Micro$traw on the Camel's Back: My forays into Linux - Printable Version +- Drunkard's Walk Forums (http://www.accessdenied-rms.net/forums) +-- Forum: General (http://www.accessdenied-rms.net/forums/forumdisplay.php?fid=1) +--- Forum: General Chatter (http://www.accessdenied-rms.net/forums/forumdisplay.php?fid=2) +--- Thread: Micro$traw on the Camel's Back: My forays into Linux (/showthread.php?tid=11823) |
Micro$traw on the Camel's Back: My forays into Linux - Foxboy - 03-09-2014 Okay. I've been patient with Windows 8.1 after a catastrophic HD failure and inability to find my Windows 7 installer... until I'd forked over the bills for the disc, etc etc... And apparently MikeyShaft doesn't like folks building their own computers or daring to "upgrade" without being a bleeding edge OEM consumer. My drivers are a mess because apparently Plug-and-play is no longer a thing: anything that depended on MS drivers is pretty much dead in the water, like a MIDI Keyboard Controller, to try to do some electronic music, for example. Thus, as soon as I get an extra HD RAID'ed into my box, I'm Dual booting Ubuntu Studio 14.xx. Sunk cost fallacy and all, I've got too many things I've heard don't play well with WINE that do work on Win 8.1... So. Yeah. ''We don't just borrow words; on occasion, English has pursued other languages down alleyways to beat them unconscious and rifle their pockets for new vocabulary.'' -- James Nicoll - Dartz - 03-09-2014 The Kernel for 8.1 broke a lot of surprising things. I built a system yesterday and it booted fine, right up until I tried to upgrade to Windows 8.1 . Hardware driver errors kept causing it to BSOD and reset itself.... And this was new, out of the box hardware, with the drivers installed off the disk it came with. I really should've Linuxed it like I planned to, but I got 8(not 8.1)Pro cheap , and it has a few features that are handy for what I wanted to do with the new system. I would say that you shouldn't rely on RAID - it's really a false security. It's really only good if one of the disks goes POP! suddenly and just drops straight out of the array. If it doesn't, if it fails but hangs in there still 'operational' but dying, then it's going to spew corrupt data all over the mirror and ruin everything. Having had this happen to the system that contained the entire accounts of the company I used to work for when a RAID'd drive failed overnight I know from experience that the results can be horrific. Worse - it failed when I was out of the country - and was a big contributor to the Business' decision to call it a day at the end of December. ________________________________ --m(^0^)m-- Wot, no sig? - ECSNorway - 03-10-2014 GRARGH. HDD on my main laptop (with all my recent stuff on it, including vital emails) just went *pif*. DiskWarrior refuses to touch it. Hoping the freezer trick works.... -- Sucrose Octanitrate. Proof positive that with sufficient motivation, you can make anything explode. - Foxboy - 03-10-2014 Fortunately, my inexperience has yet to kill me. But I couldn't install Linux just yet. I need to pore over the esoteric tomes of Disk Partitioning. Someone led me astray on the whole "Add another HDD, it's easier to "dual boot" that way!" As in, I needed to Partition the new HD and had no idea what I was doing. Fortunately the folks who make the Distro I was trying are kind enough to let you NOT screw things up royally if you have any degree of caution. Another try in the Morning. Edit: Discovered that the manufacturer of my Net Access Device is deliberately shafting Linux as well, so I'm in the market for a new one soonish. Ah Well. ''We don't just borrow words; on occasion, English has pursued other languages down alleyways to beat them unconscious and rifle their pockets for new vocabulary.'' -- James Nicoll - Black Aeronaut - 03-10-2014 Okay, as someone who's done dual boots (Ubuntu/Windows 7) and even triple boots (Ubuntu/Hackintosh/Windows 7), I feel that I am qualified to dispense some useful advice. First, a link to Wikipedia about disk partitioning, just in case you need help with the terminology and such. I know I do now and then, and I've done stuff with my computers that make most casual users boggle. Next, get yourself a live-cd version of GParted. This software is so freaking useful that you'll smack yourself for not trying it sooner (if you haven't, that is). Got it? Good. Burn that sucker to a CD, back up your important bits, then nuke the drive. The best way to do this is with a clean slate. Now! The partitions!
The cons... well... just the work that goes into setting it all up. That, and the fact all your eggs are literally in one basket should a drive failure occur and you were only using one drive. That said.... it is entirely possible to do all this with separate drives instead of just partitioning out one drive. It's even a little easier, especially if you can get away with having four hard drives (one small solid-state for boot; one for each OS - possibly solid state, too; and one for your documents). Of course, your mileage may vary. Me? I'm using a laptop, so I'm stuck with one HD for now. When I do get to build myself a desktop, though, I would like to go for the four-drive setup. - Foxboy - 03-10-2014 Hm. You ot a script of dumbed-down so I can print it off and hand it to my dad when he comes by to ask what the hell I'm cursing at in here? I know I have to do the 1950s office analogy a lot when talking about the simplest Windows installs. Directories are the drawers of a filing cabinet, the drives are the cabinets themselves, etc. I already know I need to get a new Wireless adapter for my rig, since I was looking around for drivers for my dongle in Linux and found mention that only the XP drivers can be made to work in Linux... and I have 64-bit architecture. Seems Broadcomm manufactured the chips in my particular version, and they don't like FOSS Drivers. Not. One. Bit. ''We don't just borrow words; on occasion, English has pursued other languages down alleyways to beat them unconscious and rifle their pockets for new vocabulary.'' -- James Nicoll - robkelk - 03-10-2014 Foxboy Wrote:...In that analogy, dual-boot is two people with very different ideas on the right way to do things sharing the same office (the computer). -- Rob Kelk "Governments have no right to question the loyalty of those who oppose them. Adversaries remain citizens of the same state, common subjects of the same sovereign, servants of the same law." - Michael Ignatieff, addressing Stanford University in 2012 - ECSNorway - 03-10-2014 Hmmm. I have a Toshiba Satellite L305 laptop that I haven't been using since I got the MacBook... problem with it is, it came with Vista, and it has a bad tendency to freeze up if I leave it idle for more than a few minutes at a time. Was considering putting some flavor of Linux on it, any recommendations? -- Sucrose Octanitrate. Proof positive that with sufficient motivation, you can make anything explode. - Foxboy - 03-10-2014 Well, it depends on the system architecture. I do know that Linux Mint 16/Petra works on a Vista-era laptop, but you have to use the kde or xfce desktop versions. The "shiny Hawtness" of Mint's preferred Cinnamon desktop requires 64-bit architecture. Mint is pegged to Ubuntu, so that's an option as well, you just have to find a version that fits what you've got for architecture; the "default" version wants to go for a lot of shiny new stuff. Between the two of them, they've got the lion's share of Linux installs, so they've a robust file repository, and the Majority of Steam games for Linux process quite happily on them. ''We don't just borrow words; on occasion, English has pursued other languages down alleyways to beat them unconscious and rifle their pockets for new vocabulary.'' -- James Nicoll - ECSNorway - 03-10-2014 Well. Let's see. I'm at work right now, but as I recall: 64-bit architecture 2.00 Core2Duo processor 4GB RAM Intel craptastic on-MB graphics. ~300gb HDD -- Sucrose Octanitrate. Proof positive that with sufficient motivation, you can make anything explode. - Ankhani - 03-10-2014 I use Ubuntu, myself. I rather like it. This site here ( http://www.psychocats.net/ubuntu/index ) has great information and tutorials on using ubuntu for a windows-native. It's primarily intended for ubuntu, but has some foray into KDE and XFCE. One thing I would like to note: If you're looking to do a "traditional" dual-boot, with repartioning your HHD and installing GNU Grub (the bootloader), I would warn you it is impressively difficult to fully remove ubuntu without a lot of work reinstalling the windows bootloader. If you aren't sure you want to keep this, I'd suggest using the Windows Ubuntu Installer (WUBI). If you -do- want to repartition, and you're not using a LTS version, you may want to create a separate /home partition so you can do clean installs with (near) impunity and keep (almost) all your personal files. The OS is installed at the system root, aka /, but most user files and documents are stored under /home/. So if you have /home located on another partition you can wipe out / and reinstall it fresh without touching /home (as long as you tell the installer to use that partiton as /home). I've done this many times, myself, so I'd be happy to give further instruction should you wish it. --- The Master said: "It is all in vain! I have never yet seen a man who can perceive his own faults and bring the charge home against himself." >Analects: Book V, Chaper XXVI - Foxboy - 03-10-2014 Quick note: WUBI does NOT work with any flavor of Windows 8. Or it takes so much arcane gibberish to get it to work it ain't worth it. I'm just lucky I built this system myself so I don't have to deal with the Secure Boot drek. I hope. ''We don't just borrow words; on occasion, English has pursued other languages down alleyways to beat them unconscious and rifle their pockets for new vocabulary.'' -- James Nicoll - ECSNorway - 03-11-2014 OK, I have Ubuntu 12.whatever downloaded and some blank DVDs to burn to. ($3 for a 10-pack at Staples, nice deal. Also got a 32-gig USB stick for $20.) On the other hand, I may well have discovered the source of my issues with the laptop. It's narrowed down to either the screensaver I was using, or something in Vista's power-management software. I set the power management scheme to "never turn off" and chose a different screensaver, left it overnight, and this morning when I left for work it hadn't frozen up. So. -- Sucrose Octanitrate. Proof positive that with sufficient motivation, you can make anything explode. - Black Aeronaut - 03-12-2014 Ooohhhh yeah. That whole hibernate/standby feature can cause all kinds of havoc if something is causing windows to not handle the page files properly. - ECSNorway - 03-12-2014 Well, there is also -definitely- HDD issues, I've already taken a backup of the drive. It's been flaking a bit lately, slow to load programs, forcing a checkdisk every few reboots, etc. And while it didn't freeze up overnight it had BSOD'd by the time I got back from work. So I've ordered 2 500-gig drives from NewEgg, and a 2-gig RAM chip to add to the mac. Got the torx drivers I need to disassemble the mac, too. Wal*Mart is occasionally useful. -- Sucrose Octanitrate. Proof positive that with sufficient motivation, you can make anything explode. |