Hello. I'm thinking of buying a new laptop. I don't know much about the subject (I've only had one old laptop, which I bought from a friend, and he had already installed sid). From what I've learned googling, IBM Thinkpads seem to be one of the best options. I live in Japan, and Japanese brands are cheaper, but IBM looks like a safer bet.
Currently I'm considering R50, T41, T42 models, but I'm open to suggestions! It will probably not be possible to buy a laptop without XP installed. I've read that one has to be very careful when first booting, because Windows XP converts the file system from VFAT to NTFS. There's also the issue of the special "recovery" partition somewhere in the hard disk. And there's the issue of hardware detection. As I still don't have the big picture, my questions: 1. If I naively do a normal boot, then filesystem conversion will take place, and I will not be able to (easily) resize partitions to make room for Linux later? Or the only problem with NTFS is that they're read-only? 2. If I keep XP, then I also have to keep the "recovery" partition. Right? 3. If I keep XP, what would be a suitable partition size for it? I will not really use it, just a backup in case I need to know about some hardware, until I'm sure sid is working properly with all hardware. 4. A simpler alternative would be to boot first time with Knoppix, which seems to do a very good job detecting hardware. Learn all I have to learn with Knoppix, and then delete all partitions and start with a pure Debian system. Any horror stories out there? 5. This recovery partition, is of use only to Windows? The "delete all partitions" part above is safe if I intend to have Debian only? Sorry for all the "if" questions, but I'm trying to get some advice and information beforehand. Regards, Victor -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]