Re: [CentOS] Live CD iso

2012-12-29 Thread James Freer
On Fri, 28 Dec 2012, John R Pierce wrote:

 On 12/28/2012 3:21 PM, James Freer wrote:
 You mean the bin DVD. Thing is with the DVD they are big for broadband
 download. I think i'd buy one. But i appreciate your advice.

 unless your broadband is metered, or really slow (and then should it be
 called broadband?), 4GB or whatever is really not that big of a deal.  a
 few hours, perhaps.


 One thing i did learn with linux when i first started is that it's
 essential to have a spare PC to test a distro on first - then one can...

 or install it as a VM under VirtualBox or whatever.   Thats certainly
 how *I* test stuff, and indeed, I put 16GB ram into my latest desktop PC
 just so I can run several substantial VMs as needed.

In the UK most broadband providers offer 10GB. After a distro CD, several 
clips on Youtube, probably a fair bit of surfing - i find myself qualifying 
for a reminder on broadband usage! I've got two spare PCs so i've never looked 
at VM and certainly never had a PC capable of taking 16GB RAM. Current PC is 
only about 18 months old so i think i need to shop more carefully next time.

many thanks - i'm off to explore Centos again.

james
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Re: [CentOS] Live CD iso

2012-12-29 Thread John R Pierce
On 12/29/2012 1:54 AM, James Freer wrote:
 I've got two spare PCs so i've never looked
 at VM and certainly never had a PC capable of taking 16GB RAM. Current PC is
 only about 18 months old so i think i need to shop more carefully next time.

the new Intel Core i5 box I built last month can hold 32GB ram (4x8GB), 
I put 2x8GB in it.  CPU is a I5-3570k, motherboard is Z77 based.   16gb 
of fast high grade memory was like US$59

my 2008 vintage Core2Duo box supported 8GB, that was plenty to run a 
2-4GB VM as long as you aren't running /too/ much other stuff on the 
host OS concurrently.   When I bought it, I only put 4GB in it. after 
upgrading my desktop system to the i5,  I took the core2duo, put 8gb in 
it and set it up for my son (a college student), added a SSD as the main 
disk, and wow its fast now.




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Re: [CentOS] Live CD iso

2012-12-29 Thread Phil Dobbin
On 12/29/2012 09:54 AM, James Freer wrote:

 On Fri, 28 Dec 2012, John R Pierce wrote:
 
 On 12/28/2012 3:21 PM, James Freer wrote:
 You mean the bin DVD. Thing is with the DVD they are big for broadband
 download. I think i'd buy one. But i appreciate your advice.

 unless your broadband is metered, or really slow (and then should it be
 called broadband?), 4GB or whatever is really not that big of a deal.  a
 few hours, perhaps.


 One thing i did learn with linux when i first started is that it's
 essential to have a spare PC to test a distro on first - then one can...

 or install it as a VM under VirtualBox or whatever.   Thats certainly
 how *I* test stuff, and indeed, I put 16GB ram into my latest desktop PC
 just so I can run several substantial VMs as needed.
 
 In the UK most broadband providers offer 10GB. After a distro CD, several 
 clips on Youtube, probably a fair bit of surfing - i find myself qualifying 
 for a reminder on broadband usage! I've got two spare PCs so i've never 
 looked 
 at VM and certainly never had a PC capable of taking 16GB RAM. Current PC is 
 only about 18 months old so i think i need to shop more carefully next time.
 
 many thanks - i'm off to explore Centos again.

I'm with BT Infinity in the UK. Unmetered  75 MBps down  15 up.

If servers are your thing, I picked up a Dell Poweredge 860 with 2 x
Dual Core Xeons  8 GB's of RAM for £30 off eBay just before Xmas. You
can, of course, run XWindows on it. It's a tad heavy on the gas (it's
about 285W I think) but it's perfect for VMs.

Have fun!

Cheers,

  Phil...


-- 
currently (ab)using
CentOS 5.8  6.3, Debian Squeeze  Wheezy, Fedora Beefy  Spherical,
Lubuntu 12.10, OS X Snow Leopard  Ubuntu Precise  Quantal


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Re: [CentOS] Live CD iso

2012-12-29 Thread James Freer

On Sat, 29 Dec 2012, Phil Dobbin wrote:


On 12/29/2012 09:54 AM, James Freer wrote:


On Fri, 28 Dec 2012, John R Pierce wrote:


On 12/28/2012 3:21 PM, James Freer wrote:

You mean the bin DVD. Thing is with the DVD they are big for broadband
download. I think i'd buy one. But i appreciate your advice.


unless your broadband is metered, or really slow (and then should it be
called broadband?), 4GB or whatever is really not that big of a deal.  a
few hours, perhaps.



One thing i did learn with linux when i first started is that it's
essential to have a spare PC to test a distro on first - then one can...


or install it as a VM under VirtualBox or whatever.   Thats certainly
how *I* test stuff, and indeed, I put 16GB ram into my latest desktop PC
just so I can run several substantial VMs as needed.


In the UK most broadband providers offer 10GB. After a distro CD, several
clips on Youtube, probably a fair bit of surfing - i find myself qualifying
for a reminder on broadband usage! I've got two spare PCs so i've never looked
at VM and certainly never had a PC capable of taking 16GB RAM. Current PC is
only about 18 months old so i think i need to shop more carefully next time.

many thanks - i'm off to explore Centos again.




Hi Phil


I'm with BT Infinity in the UK. Unmetered  75 MBps down  15 up.


hmm - i think i need to have a word with BT! But i don't see how you can be 
unmetered and then 75 down and 15 up tbh. Bit more learning and exploring 
necessary. Nice to know someone on the list is fron the UK.



If servers are your thing, I picked up a Dell Poweredge 860 with 2 x
Dual Core Xeons  8 GB's of RAM for £30 off eBay just before Xmas. You
can, of course, run XWindows on it. It's a tad heavy on the gas (it's
about 285W I think) but it's perfect for VMs.


It's something i want to learn about. My hands are rather full copying with my 
mother's Alzheimer's so i don't get enough time. I'll get back to you if that's 
ok maybe with some questions. Our LUG group never meet for 'workshops' so i 
don't have anyone to ask locally. I see you use several distros - Ubuntu 
(im)Precise i've given up on.


yours
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Re: [CentOS] Live CD iso

2012-12-29 Thread Rob Kampen

On 12/29/2012 11:08 PM, John R Pierce wrote:

On 12/29/2012 1:54 AM, James Freer wrote:

I've got two spare PCs so i've never looked
at VM and certainly never had a PC capable of taking 16GB RAM. Current PC is
only about 18 months old so i think i need to shop more carefully next time.

the new Intel Core i5 box I built last month can hold 32GB ram (4x8GB),
I put 2x8GB in it.  CPU is a I5-3570k, motherboard is Z77 based.   16gb
of fast high grade memory was like US$59

my 2008 vintage Core2Duo box supported 8GB, that was plenty to run a
2-4GB VM as long as you aren't running /too/ much other stuff on the
host OS concurrently.   When I bought it, I only put 4GB in it. after
upgrading my desktop system to the i5,  I took the core2duo, put 8gb in
it and set it up for my son (a college student), added a SSD as the main
disk, and wow its fast now.

My most recent laptop, now 12 months old ( an ASUS i7 has 16 Gb of Ram, 
plus a 60Gb SSD for the OS) - I regularly run a VM with 2+Gb of Ram 
assigned, plus develop apps using MySql, php, apache and related systems 
and test these from the VM and the base CentOS 6.3 system under some 
load. As mentioned, RAM is cheap and the benefits of having it available 
are well utilised by CentOS and VMs.



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Re: [CentOS] Live CD iso

2012-12-29 Thread Phil Dobbin
On 12/29/2012 10:46 AM, James Freer wrote:

 On Sat, 29 Dec 2012, Phil Dobbin wrote:
 
 On 12/29/2012 09:54 AM, James Freer wrote:

 On Fri, 28 Dec 2012, John R Pierce wrote:

 On 12/28/2012 3:21 PM, James Freer wrote:
 You mean the bin DVD. Thing is with the DVD they are big for broadband
 download. I think i'd buy one. But i appreciate your advice.

 unless your broadband is metered, or really slow (and then should it be
 called broadband?), 4GB or whatever is really not that big of a
 deal.  a
 few hours, perhaps.


 One thing i did learn with linux when i first started is that it's
 essential to have a spare PC to test a distro on first - then one
 can...

 or install it as a VM under VirtualBox or whatever.   Thats certainly
 how *I* test stuff, and indeed, I put 16GB ram into my latest
 desktop PC
 just so I can run several substantial VMs as needed.

 In the UK most broadband providers offer 10GB. After a distro CD,
 several
 clips on Youtube, probably a fair bit of surfing - i find myself
 qualifying
 for a reminder on broadband usage! I've got two spare PCs so i've
 never looked
 at VM and certainly never had a PC capable of taking 16GB RAM.
 Current PC is
 only about 18 months old so i think i need to shop more carefully
 next time.

 many thanks - i'm off to explore Centos again.

 
 Hi Phil
 
 I'm with BT Infinity in the UK. Unmetered  75 MBps down  15 up.
 
 hmm - i think i need to have a word with BT! But i don't see how you can
 be unmetered and then 75 down and 15 up tbh. Bit more learning and
 exploring necessary. Nice to know someone on the list is fron the UK.
 
 If servers are your thing, I picked up a Dell Poweredge 860 with 2 x
 Dual Core Xeons  8 GB's of RAM for £30 off eBay just before Xmas. You
 can, of course, run XWindows on it. It's a tad heavy on the gas (it's
 about 285W I think) but it's perfect for VMs.
 
 It's something i want to learn about. My hands are rather full copying
 with my mother's Alzheimer's so i don't get enough time. I'll get back
 to you if that's ok maybe with some questions. Our LUG group never meet
 for 'workshops' so i don't have anyone to ask locally. I see you use
 several distros - Ubuntu (im)Precise i've given up on.

If you're with BT Broadband, you can upgrade to Infinity free of charge
(dependent, of course, if it's available in your area)  it's only about
a fiver extra a month on the bill. It's very cheap.

By all means, if you need anything, just email me. No problem.

Cheers,

  Phil...

-- 
currently (ab)using
CentOS 5.8  6.3, Debian Squeeze  Wheezy, Fedora Beefy  Spherical,
Lubuntu 12.10, OS X Snow Leopard  Ubuntu Precise  Quantal


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Re: [CentOS] Live CD iso

2012-12-29 Thread John R Pierce
On 12/29/2012 2:46 AM, James Freer wrote:
 I'm with BT Infinity in the UK. Unmetered  75 MBps down  15 up.

 hmm - i think i need to have a word with BT! But i don't see how you 
 can be unmetered and then 75 down and 15 up tbh. Bit more learning and 
 exploring necessary. Nice to know someone on the list is fron the UK. 

I believe he meant his SPEEDS are 75Mbit/sec and 15Mbit/sec, not data caps.


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Re: [CentOS] Live CD iso

2012-12-29 Thread Phil Dobbin
On 12/29/2012 09:37 PM, John R Pierce wrote:

 On 12/29/2012 2:46 AM, James Freer wrote:
 I'm with BT Infinity in the UK. Unmetered  75 MBps down  15 up.

 hmm - i think i need to have a word with BT! But i don't see how you 
 can be unmetered and then 75 down and 15 up tbh. Bit more learning and 
 exploring necessary. Nice to know someone on the list is fron the UK. 
 
 I believe he meant his SPEEDS are 75Mbit/sec and 15Mbit/sec, not data caps.

Correct, I do mean speeds. As for data caps, it's advertised as
unlimited  Nagios is telling me I have 17 machines on the local network
 more than a couple of those are heavy hitters  I've never been capped
or emailed to cut it out (I've also got a wife  three kids who game
heavily every night).

True, there is a very minimal throttling that happens sometimes at peak
hours between about 18:00  21:00 very occasionally but it's negligible.

All in all, I'm very, very happy with the service.

Cheers,

  Phil...

-- 
currently (ab)using
CentOS 5.8  6.3, Debian Squeeze  Wheezy, Fedora Beefy  Spherical,
Lubuntu 12.10, OS X Snow Leopard  Ubuntu Precise  Quantal


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Re: [CentOS] Live CD iso

2012-12-29 Thread Yves Bellefeuille
On Saturday 29 December 2012, James Freer jessejazza3...@gmail.com 
wrote:

 In the UK most broadband providers offer 10GB.

Obviously, I'm not familiar with the market in the UK, but here in 
Canada, many ISPs offer a basic or beginner package with 10 GB or 25 
GB. For a few dollars more, you can have 50 GB, which is obviously worth 
it.

For example, I see that BT's Broadband package costs 13 pounds and 
gives you 10 GB, and that the More Broadband package costs 18 pounds 
and gives you 40 GB.

-- 
Yves Bellefeuille y...@storm.ca
Simply put, E=mc^2 is liberal claptrap. -- Conservapedia.com

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Re: [CentOS] Live CD iso

2012-12-29 Thread Phil Dobbin
On 12/30/2012 12:22 AM, Yves Bellefeuille wrote:

 On Saturday 29 December 2012, James Freer jessejazza3...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 
 In the UK most broadband providers offer 10GB.
 
 Obviously, I'm not familiar with the market in the UK, but here in 
 Canada, many ISPs offer a basic or beginner package with 10 GB or 25 
 GB. For a few dollars more, you can have 50 GB, which is obviously worth 
 it.
 
 For example, I see that BT's Broadband package costs 13 pounds and 
 gives you 10 GB, and that the More Broadband package costs 18 pounds 
 and gives you 40 GB.

Have a look at:

http://www.productsandservices.bt.com/products/broadband/infinity

you'll find the unlimited (i.e. uncapped data) package there along with
speeds of up to 160 MBps down  20 MBps up.

Cheers,

  Phil...

-- 
currently (ab)using
CentOS 5.8  6.3, Debian Squeeze  Wheezy, Fedora Beefy  Spherical,
Lubuntu 12.10, OS X Snow Leopard  Ubuntu Precise  Quantal


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[CentOS] Live CD iso

2012-12-28 Thread James Freer
Hi folks

I'm just about to start using Centos again. I used it briefly a couple of years 
ago but found the switch to rpm a bit much after using deb for 5 years. Now 
there seem to be a lot of changes on the deb front so i'm going to try again 
with rpm.

I noticed that there is now a live CD (as well as the DVD) instead of the six 
CDs that i used before (iirc). I would just be grateful if someone could 
confirm that... i've been an xfce user so i was thinking that i've either got 
to go back to gnome and load the xfce desktop or use the DVD (and install xfce 
straight).

thanks
james
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Re: [CentOS] Live CD iso

2012-12-28 Thread Phil Dobbin
On 12/28/2012 08:28 PM, James Freer wrote:

 Hi folks
 
 I'm just about to start using Centos again. I used it briefly a couple of 
 years 
 ago but found the switch to rpm a bit much after using deb for 5 years. Now 
 there seem to be a lot of changes on the deb front so i'm going to try again 
 with rpm.
 
 I noticed that there is now a live CD (as well as the DVD) instead of the six 
 CDs that i used before (iirc). I would just be grateful if someone could 
 confirm that... i've been an xfce user so i was thinking that i've either got 
 to go back to gnome and load the xfce desktop or use the DVD (and install 
 xfce 
 straight).

Download the netinstall  choose your window manager. Save you a lot of
time.

Cheers,

  Phil...

-- 
currently (ab)using
CentOS 5.8  6.3, Debian Squeeze  Wheezy, Fedora Beefy  Spherical,
Lubuntu 12.10, OS X Snow Leopard  Ubuntu Precise  Quantal


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Re: [CentOS] Live CD iso

2012-12-28 Thread James Freer
On Fri, 28 Dec 2012, Phil Dobbin wrote:

 On 12/28/2012 08:28 PM, James Freer wrote:

 Hi folks

 I'm just about to start using Centos again. I used it briefly a couple of 
 years
 ago but found the switch to rpm a bit much after using deb for 5 years. Now
 there seem to be a lot of changes on the deb front so i'm going to try again
 with rpm.

 I noticed that there is now a live CD (as well as the DVD) instead of the six
 CDs that i used before (iirc). I would just be grateful if someone could
 confirm that... i've been an xfce user so i was thinking that i've either got
 to go back to gnome and load the xfce desktop or use the DVD (and install 
 xfce
 straight).

 Download the netinstall  choose your window manager. Save you a lot of
 time.

 Cheers,

  Phil...

Ah many thanks. I read about the minimal install and thought that's what i 
could use - thought better of it and chose the liveCD. I wasn't sure about the 
netinstall... but i've found since receiving your email a how-to and it seems 
quite clear.

Seems Centos has changed quite a bit from what i remember. There wasn't a 
liveCD and i installed from 6 CDs... which was a lot of downloading (easier to 
buy the DVD really).

james
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Re: [CentOS] Live CD iso

2012-12-28 Thread Yves Bellefeuille
Phil Dobbin wrote:

 Download the netinstall  choose your window manager. Save you a lot
 of time.

My advice is different: download the regular DVD (not the live DVD)
and use it to install. The first disk is sufficient.

The reason I have a different opinion is because netinstall is too
minimal, especially if you're not familiar with CentOS, and installing
with the live CD or DVD is too inflexible. Use the regular DVD
instead.

Yves Bellefeuille


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Re: [CentOS] Live CD iso

2012-12-28 Thread James Freer
On Fri, Dec 28, 2012 at 10:53 PM, Yves Bellefeuille y...@storm.ca wrote:
 Phil Dobbin wrote:

 Download the netinstall  choose your window manager. Save you a lot
 of time.

 My advice is different: download the regular DVD (not the live DVD)
 and use it to install. The first disk is sufficient.

 The reason I have a different opinion is because netinstall is too
 minimal, especially if you're not familiar with CentOS, and installing
 with the live CD or DVD is too inflexible. Use the regular DVD
 instead.

 Yves Bellefeuille

You mean the bin DVD. Thing is with the DVD they are big for broadband
download. I think i'd buy one. But i appreciate your advice.

One thing i did learn with linux when i first started is that it's
essential to have a spare PC to test a distro on first - then one can
use the main PC to email on if in trouble! I'll explore and test
things out over the next few days. I had a good look at many distros 3
years ago and the only one's i liked were *buntu family and Centos.

james
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Re: [CentOS] Live CD iso

2012-12-28 Thread John R Pierce
On 12/28/2012 3:21 PM, James Freer wrote:
 You mean the bin DVD. Thing is with the DVD they are big for broadband
 download. I think i'd buy one. But i appreciate your advice.

unless your broadband is metered, or really slow (and then should it be 
called broadband?), 4GB or whatever is really not that big of a deal.  a 
few hours, perhaps.


 One thing i did learn with linux when i first started is that it's
 essential to have a spare PC to test a distro on first - then one can...

or install it as a VM under VirtualBox or whatever.   Thats certainly 
how *I* test stuff, and indeed, I put 16GB ram into my latest desktop PC 
just so I can run several substantial VMs as needed.



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