I'm curious, besides one gaming machine and some backup systems I'm running mostly on Linux, did anyone else make that jump as well?
I have a few modern machines running Linux Mint 17.3 LTS with the Cinnamon desktop and also older machines which also run this OS, mainly older dual cores and one single core Sempron 145.
I started long ago with Fedora which I didn't like, it was troublesome on the machine I tested it on, this was around 2004, that machine was to be fair already a bit antiquated, Compaq Deskpro P-II 400 I also tried SUSE Linux on it and this did run quite well, it was version 9.0 or 9.1 IIRC, later on I always kept a few Linux test machines around and I switched to Ubuntu/Xubuntu around 2006 until 20103, after that I tried Linux Mint 13.xx which is still running on some of the really old machines, on the more modern ones it will be 17.3 until 18 comes out, so far Mint has been the most comfortable Linux distro for me, the range of machines I have it running on is quite diverse and none of them has been troublesome.
That's my story so far, anyone else have his/her own Linux story?![]()
Yep. I set it up last night on the family PC. It had Windows Vista on it and was being buggy, so I figured this was the best time to do it. I setup the primary account (mine) and two user accounts, one for each of them. Mine has everything, while I removed access to the menu and the terminal for them, and hid the applet bar (I put all the games and education tools right on the desktop). They'll be able to have fun, and enjoy the system and all without ever having to use the terminal.I haven't used the terminal in ages, the only thing I use it for is to setup one monitoring program and even that is as simple as running an old DOS program, in the past you indeed needed it for setting up stuff like graphics and the like but nowadays Linux is quite easy.![]()
I would like linux more if you didn't have to do so much with typing out commands.
That's what I though, but it honestly isn't like that any more.
The terminal is more of a bonus feature, something handy to have if you're a power user. Linux, though, can do almost everything via its point and click interface. Linux Mint 17.3 is currently my favorite flavor, and is probably the best for balance between power users and casual users (IMO).I hope so because everytime I watch a youtube about linux they always do the more neat stuff via typing and that kinda bugs me about ever trying it.
The terminal is more of a bonus feature, something handy to have if you're a power user. Linux, though, can do almost everything via its point and click interface. Linux Mint 17.3 is currently my favorite flavor, and is probably the best for balance between power users and casual users (IMO).
You can have it dual boot with Windows if you like, even setting that up isn't all that hard either.
Sounds like its indeed not entirely compatible with an SSD, might be that the SATA controller of the enclosure is of an older type which, since USB speeds are not that high SATA I would be fast enough for a HDD but maybe unable to deal with an SSD.
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