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Craise 01-09-2007 04:42 PM

mandriva vs fedora
 
i tried fedora and even with kde i couldnt get on internet..is mandriva easier?

i have mandriva one disc from last may06
192ram 12.8gig drive which ill upgrade maybe 266mhz

it went on as sample but how do i put it on drive so it stays?

pixellany 01-09-2007 05:47 PM

You won't solve internet connection problems by changing distributions. Pick any of the top distros and stay with it until you get it working.
Quote:

192ram 12.8gig drive which ill upgrade maybe 266mhz
to 266MHz from what??

Quote:

it went on as sample but how do i put it on drive so it stays?
What does this mean? Perhaps you were running from a live CD? If so, there is an install command either on the desktop or in one of the menus.

Craise 01-09-2007 07:35 PM

to 266MHz from what??

i mean its a cpu thats 266 mhz ,an old computer pentium 2,
i really should get a new one i suppose

thanks pixellany

i wonder if i can find this menu you mean

live cd i guess -it just shows what its like without the real install

shorty943 01-09-2007 07:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Craise
i tried fedora and even with kde i couldnt get on internet..is mandriva easier?

i have mandriva one disc from last may06
192ram 12.8gig drive which ill upgrade maybe 266mhz

it went on as sample but how do i put it on drive so it stays?

Several problems I see here.
1- RAM - 192 is an oddball. System can only use power of 2, that is - 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64,128, 256, etc. You appear to have 2 different size RAM sticks, the system will ignore one of those chips.
2- Internet access depends on the correct settings in your networking system, Linux will not hold your hand and find the world automatically.
3- 12.8 Gb drive you will upgrade to 266Mhz? WHAT?

You appear very confused about the mechanics inside your computer, don't fret, you are not an orphan there. You would be amazed at the number of people I see, who mistakenly call the computer case the hard drive.

Tell us exactly what CPU you have, Intel?, AMD? CPU speed? in Mhz.

As Pixellany said in her? post. It seems as if your are running from the "live" CD. Put the disk in your machine as it starts, let it boot to the graphical desktop, somewhere down the left side of the desktop, you will find an icon named "install to hard disk" or similar.
Double click this icon. BE AWARE. This will overwrite anything else on the disk.
If you still want MS Windows, then I suggest you purchase another hard disk and cable, install it in your machine, the install Linux to this drive, Remember to install the "boot loader (grub or lilo) to the MBR of HDA.
The first hard drive is hda, the second is hdb, the third is hdc, and so on. Under Linux, floppy drives are numbered, ie, fd0, fd1,fd2. SCSI disks are, sda,sdb,sdc, etc.
Please do not hesitate to ask for more help, that is why we are here. We like to at least try to help people out of confusion. As for the best distro? That is purely your choice.

Good luck.

Shorty943.

Craise 01-09-2007 08:17 PM

thanks shorty -im not a novice on computer stuff i just dont type well

i know the cpu, harddrive, and ram ,are 3 diferent things

i think possibly i cant get the install option becuse i have a weird video card

Craise 01-09-2007 08:18 PM

it seems anyway the cpu mhz has nothing to do with linux 2006/2007

JimBass 01-09-2007 08:46 PM

192 RAM makes perfect sense, it is a 128 Mhz chip and a 64 Mhz chip. I don't know why shorty943 thinks that doesn't work, I had a computer with 192 Mhz RAM for years, and it was fine.

To Craise, the processor is important to linux, but as you have seen, linux can function (and even function well) with a system that doesn't have high enough specs to run windows XP. What I would suggest if you install linux (as opposed to running a live CD) is that you install a light weight graphical enviornment. XFCE is probably the most popular of the "light" enviornments, although IceWM and windowmaker are also fine choices. You would want to stay away from KDE and Gnome, as those require more RAM and processor power.

A strange video card will not prevent you from installing. It may take a bit of work to get it configured, but it certainly can function. Why do you say it is strange, is it just that it is as old as the rest of the machine? If so that's no problem, linux still supports old hardware, and if it ever was supported, it still is supported!

We're still very unclear as to what type of linux you are running. You mention Fedora and Mandriva in your initial post. Is it that you have installed Fedora and are asking if changing to Mandriva will help? Please open a terminal and type "uname -r" without the quotes. That will give us the kernel name and hopefully enough info so we can help you. Please post the output of that command here.

Peace,
JimBass

Craise 01-09-2007 09:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Craise
i tried fedora and even with kde i couldnt get on internet..is mandriva easier?

i have mandriva one disc from last may06
192ram 12.8gig drive which ill upgrade maybe 266mhz

it went on as sample but how do i put it on drive so it stays?

i said i nave mandriva one

i got in magazine in may2006

all other versions are deleted

JimBass 01-09-2007 09:31 PM

Try this to install then -

Click on the home icon. In your home, there will be a directory either called desktop or Desktop. Click on that (linux is case sensitive, so they are not the same). Within that folder there should be an icon to install mandriva to the hard drive. That is how most of the live distros install to hard disk, although I have no first hand experience with mandriva.

Peace,
JimBass

IndyGunFreak 01-09-2007 09:59 PM

Mandriva is gonna be slower than christmas on that machine. It just doesn't seem to work well with old machines. I tried to run it on my 2.4ghz machine, and it was so slow it drove me nuts. Hopefully you have better luck.

I'd probably recommend Xubuntu on a machine that old, but thats just me.

http://www.xubuntu.com

IGF

JimBass 01-09-2007 10:02 PM

What IndyGunFreak said is true. With mandriva defaulting to KDE, you'll be hard pressed. I suggested XFCE back in my initial post in this thread, and Xubuntu does use XFCE. Just something to consider.

Peace,
JimBass

Craise 01-10-2007 12:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JimBass
Try this to install then -

Click on the home icon. In your home, there will be a directory either called desktop or Desktop. Click on that (linux is case sensitive, so they are not the same). Within that folder there should be an icon to install mandriva to the hard drive. That is how most of the live distros install to hard disk, although I have no first hand experience with mandriva.

Peace,
JimBass

maybe on another ill do that

i gave up and put on fedora 3 from a 2005 "linux for dummies" book

it seems to work ok on it but it wont play a music cd and i know the sound card works

JimBass 01-10-2007 12:11 AM

Well, Fedora 3 is now 3 versions old, as Fedora 6 is now out. Changing distros is not a smal step. I suggest you pick one distro, ande stick with it for a few months to learn how it operates, tehn trying others. Bouncing around like a super ball is tough.

If the cd is mp3, Fedora needs an install to play mp3s. If it is a true audio CD, then you have another issue. You should at least upgrade to Fedora 6 if you are going to use Fedora.

You'll still have to install the graphics drivers in fedora, so that didn't help in that regard any.

Peace,
JimBass

Craise 01-10-2007 12:14 AM

i did have core 5

how is 3 so diferent from 5 and 6?

JimBass 01-10-2007 12:28 AM

The higher number, the newer it is. Your book will still be 98% or more true, but you can't get the latest software on old OSes. You always want to stick with the newest version, as it is the most supported. In particular, you want a fresh modern kernel, for hardware support and security, and the newest kernels come with and are updated by the newest version of the OS.

Peace,
JimBass


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