Suse 8.2 to Windows 7 to Open Suse 11.04

I have passed on my imac as painful as it was. I always had a love/hate relationship with my Mac. I love the way it is built. I love the way software works flawlessly. I love the no virus to worry about problem. Most of the software I used was either free or low cost.

I was however sold on the siren song of Windows 7 from using it on my laptop. Windows 7 is nice OS. Nothing to complain about, almost. Just some niggling stuff. Windows 7 complains about the lack of virus protection and I need to buy third party software to have virus protection. Yes, there is free anti virus, but that is not the point. Two included text editors without spell checking? File encryption built in, but turned off unless you have the most expensive version of Windows 7?

These shortcomings are not big things by themselves. They are greed driven things. They are small items that should either be included in Windows 7 when purchased as is. I am all for making a profit. If companies did not make a profit, none of us would have work to do for our money. Like it or not we need to work. But come on, having to pay some serious dollars for the privilege of having file encryption, and a spell checker? That goes beyond making a profit.

I tried hard to enjoy Windows 7. I like it on my laptop for the most part, but my laptop is only used occasionally, I use my desktop a lot more often. As much as I would like to use the space a desktop takes up for something else, a laptop without adding more hardware, does not a desktop make.

After a week it became apparent that life with Windows was only a more polished version of previous life with Windows. Nothing changed really since I left Windows behind some years back. Virus checking, defragment hard drives, wondering how downloads and web sites were giving away presents I did not want. My virus checker confirmed nothing really had changed in the Windows World except the cost of Virus Checking went way up.

I had enough, and it was time to go back to Linux. I tried my favorites, but seeing my desktop is recently off the shelf and 64 bit, my favorite Linux versions did not fit well with one piece or another of my desktop computer. After trying six or seven of my old standby Linux flavors, I went back to my Linux beginnings. Every 32 bit Linux distribution installation was generally happy after install except my LAN and Wireless card which would fail to work after a few minutes.

My first experience with Linux was an off the shelf computer store purchase for $42.00. For my $42.00 plus tax, I had a three Cd set and a Magazine. I had purchased Suse Linux 8.2 for my hard earned money. I never looked back from Linux, even though Suse 8.2 never made my favorites list.

Back then, as now Suse was/is a little confusing to install. Back then because I had no clue, this time around with Open Suse 11.4 because I had a empty one terabyte hard rive, and only wanted to use part of it for Linux OS.

I eventually came to terms with what the install process actually wanted rather than how I thought it should be done. and my Open Suse installation went smoothly. Almost anyone should be able to install Open Suse Linux. It may be daunting for a new user, or perhaps perplexing as it was for me, trying to install Open Suse on an empty hard drive, but there is a wealth of information on the Open Suse web site to ease anyone through the process.

My perspective has changed over the years. When I installed Suse 8.2 I did not appreciate how rigid the structure seemed to be. The mousing was to precise, I could not install any old program I wanted, and I had to learn how to do things the Suse way. Now some years and scores of Linux distributions later, I am typing this in LibreOffice running on Open Suse, Funny how all those original faults I thought I had with Suse Linux, I have now come to value.

There is not a lot to say about Open Suse, that has not been said already. It is a well made, well contained distribution, and if you have been a distro hopper like myself, you will appreciate the precision and care taken with Open Suse. I installed the KDE Desktop, but Gnome, LXDE, and perhaps other desktops are available.

There were a few things I wanted to change. Minor personal nits contained within KDE itself. I have never been a big KDE desktop fan. It is alright, but it is not my first choice for a desktop. I appreciate K3B, a few games, and the wallet, but after that I am indifferent to what KDE has to offer.

After I did not locate what I wanted in the repositories I did what I should have done in the first place. I went to the Open Suse home page and started looking for answers there. Of course everything I wanted to change, was there as other Open Suse users also want something different than the stock DVD. Within thirty minutes, I made all the changes I wanted.

I mentioned I am typing this post in LibreOffice Writer, and it is as snappy and more powerful than any text editor I may use. I have not used the other parts of LibreOffice, so I will leave them to others to write about.

There are numerous reviews about Open Suse, and the newest release is currently getting ready to replace the version I downloaded a few weeks ago. I understand from what I read, there is an upgrade path available for those that want it. I back up what is important to me, and now that I understand the Open Suse way of doing a Linux installation and upgrade or reinstall, either method will be painless.

Open Suse is one of the most popular Linux Distributions in the world. The days of needing everything about your hardware to do an installation have gone the way of my first Linux, Suse 8.2. If you have not found a Linux distribution that reaches and grabs you, you may want to give Open Suse a try. I am happy I decided to give Open Suse a visit.

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Pardus Linux Install On My Laptop

While I enjoy my Netbook because it is small and easy to carry around, when it comes to more serious work using multiple programs the screen size leaves a little to be desired. Hence a new laptop was in my near future. After checking what was available for a reasonable price I decided on a Sony Vaio laptop.

It is a Sony Vaio model VGN-CS320J, with the usual trimmings. There were not any reviews that I could find, but there is an older Sony laptop in the house that has performed flawlessly for almost five years now. I thought that was a good recommendation in itself.

One of the nice things about a new laptop is the search for a new Linux. Having a full size screen and a little more power under the keyboard opens the door to distributions I have not tried before. I again tried the usual distributions that I have mentioned in past Linux posts, and they performed in the same manner as before.

I had read about a distribution named Pardus that has been popular among some of the seasoned Linux crowd of the past. There was a new release a short time ago. I wanted to download and try try Pardus out, but the servers were quite busy at the time.

Pardus is a distribution from Turkey and as written in the ‘About Pardus’ section on Distrowatch:

Pardus is a GNU/Linux distribution funded and developed by the Scientific & Technological Research Council of Turkey. Pardus has a range of unique features, such as Mudur, a start-up framework of Pardus to speed up the boot process, and PiSi, an efficient package management system with a user-friendly graphical interface.

My download time last night was about forty minutes. I downloaded the Pardus iso last night, then burned a cd and installed Pardus this morning. Pardus is a simple to install and use distribution by design. In the about section of the Pardus home page, the creators of Pardus want a Linux system that is powerful and easy to use for government, business and individuals with ease of use and productivity in mind.

Pardus DesktopIf you enjoy KDE, you will love KDE 4.x.x for your initial desktop and Open Office with a few KDE programs added in for your office programs you need not look further for a productive Linux distribution. If you prefer Gnome as your desktop, it is a download away using the Pardus package manager named PiSi.

I changed two networking settings for my wifi to work, but that is minor and not unusual. I also changed my desktop appearance. I then added KDE games, but there is nothing more that needs to be changed to be a solid useful Linux desktop or laptop system. I guess that means I have a productive office, net, game machine now.

The repository is not as massive as some of the heavyweight distributions, but it looks like most popular packages are available for download and install. In Games for example there are one-hundred eighteen more games to choose from after I installed KDE 4 games. In multimedia there are one-hundred eighty-two more choices. There are plenty of choices in each category for most users it seems.

One unique idea that Pardus uses is in updating. Instead of downloading the whole program for a small rewrite, only the changed portion is downloaded and installed. I thought this is an interesting idea, and seeing Pardus is in use at all levels in Turkey and beyond, it works well and saves time and bandwidth.

If you can wait an hour for the download to complete and burn an iso cd you are on your way to a nice Linux system on your PC. Pardus is for you if you know the answers to a few simple install questions. Pardus installs programs most people will want and not many programs they won’t want. With a healthy lean selection of programs in the repository there are a lot of program choices for all tastes.

If you want to try Pardus out, the universal iso is recommended by Pardus. Before starting the install create a root and user passwords along with a user name. Press F2 for your language preference when you start. One interesting note, clicking on buttons or option on the Pardus home page wrote to the right of the main screen I was looking at. If you click a button and do not see anything see if it is to the side on your browser window.

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