Go to Ubuntu's wesite and request free installation CDs for Mac 
(PPC). They won't even charge you shipping! You can also get a ton of 
linux programs for Mac OS X very easily. The only real reason to 
shell out extra $$$ for a Mac is to run their OS, anyway. If you want 
to run Linux, just buy an inexpensive x86 machine.
-Darrin-

--- In [email protected], ResedaNights <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> I agree with you.  This is true for a couple of other Linux 
magazines.  My only problem with them is that it applies only to 
those trying to install a distro to a Windows OS computer.  They have 
completely ignored those wanting to install a Linux distro to a Mac 
OS computer.  To get a LInux distro for a Mac OS computer, one must 
still go to a Linux website and attempt a download.  I have after 4 
months still been unsuccessful in getting any distro to load on a Mac 
system.  I have installed SuSe and Ubuntu on WIndows PC's with the 
DVD's obtained from Linux magazines.  I am still waiting for the day 
one of these magazines offers a DVD or CD for a distro installation 
for Mac systems.
>    
>   Ron Tate
> 
> Ron Osborne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 
>           One good source for Linux programs and distros is a 
magazine called Linux Format. It has about a $15 price tag, but it 
comes with a DVD which usually have different distros and other 
programs on it. It may have one distro which can be used directly 
from the DVD as either a Live DVD or as an install disk. It, also, 
has a number of ISO files already on it; so, if you don't have 
broadband, you won't have to spend a couple of hours on a download. 
It, also, has very good articles, but since it is a British magazine, 
you will have to contend with British English.
> 
> Ron
> 
> Chad Martin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > 1- Would it be advisable to turn to Linux?
> 
> Always. I mean, yeah, you're computer will be slow, but there's not 
a
> whole lot that can be done about that. All in all, Linux is more 
secure
> and cheaper, if nothing else.
> 
> > 2- Reasons?
> 
> As I mentioned, the big ones are security and price. There's also a
> wide variety of software out there. You're not going to find a lot 
of
> games, but there's a variety of other software available. Another 
big
> factor is choice. There are a lot of choices available to you that 
your
> average Windows user wouldn't know about. This could be a good 
thing or
> a bad thing, depending on how you look at it.
> 
> > 3- How should I do so?
> 
> Download a distro and try it out. Most install quite easily. Fedora,
> Ubuntu and SuSE are quite good, though SuSE isn't free, as I 
understand
> it. If you're willing to just blow away your Windows installation,
> there really shouldn't be much in your way. Just be prepared to read
> documentation.
> 
> > 4- Should I expect a steep learning curve?
> 
> There are things to unlearn from using Windows. Just keep an open 
mind
> and be willing to read and ask specific questions. If you start with
> installing a distro that runs GNOME or KDE, it should ease your 
transition.
> 
> > 5- If I just use my computer to type things, use home Excel 
sheets, send and receive e-mails with Outlook, browse the web with 
Firefox, and not much more: What should I expect to improve with 
Linux?
> 
> Improve? Certainly, you'll be able to continue to do these things, 
but
> with different programs. OpenOffice is quite good with compatibility
> with Office formats. Firefox is available for Linux. There are many
> mail clients from Thunderbird to Evolution. It isn't possible to run
> Windows programs natively in Linux, and the Windows emulators for 
Linux
> aren't perfect, but there are often equivalent programs to use in 
Linux.
> 
> > 6- Which of the distros is best suited for old and very limited 
computers? I should also tell you that I am "old and limited" being 
almost forty YO.
> 
> It's hard to get a distro that's lean and user-friendly. I mean,
> graphical interfaces come at a performance price. I would start with
> one of the distros I mentioned above and just install a basic set of
> programs. You can always add more later if you have space. You might
> also want to poke around distrowatch.com for further ideas.
> 
> Chad Martin
> 
> "The service we render to others is really the rent we pay for our 
room on this earth."
> --Wilfred Grenfell
> 
> ---------------------------------
> Talk is cheap. Use Yahoo! Messenger to make PC-to-Phone calls. 
Great rates starting at 1ยข/min.
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> 
> 
> 
>          
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>







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