Welcome Slashdot readers. We're re-running this 2003 story from an earlier incarnation of the LinuxWorld site, to help you see what's changed in Linux installs and what might have stayed the same. -- Ed.
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· Is Windows or Linux easier to install? (LinuxWorld)
· Linux vs. Windows installation: Shoot-out at the XP Corral Part 2 in the installation-comparison series (LinuxWorld)
· Linux vs. Windows installation comparo, Part 3 Part 3 in the series (LinuxWorld)
· Xandros 1.0: Easy on the eyes, easy to install (LinuxWorld)
· A Linux you can try before you even install it (LinuxWorld)
· Mandrake 8.2 offers the easiest installation ever (LinuxWorld)
· A strategic comparison of Windows and Unix (LinuxWorld)
· Installing Linux on a laptop is still tricky (LinuxWorld)
· Downloads: Popular Linux distributions (LinuxWorld)
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Windows 95 works well enough for my needs, but I'm eight years behind the technology curve. While I realize there are still many who rely on Apple IIs and Tandy 100s for their daily computing chores, it's time for me to start planning a migration route.
I was mulling the possibilities when the OfficeSuperGeek (tOSG) talked me into a CPU upgrade, gave me a suitable motherboard from his bonepile, dumped some Linux distributions on my desk and said, "Here... try these." What follows is an 18-month tour of recent and now not-so-recent Linux distributions. Before we proceed, let me set your expectations about this overview. It isn't scientific. It's based on my impressions as a technical writer, Linux neophyte and curmudgeon. It's an appropriate and fair look from my humble newbie perspective. If you are a hairy-chested Linux administrator or programmer, you will undoubtedly find yourself screaming as you read the following. Save your breath.
Here's what I want: The migration destination My non-negotiable requirements for a new operating system center on simplicity for me. Spare me your "how much more enlightened, knowledgeable and confident I will be if I know the intimate details of my computer if the installation is treacherous!" speech; I want an operating system that works like a Honda Accord and not a kit-car project.
I assumed that I would partition drives to make room for Linux, set the BIOS to boot from a CD-ROM drive, reboot with an installation CD in the drive, make some on-screen selections, let the distribution know what hardware to use, twiddle my thumbs for a while as it loaded software and then have a working system. I expected the installation routine to configure whatever needed configuring after it detected the hardware or I told it what I had. That's what tOSG expected, too. My installation approach I have installed various Linux distributions on four variations of my PC over several months. If a system is not mentioned for a distribution, it's probably because the hardware was no longer available at that time. I did not test all my requirements on all the systems. If a distribution flunked a major requirement, it was pointless to continue.
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