Well, not exactly...
I have just installed Redhat 9 today on my PC, and it seems stable and easily accessible so far. I have been pleased by the ease of installation. It seems the Linux community has done tremendous progress in a few years about it, from when it was a pure-geek OS. Besides, the interface looks really professional (I installed both Gnome and KDE). I still have a few things to discover (like where the heck is the "search" function in the file manager), but overall, I'm pretty impressed with Redhat's performance regarding user-friendliness.
However, I have three beefs with it:
- unlike my previous Redhat 8 (which I didn't use at all), this cretin Linux refuses to let me have a 1024*768 resolution which would strectch to fit my 1600*1200. Either I have 1024*768 pixels displayed in the middle of the screen, or I have to go to the 1600 Res. In both cases, it's way too small and kills my eyes. I tried quite a fex changes (changed the resolution, changed the alledged max. res, defined the ppp, etc.) to no avail If I can't fix that, thes Redhat will follow the same fate as the previous one.
- I still can't access my NTFS partitions under Linux . Mind you, I have been so busy looking for solutions for my Res problems, I didn't look for solutions to access NTFS. I actually switched to RedHat 9 because someone told me it understood NTFS out of the box Well, I'll look into it as soon as I solve this resolution issue...
- I couldn't make a "swap" particion. I've let 520 Megs out of any partition in the past, and RedHat refused to use it as swap. A problem with Cylinders apparently (can't know more). Fortunately, my PC is generous with RAM (1024 Mb), so it's not that bad.
I'm still wondering what I could be using Linux for, that isn't already done by Windows. I don't program, I can't access any of my files for now, and I'm not that fond of XBill I guess I could use my RedHat like my Windows, since OpenOffice seems a good alternative to MSOffice, and I have yet to see if my other tools (PaintShopPro, Dreamweaver, PowerPoint, FLICster) have a good equivalent under Linux.
BTW, can anybody tell me if I can find real games free for download under Linux ? I heard about FreeCiv and Quake. Are there other games free for download ?
I have just installed Redhat 9 today on my PC, and it seems stable and easily accessible so far. I have been pleased by the ease of installation. It seems the Linux community has done tremendous progress in a few years about it, from when it was a pure-geek OS. Besides, the interface looks really professional (I installed both Gnome and KDE). I still have a few things to discover (like where the heck is the "search" function in the file manager), but overall, I'm pretty impressed with Redhat's performance regarding user-friendliness.
However, I have three beefs with it:
- unlike my previous Redhat 8 (which I didn't use at all), this cretin Linux refuses to let me have a 1024*768 resolution which would strectch to fit my 1600*1200. Either I have 1024*768 pixels displayed in the middle of the screen, or I have to go to the 1600 Res. In both cases, it's way too small and kills my eyes. I tried quite a fex changes (changed the resolution, changed the alledged max. res, defined the ppp, etc.) to no avail If I can't fix that, thes Redhat will follow the same fate as the previous one.
- I still can't access my NTFS partitions under Linux . Mind you, I have been so busy looking for solutions for my Res problems, I didn't look for solutions to access NTFS. I actually switched to RedHat 9 because someone told me it understood NTFS out of the box Well, I'll look into it as soon as I solve this resolution issue...
- I couldn't make a "swap" particion. I've let 520 Megs out of any partition in the past, and RedHat refused to use it as swap. A problem with Cylinders apparently (can't know more). Fortunately, my PC is generous with RAM (1024 Mb), so it's not that bad.
I'm still wondering what I could be using Linux for, that isn't already done by Windows. I don't program, I can't access any of my files for now, and I'm not that fond of XBill I guess I could use my RedHat like my Windows, since OpenOffice seems a good alternative to MSOffice, and I have yet to see if my other tools (PaintShopPro, Dreamweaver, PowerPoint, FLICster) have a good equivalent under Linux.
BTW, can anybody tell me if I can find real games free for download under Linux ? I heard about FreeCiv and Quake. Are there other games free for download ?
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