Mandrake 10.1 Community is Greatttttt!!!!!!
Hey for those interested, I really like Mandrake 10.1 Community, at least so far. It seems to run better than 10.0 and my other versions. I really like it a lot. I also kept 10.0 in a triple boot configuration, as a back-up.
10.1 Community went really well......and I recommend it! d-1 |
Thanks for leaving feedback on 10.1. I'm eagerly awaiting to upgrade and can gauge how great it is by the amount of threads created on it. If it truly is wonderful, as you say, then people take time to rant and rave about it, which is what I'm looking for.
I skipped Mandrake 10.0 after seeing too many problem threads about it and not enough success stories with it. I'm still using Mandrake 9.1 |
I really dunno why so many people had probs with Mandy 10. It's my failsafe/backup/last resort system. Ever since I've installed it I've rigged it with TONS of packages from the contrib, left overs from failed installs, about 4-5 different kernels compiled, plus KDE 3.2.92 (KDE 3.3 RC2) which was a lot faster than 3.2.3 and even though it was RC2, didn't see it crash like I managed to crash KDE3.2.3 in Mandy 10.1. It has survived Windows reinstalls.
OK. long story short... for me, Mandy 10.0 KICKED A55. Big time. MDK addict. I have 10.1 installed from cooker (tried Fedora 2 / Fedora 2.9 - HUGE dissapointment, SuSE 9.1 Pro - Same thing, different day). |
Of course everyone's situation is unique and I'm glad 10.0 works for you. The best and safest way is to try it and experiment and hope for the best! :) If 10.1 fails me, when it is officially released to the public, then I will resort to 10.0. If that fails me, then I am considering switching distros.
|
I agree Mandrake 10.0 was and is great for me, and believe me, I have pushed it to the outer limits by installing different programs and configurations.
With community 10.1 I have messed around with the fonts trying to make them look like windows fonts and I messed things up a bit, but was able to recover some of the problems. I manually deleted the fonts.conf file and manually added another one and it gave me fits, but I was able to go into starx and make some corrections. Even with that being said, I never crashed or locked up. Right now I am trying to figure out how to fix the font names inside of KDESU Konqueror folders. The fonts or the letters are really spaced out too far. I am currently looking for a way to restore or fix it. Also please remember, I caused this problem in an attempt to push the envelope by exploring different ways. I always know if I screw up, I can always reinstall and start over again... d-1 Quote:
|
I'm glad to hear Mandrake 10.1 is working so great. I skipped 10.0 myself because of so many problem threads. I'm still with Mandrake 9.2.
|
I'm gonna skip this release due to lack of KDE 3.3 and GNOME 2.8 as default.
|
I am telling you this is the best distro of any Mandrake Linux system, has a great mp3 player called Amarok, sounds outstanding and looks fabulous. Has nice features kaffine works flawlessly along with better version of Xine, skype is the best messenger I have used thus far.
You're really missing out....experiement, 2 is better than 1.... d-1 Quote:
|
How to fix broken spaced out fonts
Here's How we resolved spaced out fonts in folders in "kdesu konqueror" after adding newer fonts.
Navigate to: Code:
Go to /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts Code:
fonts.cache-1 and insert this: Code:
"fonts" 0 ".dir" fonts.cache-1 should look like this when you save : Code:
"encodings" 0 ".dir" download ftp://ftp.pbone.net/mirror/rpm.nyval...-2plf.i586.rpm and ftp://ftp.pbone.net/mirror/rpm.nyval...2plf.i586.rpm. Install libfreetype6-devel-2.1.9-2plf.i586.rpm first, then libfreetype6-2.1.9-2plf.i586.rpm. Copy folder Windows\Fonts from your windows partition to file:/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts . (you can only do it as root). Open file:/etc/fonts (as root, of course) Replace fonts.conf with the attached fonts.conf file. Open file:/etc/X11/fs (as root again) Open config with kwrite Add line : /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/Fonts, (let it be the second line in catalogue) Save everything and restart X server (Ctrl+alt+backspace) If the MS fonts are not installed in Openoffice, open file:/home/sam/.openoffice , open konsole from there and run ./spadmin. The popup window will open and you will be able to add fonts from file:/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/Fonts. 2.Urpmi settings http://easyurpmi.zarb.org/ All instructions are there. Help on this was made possible by a friend of mine and I am passing it on for reference or for anyone that may need to use it. d-1 [QUOTE]Originally posted by dolphans1 [B]I agree Mandrake 10.0 was and is great for me, and believe me, I have pushed it to the outer limits by installing different programs and configurations. With community 10.1 I have messed around with the fonts trying to make them look like windows fonts and I messed things up a bit, but was able to recover some of the problems. I manually deleted the fonts.conf file and manually added another one and it gave me fits, but I was able to go into starx and make some corrections. Even with that being said, I never crashed or locked up. Right now I am trying to figure out how to fix the font names inside of KDESU Konqueror folders. The fonts or the letters are really spaced out too far. I am currently looking for a way to restore or fix it. Also please remember, I caused this problem in an attempt to push the envelope by exploring different ways. I always know if I screw up, I can always reinstall and start over again... d-1 |
I added skype onto 10.1 Community, but it runs better than on 10.0. I read somewhere that Skype was improved so that may be the case for that. Mic and volume playback was great.
d-1 Quote:
|
Quote:
AMD K6II+ @ 500Mhz, 384 MB RAM, gcc 3.4.1 - 4 days full compile (not really non stop, I've got mails to check, movies to watch, people to stress) Code:
[alex@Alexx alex]$ uprecords (ok, I'm showing off a bit :P). Anyway, for you thsose who have faster PC's, it might take you a lot less: I compile the kernel in about 1.5 hours. On an AMD XP 2400+ took 10-15 minutes tops. Quote:
Quote:
|
eqxro,
Someone told me KDE 3.3 RPM is inside CD -4 (as an RPM package) of Mandrake 10.1 Community CD's, but he could not figure out how to install it. He claimed he had dependency problem issues installing it. Perhaps you can figure it out for us? d-1 Quote:
|
10.0 Power pack to 10.1 Community????
:newbie: I receive as a gift from a friend 10.0 power pack but now I want to upgrade to 10.1 wil I still be able to access the programs on the power pack cd's I have or not?
|
@dolphans1 - Perhaps there are some packages not yet shipped on the CDs... the quickest way is to see what file dependency probs there are (perhaps missing packages). It's only a matter of going to rpm.pbone.net and searching for that file (eg searching for libwhatever.so.2 would come up with the rpms in the DB containing the file. It's not necessary to have mdk rpms, but there's a chance they are there. I've seen some stuff like "modified dependencies" in RPM changelogs.
So, if there are dependency probs, search for them on Gugl or post them to see if there's a way to work around this. It can be quicker to download a .tar.gz and compile than endup in rpm dependency hell. ;) |
Agree 100%
I finish yesterday getting all the 10.1 Cd's and definitley it feels slicker than 10.0. I did an upgrade form version10.0 official and aside from the network , which was configured on the firewire interface instead of the nic and the sound card everything worked right of the bat. needless is to say that thos 2 issues have been fixed.
The only problem that I have right now is that the guy for bit trnado refuses to work even though all dependencies are installed. The gui-less version works fine though.... I just wanted to add my 2 cents and yes I have to update my signature... |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:26 AM. |