minor chance of something happening, but it still could happen, then you are SOL.
If you are more of a Windows person, my recommendation would be to look into modifying the boot.ini file to setup your dual boot. Will take a small amount of work/research, but if you want to get rid of Linux, it doesn't permanently mess up your system. 9/25/2006 7:22:08 AM |
jbtilley All American 12797 Posts user info edit post |
I really don't want to create a new thread just for this question so I might as well ask it here.
What is the best distro of linux with a decent UI for a P3 256MB ram computer? The last several distros I used were just as much a resource hog as Windows. 9/25/2006 11:59:31 AM |
State409c Suspended 19558 Posts user info edit post |
It's not that they are resource hogs (at least, the *nix distros), its just that you expect an older machine to do GUI intensive stuff most likely. 9/25/2006 12:18:14 PM |
jbtilley All American 12797 Posts user info edit post |
I really don't need a graphics heavy GUI - not text based either though. Will Fedora core 5 do well for me? 9/25/2006 12:34:00 PM |
jab All American 795 Posts user info edit post |
^I ran core 5 on a P3 1GHz fine. 9/25/2006 3:12:35 PM |
windhound96 Veteran 284 Posts user info edit post |
I have a box with twin P3 667 mhz, 512 ram primarily using ubuntu dapper, but I also installed Fedora 5 and it runs fine (I've never been happy with Fedora's repos. I can run "yum install update" 5x in a row and get different packages depending on which mirror it chooses. Ubuntu seems much better about this)
also, unlike windows which will allocate more if you need it, linux has you choose a set amount of swap space for when your ram is not enough. make sure you create enough. my computer stalls and has to be reset if I'm not careful and let both swap and ram fill up (512 ram, 400 swap)
its not really so much the distro thats a resource hog, but whether you choose KDE, Gnome, XFCE, Fluxbox etc. as your windows manager.. Gnome tends to run a little higher than the others as far as resource usage, XFCE and Fluxbox much less so, KDE being inbetween I like Gnome the best overall, and it runs fine on my box 9/25/2006 3:41:42 PM |
smoothcrim Universal Magnetic! 18966 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "also, unlike windows which will allocate more if you need it" |
9/26/2006 10:46:33 AM |
mbmorri2 Veteran 136 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "I really don't need a graphics heavy GUI - not text based either though. Will Fedora core 5 do well for me?" |
Ubuntu + fluxbox. Its not much to look at, but it does everything you'd need it to. I personally like it a lot more than Gnome/KDE, even on a machine that could easily run a nicer looking GUI.9/26/2006 4:15:57 PM |
windhound96 Veteran 284 Posts user info edit post |
^^ I think windows automatically allocated about 10 gigs of pagefile on my laptop by default its system managed, but ofcourse you can tweak it. though, it is easier to give windows more pagefile than expand the linux swap partition
^ I prefer XFCE over Fluxbox, just personal preference. xfce seems to have more add-ons if you want them. both are light on resources, both are in the ubuntu repos (thus easy to install)
note that if you install ubuntu it comes with gnome and only gnome. xubuntu (http://www.xubuntu.org/) is ubuntu with the xfce desktop. kubuntu is KDE. Fedora Core 5 comes with Gnome and KDE, you decide on install which you want (or both). after the base install you can decide if you would prefer using another manager like fluxbox or xfce, which are easily installed using Synaptic / apt-get [ubuntu] or yum [fedora].
[Edited on September 26, 2006 at 6:13 PM. Reason : note] 9/26/2006 6:01:09 PM |
mbmorri2 Veteran 136 Posts user info edit post |
I've never tried XFCE, I might apt-get it and try it out. I just really like fluxbox's functionality. XGL/Compiz is such a waste. I tried it out for a while, jiggly windows does not equal improved functionality. 9/26/2006 6:15:29 PM |
legatic All American 7481 Posts user info edit post |
stumbled across this today. seemed somewhat related.
Quote : | "Bill Clinton told the Labour conference to get into ubuntu. Eh?" |
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/5388182.stm9/28/2006 1:26:05 PM |