My system....
AMD 1600 (1.4gHz) 512 OCZ PC2700 Leadtech Ti200 128mb video SBLive 5.1 sound LiteOn CD/RW Plextor CD/RW RealteK Nic MS mouse and keyboard 10GB hd is a spare drive I have laying around. Hope that helps..... |
Which files do I need? I not sure. Here is the link that I'm using, is it the correct one?
Thanks http://carroll.cac.psu.edu/pub/linux...ons/slackware/ When I open up the ISO 10.2 file there are some files with the extension... asc and md5 ?????:confused: Which ones are what I need? |
As others have pointed out, you really should give ubuntu a try.
Slackware might be too hard for you. |
Is this a "Live CD" ? I want something to install on my hd.
|
I just ordered the Ubuntu 5.10 cd's. So I know I'll get the correct cd's.
Thanks for the help and patients with me on this. One day I'll be able to help someone else. Thanks and Happy Thanksgiving |
No.
You can try the distro chooser. It's not perfect but might give you a clue which distro(s) are best suited for you: http://www.zegeniestudios.net/ldc/ |
The md5 file is something you want to check once you have downloaded the file. It contains a number that is calculated agains the .iso file in the server. Once you doanload the .iso, you run a program (I don't know, but Nero should do it) to calculate the number of what you downloaded. If the numbers coincide, then you can assume that the download was successful (wasn't corrupted). Most of the time that will be the case, but if it is not, then you have to download the .iso file again.
|
Quote:
Quote:
|
Jamy,
I have a bunch of coaster now. That's why I ordered the CD's... TURKEY TIME !!! LET'S EAT!! Later guys...... |
Quote:
I also do not check the md5 number very often :( but use CD-RWs so I'm safe if something goes wrong... ;) |
Happy Thanksgiving. :)
I don't think you're going to go far wrong with Ubuntu. I decided to install it on my wife's laptop in parallel to WinXP to see how it works. (I'm a Debian user.) It worked great, both the live and installation versions. Automatic hardware detection, Internet, etc. Haven't done all that much with it yet though, since it's not my machine. Here are some instructions on how to burn using Nero in Windows, from their wiki: http://help.ubuntu.com/starterguide/...html#id2455487 In Nero you want to use "Burn Image" and choose use ISO; look in the documentation for ISO 9660 if you have trouble. You can cross-reference the Debian instructions for burning an ISO in Nero if that helps: http://www.debian.org/CD/faq/#record-windows I'm sure you can have Ubuntu installed before the CDs arrive. ;) Here is their guide (for 5.04 but most of it applies to 5.10): http://ubuntuguide.org/ Linux is mostly about reading comprehension. Start off with a distro like Ubuntu that makes a lot of decisions for you, and then move on to systems with more flexibility like Slack, Debian, et al. if you like. Don't let anybody tell you what distro you need to use. I played around at Linux for about 2-3 years before really deciding to dig in because it was so demanding. If I'd had something like Ubuntu then, it would've been great. |
Lots of good points made. When I started off with Redhat and Mandrake I had a very hard time getting to understand how things worked in Linux but when I tried Slack things were much easier to pickup. Of course its a matter of how an individual sees things.
Like others have suggested, give a few distros a try then move over to slack and completely forget about all those other distros, they dont even exist........ SLACK! SLACK! SLACK!............:D |
Ok I have the 4 iso's of Slackware. I have tried to make a bootdisk using Nero to no avail.
I tried data disk, bootable disk, regular burn. No go. Does it matter that I have the hd fdisked with a windows 98 bootdisk? Could that be the problem here? |
Quote:
Quote:
|
regular burn , I mean I just selected the file and hit burn.
No other options. Ok I'll try it again...... I'll get the hang of this yet.... or run out of disk. Need some coasters for Christmas? |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:27 PM. |