João,


Estou cem percento contigo!



sorry about my English accent :)



Brasileiro ou da Europa?



Xubuntu is exactly what I want.

So long I spent in the wastelands of MS :(



I don't care about the details, just happy that these guys make the effort

Cheers to you all!



Leigh



---- On Sun, 14 May 2017 02:59:32 +0100 Joao Monteiro 
<jmonteiro...@gmail.com> wrote ----




Hi again folks, 



Thank you for your replies and understanding, appreciated.



Not sure this will be the right place for this reply, but it is on topic (of 
gratefulness and history on how I got here). So please feel free to move it to 
wherever it may be appropriate and let me know so that I don’t pester anybody 
unecessarily again lol…



Peter, I had my first contact with Linux actually over 15 years ago, but only 
in the last 3 did I start to probe into it on a regular basis and fidling with 
it more seriously. (BTW, I'm Ccing you here as well to se if I do it right)



My very first runs were with Red Hat Linux and then Suse Linux after that. 
Bought the Red Hat Bible book in my local bookstore and used the installation 
disk it brought. The very first thing that was instantly noticeable was that I 
would require an awful lot of in-depth computing knowledge to get it all right 
– loads of command line tuning for it all to work fairly well.



Same with Suse Linux; bought a box set of 5 CD’s and acompanying manual. Same 
problems as with Red Hat.



I am from the days of ZX Spectrum connected to the tele and a tape recorder to 
load the programs and then moved onto PC with DOS. No windows then, just the 
command prompt, so had a good experience using it. But Linux is Unix like and 
Unix has by far an awful lot more of commands, different syntax, structure, etc.



So, about 3 years ago I started to seriously delve into Linux, as I got an Asus 
eeepc 1000H off a colleague at work for peanuts. It paid off.



Tried Debian, Red Hat again, Suse, Fedora and finally Ubuntu. All versions of 
linux after Ubuntu have all been Ubuntu derivatives in one way or another. Last 
year, after much reading, tried Mint and then Mate. Have to say that Mate was 
indeed the one that prevented me from finally giving up. It worked very well on 
the eeepc but still with glitches here and there – the main one was a constant 
pop up notification saying that something had stopped working and when I looke 
into it it was the Marco (desktop wallpaper background?). Nothing major, in all 
honesty, but somehow it still didn’t feel quite right. Funny thing is, I can’t 
really say what or why it didn’t feel quite right. Perhaps it was the ongoing 
arguing between some involved in its development/upkeeping about 
technicalities, like placing this or that in this menu or that, or using unity 
or not, I don’t now… something didn’t feel quite right for me. But it 
definitely gave me hope and encouraged me to not give up. For that I will 
always keep it at hand with gratitude.



A few weeks ago, whilst trying to find some answers for some drivers issues for 
it, I kept coming across references to xubuntu and to the xfce desktop. So, 
digged into xubuntu info and found the 32 and 64 bit ISOs for a bootable USB 
stick. Gave it a try and the rest is history.



It was like it had been written for the eeepc. Everything worked straight away 
without a single glitch. Mind you, Mate did work exceedingly well as well, but 
sometimes it would hang up if I had more than 3 applications open or if I tried 
to copy files with one application while another one was downloading something 
at the same time… stuff like that. And I didn’t know of any means to kill the 
hanging application(s) or doing a soft reset, so had to end up pushing the 
power button for a hard reset.



With xubuntu xfce dsktop I even have a “Ctrl+Alt+Backspace” option for an 
emergency soft reset if need be, which I implemented by following the “10 
things to do after installing xubuntu xfce”.

Just today, prior to making my first post here, my screen started to display 
flickering running lines while I was playing some songs and typing a 
spreadsheet; went online, searched for flickering screen in xubuntu xfce, found 
a cristal clear instruction to use the command line to open, edit and save a 
file with launchpad, reboot the machine and voila… flickering’s gone.



I think that the crux of the matter to me boils down to the same that probably 
affects the majority of Windows users: help. OK, seasoned Linuxers may 
rightfully argue – as I have seen – that we (Windows victims) are lazy and want 
everything served ready made. But they need to understand that it is not as 
much laziness per se, as it is a consequence of Windows habbit and an extremely 
fast paced, hectic working life these days – at least here in London, UK.



To Caeser what is of Caeser: Linus Torvalds gave the world the undeniable 
marvel that it is Linux. But Bill Gates, for all his faults, gave the world 
what the common citizen needs to USE a computer… a cursor on a GUI and a mouse 
to point and click to make things work.



This is what Linuxers need to understand… the common user doesn’t have any 
computing experience and rarely knows the difference between a bite and a baud. 
We want to switch on the machine, throw a cd or dvd into the drive, and then 
point and click on Yes, No, Maybe, Later, to install the operating system. Then 
we want to read on the screen “Done, reboot your computer” and once we reboot 
it, we want to point and click to start using it.



Windows doesn’t give users any computing knowledge; it gives them programs that 
users can use by just clicking on icons or words on a GUI.



Linux on the other hand gives users the same but educates them in computing by 
necessity along the way. As it should be, imho… I like it.



But where often Linux falls short is in overlooking the fact that due to the 
Windows convenience, most users don’t understand the technical explanations 
required sometimes.



Giving users an automatic point and click installation program for a Linux 
version, that does all the behind the scenes operations rquired for the OS to 
work, like Windows does, IS crucial and fudamental for a Windows user to start 
making the transition onto Linux, and no amount of arguing from anybody can 
change this truism.



Next is the help. With most of other Linux flavours I often had 
incompatibilities of some sort that needed adjustments. And they all required 
the use of the command line in one way or another, to edit files, change their 
contents here or there, save them and rebooting. All nice and well, but the 
instructions on how to do it were for the most part either confusing, or not 
clear enough or sometimes downright ineffective because the steps in which they 
must be done were not presented in a correct order and I had to either figure 
it out by myself via trial and error or simply give up on it altogether as it 
happened on one occasion to try to get the wifi working with Red Hat or to get 
the correct drivers for my radeon graphics card on this Samsung R20, with 
another version that I can’t even remember anymore as I gave up on it.



Look… if you try to explain to any Windows user that they can have the KDE, 
Gnome, Xfce or whichever other desktop with whichever version of linux, 99 out 
of 100 of them will think you are referring to the wallpaper… tell them about 
an X-window server and they will probably think you are talking about some 
Windows server system that they don’t want to know about because they don’t 
know anything about servers, they just work with their Windows 7 or 10 or 
whatever. Anedoctal or tragic alike, this is real and factual, for the better 
or the worst.



So… having a good Help documentation that allows any user to install a version 
of Linux in a “Linux for Dummies” or “Idiots Guide to Linux” style , with step 
by step instructions, IS crucial to help Windows users transition to Linux. Not 
a matter of laziness on Windows users, my friends… just a matter of computing 
ignorance on our part, as a direct consequence of the way that Microsoft fed us 
for decades with its ready-to-eat-windows-meal.



As I said before, I’m not a computer geek, but I’m no stranger to the command 
line, I actually prefer it for some tasks (much quicker and efficient than via 
the graphical applications) and I’m not afraid or shy of trying, experimenting 
and studying until I understand what’s what and why. But for that, I too need 
understandable, coherent, clear explanations. And let’s face it, most of the 
seasoned linux users forget that Linux newbies don’t have how to understand 
half of their instructions because they don’t have the knowledge or 
understanding of what those instructions mean or relate to.



With Xubuntu xfce I have found not only more information to help me get things 
sorted and fixed, but I have found that information to be better structured and 
more careful in its step-by-step instructions. That said, justice be made to 
Mate, it is excellent as well.



Downloaded the ISO file, burnt it to a USB stick, installed it on the laptop 
without a single glitch. Then followed the suggestions and recommendations of 
things to do pos-install to fine tune it and improve its performance as well as 
its safety and again it all worked without a glitch. Because the instructions 
are clear, concise and come with an explanation of what does what and why, so 
that hen one step didn’t work, I understood that I had to try the alternative 
step and why.



It took me pains to understand that the reason that Ubuntu worked so 
erratically and sluggishly in this 2Gb RAM 64 bit machine was the low memory. 
Thank goodness I stumbled upon Xubuntu Xfce, because otherwise I would have 
spent a bit of money that right now wouldn’t be easy on extra memory for this 
machine. Xubuntu help clearly explains what to do to help with low memory. And 
guess what… it works, he he he.



What can I say… seasoned linuxers can beat me to death with jokes and whatever 
they wish, because I’m a confessed ignorant giving my first steps in this new 
(to me) environment, but after long and exhaustive (and exhausting lol) trials 
and errors and experimentation and desperation, Xubuntu Xfce feels like the 
unexpected reward for my preseverance in not giving up on trying to learn linux.



I understand it, I can work with it, I feel at ease, comfortable and very happy 
with it (which I wasn’t with Windows, so that itself is saying something) and 
above all else, it works consistently and reliably (so far as I am finding) in 
3 very different machines with very different hardware and resources each one. 
Unless you folks let it die away, my search is over, because now I have a long 
road ahead of me to learn linux at my own pace, with this xubuntu xfce as my 
steady foundation.



Please don’t shoot me (too hard anyway lol) for this long babbling, make an 
effort to understand my joy for this linux pearl and once again thank you so so 
so much for your work and efforts, this is a fantastic OS and thanks to it I 
can educate myself further in the linux – and computing – world.

Kindest regards to all

Joa


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