Newbie - Linux Installation

Solaris, RedHat, FreeBSD and the like
Post Reply
Message
Author
ibmuser
Junior Member
Junior Member
Posts: 271
Joined: Wed May 05, 2004 9:56 pm
Location: Victoria (Canada)

Newbie - Linux Installation

#1 Post by ibmuser » Mon May 10, 2004 8:25 pm

I'd like to give linux a go on a thinkpad x31. How best to start? I know that's a rather general and vague question, but any links to web pages or installation concerns I should be aware of?

jdhurst
Admin
Admin
Posts: 5831
Joined: Thu Apr 29, 2004 6:49 am
Location: Toronto, Canada

#2 Post by jdhurst » Mon May 10, 2004 9:15 pm

Is your X31 a spare machine? I have not yet met the person who has never used Linux, installed it once correctly and used it a production machine. I am not saying don't try, but don't give up Windows until you are adept at Linux. I have installed and run RedHat Linux 6.1, 7.0, 73, 8.0, 9.0, Gentoo Linux 2004, and SuSe Linux 9.0, and I am still in a learning mode. The RedHat systems all work (OpenOffice.org, Adobe, Mozilla, Ethereal, Nessus, Nmap, Samba, compilers, etc.), although I could not use them as working systems (I still use XP Pro as a production machine). I never got Gentoo working. SuSe has promise but I don't have Samba running it in yet. You need Samba to share files with Windows machines. You need OpenOffice.org or such for an Office Suite. You need a Linux with an updater (or you'll quickly go mad with unresolved dependencies). RedHat and SuSe have such up-to-date features. Gentoo has Portage. I don't know about others.

If your X31 is not spare, I suggest you install Partion Magic 8 and contract your Windows partition, then install Linux as dual-boot. Partition Magic is not expensive.

If you *really* want to learn Linux, purchase VMware for Windows ($200 US) and run Linux in a Virtual Machine. Then you can learn about Samba, networking and other features while still maintaining a production machines. That is how I run Linux. A downside of a Linux Virtual Machine in VMware (not Windows) is that you must install the VMware Tools, and you must have matching kernel source and binaries for this to happen. Another non-novice task.

Tread carefully. ... jdhurst

ibmuser
Junior Member
Junior Member
Posts: 271
Joined: Wed May 05, 2004 9:56 pm
Location: Victoria (Canada)

Thanks!

#3 Post by ibmuser » Tue May 11, 2004 4:27 pm

Thanks for the advice. I'll keep the Windows system going I have all sorts of software that I need to keep using. Will give linux a go, but I like the virtual setup you mentioned to learn from.

Nathan

Linux on a laptop

#4 Post by Nathan » Tue May 18, 2004 1:48 pm

Or install Cygwin

http://www.cygwin.com/

A linux layer for windows! (Prefer fedora myself though!)

Bob Collins
Junior Member
Junior Member
Posts: 279
Joined: Sun Apr 25, 2004 2:16 pm
Location: Palm Beach Gardens, FL

RE: Linux install

#5 Post by Bob Collins » Wed May 19, 2004 12:24 pm

All good suggestions, but have you given FreeBSD a thought? It is `like' Linux, although it is older, more mature, and close to the Bell Labs Unix. I run it on both a 600X and a T22.

Almost all the same things are available, however updates are easier, so too are application installs.

Finally, the code-base of FreeBSD is closely controlled as to who can commit changes, and therefore keeps the system very clean and with few dependency issues like you will have in a Linux environment.

Sorry to throw a wrench in the works, but if you are looking for *nix-like thing, there are some other good, if not better choices, and no I am not trying to start a flame war, just offering another opinion for the OP to consider. And yes, I have used all maner of Linux in the past and I still prefer FreeBSD.
Bob
701C, 600X, T22, G4 Powerbook

GreenLight
Posts: 35
Joined: Fri Apr 30, 2004 7:36 am
Location: Columbus

Re: RE: Linux install

#6 Post by GreenLight » Wed May 19, 2004 1:37 pm

Bob Collins wrote:All good suggestions, but have you given FreeBSD a thought? It is `like' Linux, although it is older, more mature, and close to the Bell Labs Unix. I run it on both a 600X and a T22.
Bob, I am going to be getting a T42 soon, and I plan to dual boot WinXP and FreeBSD. I know that your T22 is different from the T42, but what kind of issues might I have to look out for? I have enough experience with FreeBSD to deal with (most of) the issues, but am wondering what I have to "look forward to" 8^)

Bob Collins
Junior Member
Junior Member
Posts: 279
Joined: Sun Apr 25, 2004 2:16 pm
Location: Palm Beach Gardens, FL

#7 Post by Bob Collins » Wed May 19, 2004 1:48 pm

Offhand I cannot really think of anything. My Intel on-board 10/100 Nic was readily found by FBSD. My add-in PCMCIA wireless card required some tuning, but nothing significant. Everything else was fine too except adding the sound driver into a custom kernel, but that is trivial. I added device pcm to the kernel config file recompiled and there it was.

I think the TPs are well suited to most any OS, as there are quite a number of TPs out there and they seem to have a pretty good support in the open source community. Obviously with IBM's push on Linux, it would make sense to try Linux on the TP, I just prefer FBSD.

All the hardware seems to either be found easily or configured easily. The one hang up I do read about on the mobile FreeBSD mailing list is the hibernation, suspend support. I think -current has better support for such things, but is definitely not ready for prime time.

Honestly I have no issues with FreeBSD, other than a couple of software issues, like AutoCAD and ESRI's ArcView for FreeBSD. If those two were native to FBSD or even Linux, I would swap all my systems to FBSD and *MAYBE* Linux.
Bob
701C, 600X, T22, G4 Powerbook

Guest

Re: Linux on a laptop

#8 Post by Guest » Mon Jun 21, 2004 3:57 am

Nathan wrote:Or install Cygwin

http://www.cygwin.com/

A linux layer for windows! (Prefer fedora myself though!)
It is nice, but so deprecated that no updates have been provided for quite a long time.

GreenLight
Posts: 35
Joined: Fri Apr 30, 2004 7:36 am
Location: Columbus

Re: Linux on a laptop

#9 Post by GreenLight » Mon Jun 21, 2004 9:42 am

Anonymous wrote:
Nathan wrote:Or install Cygwin

http://www.cygwin.com/

A linux layer for windows! (Prefer fedora myself though!)
It is nice, but so deprecated that no updates have been provided for quite a long time.
That is complete nonsense (Bill - please somehow stop guests from posting).
The latest version of cygwin was released on 5/25/2004

FxXP
Posts: 5
Joined: Sat Jun 19, 2004 10:44 am
Location: Edmonton, Canada
Contact:

#10 Post by FxXP » Mon Jun 21, 2004 1:54 pm

I used cygwin before, but whats the point of running a *nix layer on Windows? It's not a real *nix kernel or distrobution, more like emulation.
TP 770z
PII MMC-2 366 (Trying to get an MMC-2 700)
320MB RAM
14GB
14" /w 4MB VRAM
24x CD-ROM
Xircom Cardbus 10/100

vjacob
Posts: 10
Joined: Wed Jun 23, 2004 1:46 am
Location: Copenhagen, Denmark, EU

Re: Newbie - Linux Installation

#11 Post by vjacob » Wed Jun 23, 2004 2:59 am

ibmuser wrote:I'd like to give linux a go on a thinkpad x31. How best to start? I know that's a rather general and vague question, but any links to web pages or installation concerns I should be aware of?
I suggest Mandrake, Knoppix, or the like if you are a first time user.

If you are more experienced or just like not seing GUIs all the time, try Debian.

I recommend Gentoo if you _enjoy_ reading documentation (I use gentoo ;)

Post Reply
  • Similar Topics
    Replies
    Views
    Last post

Return to “Linux Questions”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests