Posted on 03/16/2017 2:54:56 AM PDT by markomalley
PONG
Very happy with Linux Mint (version 18). I run it on laptop with Windows 10.
Kinda like saying that "the Yugo, right now, is better than it's ever been."
Linux for servers? Sure. On the desktop? Less sure.
Will Linux Mint still run off the cd drive without a hard drive installed? I see all new versiona are approaching 2 gigs in size so I am assuming you need to burn DVDs in order to install? Surprising there in no install FAQ or info which to me is the big reason Linux will never be mainstream, as it seems they purposely keep things vague.
I’ve been working in the Linux kernel for 10 years now.
I use Fedora for my desktop, as it provides a developer friendly environment and is close to the environment of the distro I work for.
There are still some windows apps I need, like Studio One and Camtasia. I run those in the seamless desktop provided by Oracle Virtual Box.
Yep. I’m using Mint (17) 99.8% of the time now. The only time I boot windows anymore it to run photoshop. Gimp is just too unwieldy for my taste. Other than that, it does everything I need.
I’ve gone to Linux Mint 18 on the main desktop. I see no reason to stop, though I do use a couple of windows virtual boxes on occasion.
It does lock up ocassionaly but since I went back to a spinning disk, nothing is screwed up on reboot.
Ubuntu is the distro you want, not mint. It has FAQs and tons of support. Just type in your question and the word Ubuntu into any search engine, and you will find your answer.
Compared to anything microsoft, Ubuntu is a snap to install, and just plain works.
I like that the updates don’t require endless rebooting during shutdown and startup.
I even installed a usb bluetooth radio in about 10 min while the same hardware doesn’t work under Win7 yet after hours of screwing around.
Mint will run off the CD drive. It will also run off a USB stick. Better to install it to a hard drive though... (Or better yet a SSD. That’s how I do it on three laptops and a desktop. Takes about 20 seconds for it to boot from an SSD, and you don’t need a big expensive one either.)
Fairly easy to install. Instructions are HERE:
https://www.linuxmint.com/documentation/user-guide/Cinnamon/english_18.0.pdf
I noticed the latest update is noticeably faster than before. You never see that with MS.
Plus, you do not need to buy a new computer every 3 years to get the latest OS to run.
Linux Mint 18.1 is a decently user-friendly distribution.
I’ve been using it on a partition on my laptop since a few weeks after it was released, and I quite like it. Even my wife is choosing to use it.
We can both boot Windows 10 when needed on our systems.
My main desktop is a 7 year old hand me down box with a new p/s and a 100’s of gpus video card. Works great / less filling.
I still don’t understand why the SSDs I tried would not accommodate cinnamon lockups.
You can make a bootable USB and install it from there.
Or as we used to be told by manufacturing in sales meetings when complaining about product lead times, "Well, at least our competitors' lead times are worse than ours."
We call that 'slim consolation.'
Or as we used to be told by manufacturing in sales meetings when complaining about product lead times, "Well, at least our competitors' lead times are worse than ours."
We call that 'slim consolation.'
You can install from a USB drive
You can run Windows from a CD? Congrats
Our mainframe is a Red Hat box. Some scripting differences and you use gpg instead of pgp.
I’d like to say Linux is a viable Windows alternative.
It isn’t.
On the consumer side, the A-list video game studios do not release their titles for Linux.
On the business side, Linux lacks anything like Active Directory that I’m aware of. Samba doesn’t count. It’s an incomplete implementation.
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