Frank wrote: I would suggest that you retain your XP installation. After all, 
you have paid for it (either directly or indirectly) so why ditch it?

I just wrote about this as part of my blog called "I Don't Like Linux Because 
...". This was number eight of ten reasons which I rebut inline. I call this 
one the lamest of all excuses. There are many good reasons to ditch it. It is a 
security risk and it supports DRM and other methods of limiting your 
activities. It is about taking ownership over your computer and putting an 
operating system that does what you want and not what someone else thinks is in 
your best interest. Besides people throw out lots of things that they have paid 
for. It is called junk. 

Sorry about the shameless self promotion. Read at your peril. I am wordy and 
opinionated. Enough said.

Frank wrote: As for partitioning, without knowing your future storage needs, I 
would suggest that you keep half of your drive for XP (defragment it first 
before you start) and then split the other half between root (/) , a separate 
home partition  (/home) andsomething like 512Mb as swap.

Other than this, you give good advice. It is a good idea to have a separate 
home partition. However, my experience is that the root partition does not to 
be too large and it is easier to run out of room on your home partition. The 
root partition does not need to be bigger than 30 GBs and can be 8 GB or 
smaller, depending on how much extra he plans on installing. I have never run 
out of root space with 30 GBs and I install everything that I can. Fifty GBs is 
a good starting size for home, IMO. That still gives hime nearly 240 GBs for 
Windows. He can resize partitions later provided he unmounts them first.

I suggested WUBI only to avoid partitioning and as an easy way of trying 
Ubuntu. When he is more committed then he can partition. I use virtual machines 
and like that approach for running his accounting software, but it is not easy 
for a newbie and his hardware may not run fast, depending on what he is using 
it for. Two GBs or RAM sounds like a lot, but when you are multitasking and 
using two OSes it can tax the processor and the memeory. Dual core is better. I 
am not saying it can't work for him, but rather, it should wait until he has 
the time and is comfortable with Linux. He will have his hands full learning 
the ropes of his new OS. If he is dual booting anyway, he does not need to rush 
things.

Roy


 
Linux: Fast, friendly, flexible and .... free!
Support Open source.
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Only dead fish go with the flow!





________________________________
From: Frank Newman <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Tuesday, January 6, 2009 5:44:48 PM
Subject: Re: [LINUX_Newbies] Looking for a recommendation re: Linux on a Dell 
Inspiron 1501 laptop


Hi Dave,
Let me start by stating that I am still a newbie to Linux myself, having
run several distros over the last twelve months and that I am not a Linux
purist. I feel that it shouldn't need days of research and fiddling just to
get the basics of an OS up and running and that most things should work
"out of the box". After that, I am happy to get under the hood to tweak the
system to my requirements. I'm sure that some long-term users will disagree
with me!

That said, your choice of Linux Mint is, IMHO, an excellent one. Mint comes
with most of the facilities, codecs etc. that you need to get started 
but is also
flexible enough to customise to your liking. It has a really good look 
and feel
and was the distro which made me want to stick with Linux and use it as my
OS of choice.

I would suggest that you retain your XP installation. After all, you 
have paid
for it (either directly or indirectly) so why ditch it? Setting up a 
dual boot is
simple in Mint and it will play nicely with your Windows partition. Some
Windows programs will run fine under Wine, but others are less satisfactory
so you may find that your accounting programs are better in XP. Once you are
up and running in Linux, you can start to investigate alternatives (at 
no expense!)
to your Windows programs - many of these are as good as, or better than, the
Windows versions.

As for partitioning, without knowing your future storage needs, I would 
suggest
that you keep half of your drive for XP (defragment it first before you 
start) and
then split the other half between root (/) , a separate home partition 
(/home) and
something like 512Mb as swap.

Good luck and I hope you enjoy Mint.

Frank

MuskokaCowboy wrote:
>
> Hi Guys:
>
> I have been lurking for a few months and am now considering installing
> Linux on my Dell laptop. I am not a total newbie to Linux. I installed
> Mandrake Linux on an old computer a couple of years ago and played
> around with it for a while.
>
> My laptop has a AMD Sempron 2.0 GHz processor, 2 GB of ram and a 320
> GB hard drive with XP installed. I have a home wireless network.
>
> I mainly use this computer for web browsing, email and bittorrent and
> I often use VNC viewer to remotely control my desktop computer which
> is also running XP. I do occassonally (maybe 2 days per month) need to
> run Windows business programs on this computer (Quickbooks, Simply
> Accounting etc.).
>
> Based on the messages that I have read I am thinking of installing
> Linux Mint but would consider any other recommendations. I am
> wondering if I should run a dual boot system for the times when I need
> Windows or should I just go with Linux and use something like Wine for
> those times when I need to run Windows apps. I am also looking for
> help on how I should partition the hard drive.
>
> Thanks for your help in advance and also thanks for running this group
> to help people like myself.
>
> Dave
>
> 

    


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