Yes, I agree with Simon, and apologize I forgot to answer that part of
your question, Andrew.

You're in perfectly good shape with a 64bit cpu and 8 Gb of RAM. By the
time you need more, you'll have developed some excellent skills.

I think there are two approaches to the problem from a general
perspective:

1.)     Spend as much as you can and get a machine loaded to the gills
that you plan to keep for half a dozen years at least. This has been my
modus, and it's my approach with the Mac Mini I just ordered. My Linux
machines tend to last me around 8 years each.

*       Buy the cheapest machine that will do the job. Take the
*       commodity approach. This is increasingly an attractive option.
*       This is the Raspberry Pie approach, and there are other hardware
*       options from this approach.

>From my perspective, anything inbetween is just setting one's self up
for some kind of frustration down the road.


But, you asked what I would buy? Well, my main Linux home office server
is just about 8 years old, and I am indeed looking at upgrades in my
digs. The Mini is the first new piece of hardware, but it won't be the
last.

If I needed a new laptop, as of today it would be the Lenovo P1 2nd
generation. Here's an article about it:

https://www.anandtech.com/show/14532/lenovo-unveils-thinkpad-p1-gen-2-thin-light-156inch-eightcore-cpu-quadro


However, I am not currently in the laptop market, because anytime I go
on the road I have to take my company laptop to have VPN access no
matter what. So, I'm reall happy NVDA fixed terminal mode focus late
last year, and the Ubuntu I can run under Windows WPS will do just fine,
thank you.

Another choice of laptops are the ones from System76, not quite as high
powered, but more interesting in other ways, like the open hardware
firmware.

System76 is very interesting to me for all kinds of PC needs. I'm likely
to get one of their nano PCs as my next local desktop. I just like
having a linux console as my main working interface. Here's there web
site:

http://system76.com

I am almost certain to get one of their Merecat machines, once they're
again available. I'm on the notification list.

As for computers in my home office/studio (as in music studio), the only
remaining question is where and how to run Windows 10? It's possible
I'll be OK with Virtual Box on my Mini. The advantage would be an easy
way to share access to all the music gear between Windows and OS X. The
downside might be complications using the vm. I just don't know.

The mini is not going to be a machine I want to be rebooting for
bootcamp access to Windows. I'm intending it to do duty as my main file
and print server. I know, that's a lot of horsepower for a basic job,
but it's a job the Mini can do well even as it's also doing other
things.

My linux machine will get at files off the Mini, is my current thinking.
I will create a stub $HOME for myself, with some scripted access to
Desktop, Documents, etc., etc.

That way I have access to the same corpus of files whatever OS I'm using
at the moment. That's the idea.

hth

Janina

Simon A Fogarty writes:
> Hi Andrew,
> 
> I will just pipe up here and say that for running linux you wont need much 
> but anything you buy today will be / should be great for a few years running 
> linux
> I’d think that anything with a 64bit processor and 8gb ram should work well 
> for a great time period.
> 
> 
> 
> From: 'Andrew Lamanche' via MacVisionaries <macvisionaries@googlegroups.com>
> Sent: Friday, 27 March 2020 10:09 PM
> To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
> Subject: Re: OT: anybody on the list using Linux in VMWare or on a separate 
> machine? Pls answer off list
> 
> Dear Janina,
> 
> thank you very much for this informative email.  I shall certainly follow 
> your advice.  Depending on the future finances, and when I can go back to 
> work after coronavirus, I may consider purchasing a newer machine to run 
> linux on.
> 
> This laptop, I have finally remembered, is Dell Inspiron 640.  This is what 
> I’ve achieved since I last spoke to you, having now dubiously obtained 
> leisure. :). I had downloaded latest Debian distro from 
> debian.org<http://debian.org>.  Having read up on it,  I managed to activate 
> orca at the beginning of installation and having then connected the Dell via 
> ethernet, I had accomplished the installation.  There’s obviously something 
> wrong with the wifi hardware driver, so I have given it up for now and you’ve 
> just confirmed for me not to bother.  I have been learning Orca, and trying 
> to navigate round the system as it is with some success.  I’ve launched 
> Firefox ESR, realized i had no mail client on the system yet, found out a 
> little about Orca customization.  I will follow your advice though and will 
> explore tarch.org<http://tarch.org>, one of the websites which I had already 
> visited while researching Linux accessibility.  I do hope the blinux list 
> members are tolerant of newbees.  :)
> 
> By the way, if I were able to afford a new machine/laptop for Linux, what 
> would you suggest as minimum for future learning and solid running of Linux?
> 
> Thanks again, Janina
> 
> Andrew
> On 27 Mar 2020, at 05:54, 'Janina Sajka' via MacVisionaries 
> <macvisionaries@googlegroups.com<mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com>> 
> wrote:
> 
> OK, Andrew, I understand your situation. I'll give you my advice. But,
> as you've undoubtedly already learned, advice is cheap and various
> people will be passionate about their views.
> 
> So, let me give you a first things first approach as my top suggestion.
> Keep it simple, and keep the main thing the main thing. Linux is a "some
> assembly" required kind of environment. If you break it, you get to keep
> both pieces.
> 
> So, forget vmware or any other virtualization. Not because they're
> unworthy, they're perfect for their task, but they're complicating
> factors that will only frustrate you. After you have experience and some
> knowledge, you can always go back there. But learning linux management
> under some vm isn't the next thing, it's getting a unfctioning linux in
> the first place. I can't stress this point enough.
> 
> That seems to leave us with a 13 year old laptop. Forget about running
> Orca or any graphical Linux desktop on 13 year old hardware. It ain't
> happening--not with your level of Linux skills (no offense intended).
> 
> Could I, with my decades of Linux experience get an accessible desktop
> working on that machine? Maybe, but not very likely. So, a word to the
> wise, and all that.
> 
> You can expect to run the text console environment, though, and that's
> where the real power and attractiveness of Linux resides, actually. Yes,
> Orca is cool and leads in some compelling feature developments. But, Mac
> and Windows are far more accessible, imo.
> 
> So, if you're uninterested in learning bash (or zsh) console based
> computing, you probably want another project.
> 
> However, if you're still on board, take heart. You have options, and you
> should be able to make Linux talk and drive your braille display with
> multiple console instances on each boot that you can readily switch
> among.
> 
> Now, getting an installation becomes the problem. At this point I again
> remind you to keep it simple. Forget wifi. You configure that once the
> machine is booting reliably, not as a condition of installation. Plan to
> connect an ethernet cable where you can avoid driver issues. The main
> thing, remember?
> 
> Forget Fedora. It's a powerful Linux distribution and it powers my Linux
> vps. I'm sending you this email via my Fedora server in the cloud. But
> the installation isn't accessible, so forget it. It just came off your
> list--and never mind that someone on some list said they figured out how
> to install Fedora with Orca. That ain't you. We're keeping it simple and
> keeping the main thing the main thing, right?
> 
> Fedora is wonderful to use, but you can't use it if you can't install it
> in our current scenario, so you're going to forget it--at least for now.
> 
> Debian is good. It has a cadre of true believers that wouldn't have
> anything else. Only criticism with Debian is that it's arguably too
> conversative, i.e. what you get tends to be older, more user tested
> versions of kernels and applications. I do believe it's installation
> remains quite accessible, though I don't know the particulars. I'd
> google for that info, and also see my additional resources item below.
> 
> Arch is what I run on my personal machines. There's an accessible Arch
> installer here:
> 
> https://tarch.org/
> 
> Note there's a fundamental philosophical distinction between Linux
> distros like Fedora and Debian which "snapshot" into releases from time
> to time on the one hand, and distros like Arch which never have releases
> but rather practice rolling updates day by day and hour by hour on the
> other hand.
> 
> You can also forget vinux and sonar. As you've discovered, they're dead.
> There are newer replacements both actively maintained and in process of
> development with varying stages of maturity. I have no direct
> experience, so I won't say anything more than to note that the community
> continues to spin up distributions of Linux aimed at making the process
> easier for newbies. Years ago, I was personally involved in such a
> project myself.
> 
> Lastly, you need to be on the lists with people who focus on Linux as
> blind users. Chief of these is the blinux list:
> 
> https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list
> 
> 
> Note you can find additional resources on the Tarch page noted above.
> 
> Remember, you're offering up 13-year old hardware for your Linux, so
> your goal is console only. In that environment you'll have Speakup
> and/or Fenrir for screen readers, and brltty for your braille display.
> Those will be your main choices whether you go Debian, Arch, or
> something else.
> 
> And, you'll be using these either on bash or zsh sells.
> 
> Or, you may decide to learn emacs and emacspeak--but that's yet another
> kettle of fish that comes well after getting a function, accessible
> system working.
> 
> Good luck!
> 
> Best,
> 
> Janina
> 
> 
> 
> 'Andrew Lamanche' via MacVisionaries writes:
> 
> Hello,
> 
> A few years ago I had a go at trying to learn Linux but I failed and gave it 
> up. I never quite parted with the idea of ever returning to it.  So firstly 
> I’d like to find out what distro I could most reliably install in VMWare 
> Fusion or on an old Del laptop from 2007 I think, and whether I could 
> accomplish it without sighted help.  I’ve been doing a lot of research on it 
> over the last few days given I have lost my work due to coronavirus and am 
> having to stay at home.  When researching the accessibility of Linux, some 
> say Fedora is better, others recommend Vinux or Sonar but both Vinux and 
> Sonar have folded and have not been updated although some pages are still on 
> the web.  Debian is supposed to be accessible and I tried the last distro but 
> while I was able to start the installation after having burnt the .iso to cd 
> with sighted help, the installation failed because I was unable to connect it 
> to my wifi: Linux wasn’t finding the name of my wifi at home - something 
> wrong maybe with drivers , goodness knows.  Debian is supposed to have Orca 
> and Braille support.  So yes, if I could successfully install and run a Linux 
> distro with orca and Braille, I’d like to have a go at learning Linux.  It’s 
> a tantalizing prospect given linux reputation for stability and safety.  But 
> I’m rather inexperienced in terminal or command line so maybe I will fail 
> again.  Still, nothing ventured, nothing gained.  So if I could find out a 
> bit on which distro might be best for me, and perhaps some contacts off the 
> list to ask question, or even if a proficient linux user who’s blind has the 
> time and would be willing at some point to give paid tutorials on Linux, I’d 
> certainly feel more secure in this venture.  Linux requires a whole new 
> vocabulary whose terms I’m trying to understand.
> 
> Andrew
> 
> On 26 Mar 2020, at 06:33, 'Janina Sajka' via MacVisionaries 
> <macvisionaries@googlegroups.com<mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com>> 
> wrote:
> 
> Several of us on this list are long time Linux users. What are you
> looking for?
> 
> 'Andrew Lamanche' via MacVisionaries writes:
> 
> Hi,
> 
> Does anybody on the list use Linux successfully either in virtual environment 
> or on a separate computer? Please email off list if you wouldn’t mind sharing 
> your experiences.
> 
> Andrew
> 
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> Janina Sajka
> 
> Linux Foundation Fellow
> Executive Chair, Accessibility Workgroup:              http://a11y.org
> 
> The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI)
> Chair, Accessible Platform Architectures http://www.w3.org/wai/apa
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> Janina Sajka
> 
> Linux Foundation Fellow
> Executive Chair, Accessibility Workgroup:              http://a11y.org
> 
> The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI)
> Chair, Accessible Platform Architectures http://www.w3.org/wai/apa
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-- 

Janina Sajka

Linux Foundation Fellow
Executive Chair, Accessibility Workgroup:       http://a11y.org

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI)
Chair, Accessible Platform Architectures        http://www.w3.org/wai/apa

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