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GNU/Linux Basic Guide
This 255-page guide will provide you with the keys to understand the philosophy of free software, teach you how to use and handle it, and give you the tools required to move easily in the world of GNU/Linux. Many users and administrators will be taking their first steps with this GNU/Linux Basic guide and it will show you how to approach and solve the problems you encounter.
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05-03-2012, 11:35 PM
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#16
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Moderator
Registered: Aug 2001
Location: Fargo, ND
Distribution: SuSE AMD64
Posts: 15,733
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According to Pat of the TLLTS podcast, the Microsoft remote works great for Myth TV.
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05-04-2012, 03:23 AM
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#17
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Senior Member
Registered: Mar 2011
Location: Brisneyland
Distribution: Debian, aptosid
Posts: 2,920
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Microsoft keyboardsand mice can be OK. I've used a few over the years, and they arent anything special as far as build quality goes. You can normally get better keyboards/mice for any given amount of money, that micosoft branding costs.
I wouldnt be buying micosoft keyboards/mice myself. But I'd rather have micosoft keyboards or mice over the other hardware they make (xbox, zune, etc.).
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05-05-2012, 09:12 AM
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#18
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Senior Member
Registered: Jan 2011
Location: Australia Victoria
Distribution: Debian, Opensuse, Slackware (still undecided)
Posts: 1,073
Rep: 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Zssfssz
Being a loyal member of the FOSS community I wanted to know if I should only look down on microsoft's software or their harware too.
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Seriously!? stop pulling your self, you're posting off of an Os X system, you can't be to loyal. If you own a mac, i'm sure buying a microsoft product will be of the least of your concerns. Richard Stallman described Steve Jobs as an evil genius. I'm not against Foss, Apple, or Microsoft, and don't have anyhting against you Zssfssz, but i think that your post was pointless, and it personally annoyed me. It really epitomized ye ol saying that the bsd folks like repeating.
Quote:
Linux is for people who hate Microsoft
The Bsds are for people whom love Unix like operating systems
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Or something like that. Just get the bloody thing, Even Richard Stallman has made comment about how hard it is to get a modern laptop that is ethically correct. Please note that the last sentence i just wrote is not a direct quote of Richard Stallman, and i may have it slightly incorrect.
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05-05-2012, 12:15 PM
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#19
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Member
Registered: Sep 2011
Location: Las Vegas!
Distribution: Ubuntu n' Flavors, ReactOS, MINIX3, FreeDOS, Arch
Posts: 339
Original Poster
Rep: 
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It's an iPod, I am getting an Android but need to...
I just was stuck for words...
Sorry
(Don't act like you have NEVER used OSX, iOS, or Windows)
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05-05-2012, 12:21 PM
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#20
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Guru
Registered: Mar 2008
Posts: 8,546
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You can not be so tied to some free software that you loose sight of real workers doing great jobs each day. People that work at places like MS love their job and I believe they deserve to work in a field that that they have chosen. I fully support good products. Many of the top names in software are the very best in the world and I don't mind paying for good stuff.
If you want to make a useless mark then try to purchase electronic products from companies that properly pay their workers along with being environmentally conscious. Sadly that won't happen. All this stuff is made by slaves of governments that couldn't care less about the environment.
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05-05-2012, 08:24 PM
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#21
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Senior Member
Registered: Jan 2011
Location: Australia Victoria
Distribution: Debian, Opensuse, Slackware (still undecided)
Posts: 1,073
Rep: 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Zssfssz
It's an iPod, I am getting an Android but need to...
I just was stuck for words...
Sorry
(Don't act like you have NEVER used OSX, iOS, or Windows)
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I wasn't having a go at you, i just found your post contradicting; and someone needed to point this out.
I wasn't acting like i've never used them os's. I have never used iOS; but other than that, i own a macbook pro my self, and two licenses to Windows 7, one, which is used with Virtualbox on this current machine and the other is used on a partition on the mac.
I use mp3 and mp4 codecs, and play proprietary Windows games on WINE. I admire FOSS and everything it's about; but unfortunately at the current time i would find it hard to give up all proprietary applications. With FOSS it's black and white in Richard Stallmans eyes; you're with it, or your not. You and i are not. We may be some day but not at the moment. For For this reason i think that you should not be calling your self "a loyal member of the FOSS community". You may be a member, but not a loyal member. It's not about disliking Microsoft, it's about freedom.
By the way, i've a microsoft mouse, it's nice, simple and works.
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05-05-2012, 09:15 PM
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#22
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Senior Member
Registered: Dec 2011
Location: UK
Distribution: Debian Sid + various in VMs.
Posts: 1,819
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I have to agree with your pragmatic approach Knightron but, personally, I do try to avoid putting money into the pockets of patent lawyers whenever possible.
I have an XP license, a 2K license and a 98se license (as far as I can tell under the law of the country I live in) so have them in VMs for the odd occasion when they're needed. I also have an iPhad which I won at my last place of work. I have the corpses of a few Windows phones (around 5 years old) dotted around the place.
However, in the last 5 years I have bought a PC and a netbook and both had Linux installed. My phone is a pre-MS Nokia and I got my best friend into Linux so much he uses it to produce music and is probably more savvy than me.
My point being that if you know that a percentage of the money you would pay for a keyboard goes to patent lawyers who stifle innovation and try to kill the OS you love then you ought not to buy it. I am aware that it's possible that I pay money to heinous people every day when shopping but when I know where the money is going to be spent I do try to exercise discretion.
Last edited by 273; 05-05-2012 at 09:16 PM.
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05-05-2012, 11:51 PM
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#23
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Senior Member
Registered: Jan 2011
Location: Australia Victoria
Distribution: Debian, Opensuse, Slackware (still undecided)
Posts: 1,073
Rep: 
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I like and agree with your prospective 237, but the title is How Much Should I Hate Microsoft's Hardware. My point drifted off to other matters but at the heart of it, what i basically meant was. How can you hate one company but ignore others that are just as bad.
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05-06-2012, 12:22 AM
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#24
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Senior Member
Registered: Feb 2011
Location: Australia
Distribution: Debian Sid/Experimental
Posts: 1,820
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Knightron
I like and agree with your prospective 237, but the title is How Much Should I Hate Microsoft's Hardware. My point drifted off to other matters but at the heart of it, what i basically meant was. How can you hate one company but ignore others that are just as bad.
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Unfortunately that is not how your post comes across, and this is coming from someone who does exactly what your post was trying to say.
Getting back on topic, I think if someone works and chooses to put a price on something then so be it. It is then up to the potential user to pay for it or to not purchase/use it. If they buy it lets hope they buy it for the right reasons (quality, made under ethical conditions for both staff and planet, etc) but if they don't then that is also their choice. There is such a thing as freedom of choice. As for hating a product I personally think hating an inanimate non cognisant thing is a waste of time. Preferring one inanimate non cognisant thing over another is a different matter and does not mean you have to hate something in any way shape or form.
Last edited by k3lt01; 05-06-2012 at 12:23 AM.
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05-07-2012, 02:16 PM
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#25
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Senior Member
Registered: Apr 2006
Location: Glendale, AZ
Distribution: Distro-homeless. Lost.
Posts: 1,771
Rep:
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Answer: you shouldn't "hate" computer hardware at all. That's ridiculous.
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05-07-2012, 03:28 PM
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#26
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Member
Registered: Feb 2011
Location: Croatia
Distribution: openSUSE 12.3
Posts: 69
Rep:
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I actually had a funny experience with a MS mouse, it was an early bluetooth model, and it worked perfectly, but once I changed the batteries it would never work on the same computer again. I remember it because my father used it, and when he changed the batteries it didn't work anymore so he gave it to me. I plugged it into my computer and it worked perfectly again. But when I changed the batteries it wouldn't work anymore. Until I plugged it into another computer. And so on. I have actually never tried to use it with anything else than Windows XP, but now that I think of it, wouldn't it be ironic if it turns out it works flawlessly with linux? 
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05-07-2012, 04:35 PM
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#27
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Senior Member
Registered: Jan 2011
Location: Australia Victoria
Distribution: Debian, Opensuse, Slackware (still undecided)
Posts: 1,073
Rep: 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cheese1343
wouldn't it be ironic if it turns out it works flawlessly with linux? 
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not quite the same but last year I purchased a Samsung sf311 laptop. it has optimus graphics thus isn't handled by gnu/Linux as well as it could be, yet, so it currently doesn't get much use; but the synaptics touch pad was a bitch to use on windows 7, on Linux it worked great though.
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