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		<title>LinuxQuestions.org - Blogs - autophil</title>
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			<title>Slacking off</title>
			<link>http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/blog/autophil-277150/slacking-off-1018/</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 02 Aug 2008 06:26:05 GMT</pubDate>
			<description>I started using Gnu/Linux operating systems by getting someone to help me load Ubuntu as a dual boot on my regular home pc. So thats how I started...</description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>I started using Gnu/Linux operating systems by getting someone to help me load Ubuntu as a dual boot on my regular home pc. So thats how I started out and it all looked to exciting and new with a brown orientated desktop and a layout so different from the XP desktop that had become so predictable. <br />
The problem that I did encounter was that trying anything more than the basic funtions of a pc was a bit more complicated than I was accustomed to. For instance, installing a new application was not any more difficult but the process was quite different. Different packages for each distro. As long as I could get used to a different system of installing applications all was well. It was actually very easy once I got used to that. Well, to a degree. Sometimes an application still had to be configured in some way. <br />
Take wvdial for instance. It was one thing to install application. And another thing to get it up and running. Then I got a new pc. Brought it home and tried to install a new version of Ubuntu. No luck. I probably tried twenty times or more. It just got stuck and 'hung' part way through. This was the end of the line. I thought. <br />
So I bought a magazine with a free dvd full of distros and other goodies. I managed to install a few distros and tried them out. But now I was getting a little bit particular.  Many of the distros I tried did not install. More than one of them installed, and then for some reason would not boot up afterwards. Later I found out that Ubuntu at that time would not install onto a 64 bit machine. I had a disk with a version of Slackware. The write up inside indicated that this was NOT for beginners. So it was put to one side and not used. <br />
Then in desparation one day I picked it up and stuck it into the drive. Half an hour later after making a few intrepid choices I was sitting with a new version of Gnu/Linux of the Slackware variety. I changed to the XFCE desktop and it felt good.  I have stayed with Slackware ever since because I began to realise that using the smooth sailing versions like Ubuntu, one began to depend so much on the &quot;point and click&quot; system that I was not really learning very much about how Gnu/Linux worked. I have also used Zenwalk quite a lot and it appears to as basically a Slackware system with slightly pared down modifications. Specifically it is a much smaller file to download a new version. Now I know I can go and find a Freedom Toaster and write a new dvd with a new version of Slackware, but so often they are out of order, and I can sit right here on my bum and watch Zenwalk download in about two and a half hours flat.</div>

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