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stu-t-ter 04-03-2010 10:39 PM

New computer help
 
hi all!

i have just purchased a new computer a compaq presario with windows 7 pre-installed. it is an AMD Athlon II X2 215 processor 2.70 with 2Gig memory it is 64bit. i also decided to get a USB expansion drive which is a SeaGate 1TB. i want to install a linux disro on this machine and dual boot to win7, this is completely new tech to me as i had my "old" computer for almost 10 years. is there anything special i should know/look out for when installing to this system? will grub do fine in the SCSI MBR? can i install to my external drive? once again this is completely new tech to me and i am unsure of any issues that may arise. i was going to try either Debian or ubuntu.

ANY suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

Hey! i just installed Ubuntu with wubi windows installer it seems to have worked well! i did however skip a few steps in the installation due to my lack of bandwidth at the moment but i will cure those in time. this beats my old Pentium 4 any day!

bcwagne 04-04-2010 12:02 AM

Everything should be basically okay, just be sure to check your hardware to see if it needs special drivers which aren't included. Usually wireless networking is a little iffy. See if you can get the drivers for your hardware...even contact HP (who makes Compaq computers) to see if they have linux drivers available. It's doubtful they do, but worth a shot.

When partitioning your drive, keep in mind that Windows likes to be first on the drive. There are ways to work around it, and it isn't difficult, just a little pain. Just look up how to map drives in grub, and you should have no trouble. If you're not sure what distro you want yet, it might be best to install windows on the first partition, then linux on partitions after that. That way if you don't like the distro you tried, you can switch easily without zapping the windows install.

You should have no problem at all using the USB drive. Booting from it might be tricky. If that is what you want, it may be wise to try a distro designed specifically for that.

I won't advise on choice of distro, (though I could throw in my vote for Debian), just try lots. Any of the mainstream ones are a good place to start.

Good luck!


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