Re: [left blank]

2011-08-04 Thread AG

On 04/08/11 13:49, Kevin Williams wrote:


I switch back to windows after searching for it for about twenty 
minutes thanks to anyone who tried to help me and for the idiots who 
had something to say about me being a troll. Y'all do realize the only 
way to stop a troll is too ignore him right? Thanks again for everyone 
who tried too help me.I'll try this out again once I have done my research




Kevin

Might I suggest that you take the time to do two basic things:

(1) read up on GNU/Linux /before/ you install it ... get to know what 
the steps are, how to partition the drive(s), how to set up the network, 
etc.  And yes, you will definitely need a root a/c whether or not you 
would like one.  The graphic installation is usually the best option 
because usually (altho' not always, so be aware) the defaults are the 
right options you can select for your system.  But, read up on some 
documentation first - if you are going to do comp sci then get used to 
the reading ... there'll be loads of it!! ;-)


(2) familiarise yourself with some mail list netiquette ... if you do a 
google on a how to ask good questions, you will doubtless find some 
clues.  But basically it boils down to:
(2.1.) use meaningful subject lines - this makes it easier for other 
people to learn what you did that helped and also for others to answer 
your concerns;
(2.2.) do not top post - in other words, start your email replies below 
the sig line of the post you are replying to.  That way, readers can 
follow the thread logically from top to bottom, because people tend not 
to read from the bottom upwards

(2.3.) don't use HTML emails (disable it in your email client),
(2.4.) always give as much info about your system, what the problem is, 
when/ how it happens and what you have attempted already before asking 
the question.  It has been my experience here that people are really 
friendly and helpful and that they generally are more prone to help if 
they recognise that you have already made an effort to help yourself.


Aside from this - don't give up, persevere and you will definitely 
succeed.  At the risk of stating the blinding obvious, unlike Windows, 
GNU/Linux expects the user to do some work and depending on the distro, 
this expectation will range from very little to quite a lot.  But, as 
you are intending to do comp sci, I guess that this should be agreeable 
to you?


GNU/Linux - and the *BSDs - are great systems to learn computing on.  
For the transition though I would strongly advise against using the new 
system as your production system ... in the early stages of your 
learning curve there is the real risk that you can trash your system 
completely, so only install on a partition or a computer that you can 
play around on until you can become more familiar and confident with the 
system you are using.  This is also why you will need to set up a root 
a/c and a user a/c and only ever use the user a/c for working on the 
system unless the system requires you to be root.  In which case, try 
safeguards such as using the shell command su or sudo to temporarily 
grant root powers to the user.


Otherwise, welcome to the world of GNU/Linux Debian and good luck.

AG


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Re: [left blank]

2011-08-04 Thread Chris Brennan
On 8/4/2011 9:40 AM, AG wrote:
 GNU/Linux - and the *BSDs - are great systems to learn computing on. 
 For the transition though I would strongly advise against using the new
 system as your production system ... in the early stages of your
 learning curve there is the real risk that you can trash your system
 completely, so only install on a partition or a computer that you can
 play around on until you can become more familiar and confident with the
 system you are using.  This is also why you will need to set up a root
 a/c and a user a/c and only ever use the user a/c for working on the
 system unless the system requires you to be root.  In which case, try
 safeguards such as using the shell command su or sudo to temporarily
 grant root powers to the user.
 
 Otherwise, welcome to the world of GNU/Linux Debian and good luck.
 
 AG

A great list of suggestions AG. A great alternative if you don't want to
dual-boot or use a whole system is to use a Virtual Machine such as
VirtualBox[1]


[1]http://www.virtualbox.org


-- 
 Chris Brennan
 --
 A: Yes.
 Q: Are you sure?
 A: Because it reverses the logical flow of conversation.
 Q: Why is top posting frowned upon?
 http://xkcd.com/84/ | http://xkcd.com/149/ | http://xkcd.com/549/
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