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Thread: Linux Choice

  1. #11
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    We use debian and xubuntu. Ubuntu is horrible these days imho.

    Xls is still better than oo spreadsheet unfortunately.

  2. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by isuzurover View Post
    We use debian and xubuntu. Ubuntu is horrible these days imho.
    Good to know it's not just me.

    Quote Originally Posted by isuzurover View Post
    Xls is still better than oo spreadsheet unfortunately.
    Absolutely. I still use excel for all my involved calcs. I use OO spreadsheets for all the lower complexity stuff.
    I haven't found a use for.xlsx yet. Every "compatibility warning" I get saving as .xls is over the (default) shade of red used to highlight cells. Seriously!

  3. #13
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    + 1 for Mint.

    Have been running a Mint server (Samba) at home for many months. More stable than any of my previous home Windows servers, even though it's the oldest hardware i have in use.

    Cinnamon is pretty good as far as Linux GUIs go. My UI occasionally hangs requiring a reboot, even though the OS still happily hums away serving files underneath the dead UI. It's annoying but I haven't bothered looking into it yet.

    I don't run printer drivers on mine, but if you need Canon driver support, send me a PM. I have good contacts with the Canon tech Gurus in Sydney. Used to work with them.

  4. #14
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    When ubuntu went down hill i switched to elementry. ubuntu based but without the issues.

  5. #15
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    I should have added we have managed to get both xubuntu and debian to talk nicely to our network printing system here.

  6. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dougal View Post
    At this stage money spent on commercial releases is a tiny fraction of the time spent. Spent 12 hours on Ubuntu and Crunchbang with no usable result.
    I would try Fedora next. Cups works for us, some canon and sharp printers.

    Edit
    Rpm driver will work with fedora

  7. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by mjm295 View Post
    I would try Fedora next. Cups works for us, some canon and sharp printers.

    Edit
    Rpm driver will work with fedora
    I have CentOS here ready for a crack. Just need to order a new hdd. The current one occasionally fails to boot.

  8. #18
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    So I tried another install on the ~2004 Dell 600m laptop. Now this one has PAE support, but it doesn't show. So all these linux distributions from the last like 3 years throw up their hands in despair thinking I've got a 1994 laptop and refuse to do anything.

    Ubuntu current versions have a forcepae command to bypass this hysteria, but Ubuntu isn't usable on that computer.

    Any advice? Currently looking at peppermint 3. This computer is basically a backup server. It's not a workstation and doesn't need to print. I do however use an identical machine to drive my little CNC mill. No plans to go to linux on that one yet.

  9. #19
    mouce Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by mjm295 View Post
    I would try Fedora next. Cups works for us, some canon and sharp printers.

    Edit
    Rpm driver will work with fedora
    Fedora has a HUGE community supporting it, with a new verison released every 6 months or so. That said...I've used Fedora as both server OS (in a business setting, and at home) as well as on laptops/desktops as workstations.

    With fedora you've got a lot of different desktop environments (GNOME, KDE, LXDE, XFCE...) so if you're running slightly "older" equipment, you don't have to run the top-end desktops, and you can still get good performance.

    It's very closely related to Redhat, which means that if there are "drivers" for your equipment for Redhat, there's normally a way to make it work in Fedora.
    Last edited by mouce; 14th August 2014 at 05:29 PM. Reason: Typo

  10. #20
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    Dougal, maybe it's your Dell that does not want to play - curious, how do you know it has it if it doesn't show? Is there a PAE option in BIOS? From wiki "Physical Address Extension"

    Linux[edit]
    See also: Executable space protection ยง Linux
    The Linux kernel includes full PAE mode support starting with version 2.3.23,[17] enabling access of up to 64 GB of memory on 32-bit machines. A PAE-enabled Linux kernel requires that the CPU also support PAE. The Linux kernel supports PAE as a build option and major distributions provide a PAE kernel either as the default or as an option.

    The NX bit feature requires a kernel built with PAE support.[18]

    Linux distributions now commonly use a PAE-enabled kernel as the default, a trend that began in 2009.[19] As of 2012 many, including Red Hat Enterprise Linux / CentOS, Ubuntu (and derivatives like Linux Mint),[20][21] have stopped distributing non-PAE kernels, thus making PAE hardware mandatory.

    Distributions that still provide a non-PAE option, including Debian (and derivatives like LMDE), Slackware, and LXLE typically do so with "i386", "i486" or "retro" labels.[22][23]

    PS. I just bumble along with unsupported Fuduntu on a USB.

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