• are you using linux right now?
    215 replies, posted
[QUOTE=TheGuru;25910276]Arch's installer is pretty easy to get through if you're reading the beginners guide. Hell, I've only installed it once and haven't had any issues, and I feel like I could go through the whole thing again without the guide.[/QUOTE] The first time I installed Arch, I didn't even use the Guide. That was after I started using Gentoo though, so that probably had something to do with it.
Not directly, but I have cygwin running an X session to my BSD box. Does that count?
[QUOTE=PvtCupcakes;25918506]The first time I installed Arch, I didn't even use the Guide. That was after I started using Gentoo though, so that probably had something to do with it.[/QUOTE] first time I installed Gentoo I didn't use the guide that was a fun 8 hours
[QUOTE=ButtsexV2;25930816]first time I installed Gentoo I didn't use the guide that was a fun 8 hours[/QUOTE] I used the guide and it still took me 8 hours.
second time I did use the guide and it only took me 5 you are obviously terrible at this [editline]8th November 2010[/editline] THESE ARE IMPORTANT LiFE SKILLS MAN
Yes /thread
Yes. My main OS, Ubuntu 10.4.
I don't use my Arhc laptop that much.. [editline]9th November 2010[/editline] But I use my Linux server hell of a lot, but just not right now :v: Oh, and it's running Ubuntu. I want to move to CentOS, I just haven't got used to how it's command are set compared to Ubuntu, which I'm really used to now.
[QUOTE=Fatrix;25955550]I don't use my Arhc laptop that much.. [editline]9th November 2010[/editline] But I use my Linux server hell of a lot, but just not right now :v: Oh, and it's running Ubuntu. I want to move to CentOS, I just haven't got used to how it's command are set compared to Ubuntu, which I'm really used to now.[/QUOTE] They use the same commands. The only difference is apt-get vs yum
No, there are other differences, like the "system-config-*" programs that are common on RedHat-based systems but not on Debian-based systems.
No....I have Linux on my netbook which i don't use much.
Not yet, but I'll probably be setting up a dual-boot later this evening with Ubuntu. After that, let's just hope I can figure the damn OS out.
[QUOTE=Tezzanator92;25948366]Yes. My main OS, Ubuntu 10.4.[/QUOTE] you're a musician, what do you use to record, mix, and master audio in Linux?
no, but I was dicking about in mint 9 just a bit ago changing the theme to not mint defaults and cutting off some of the leftover ubuntu bloat
[img_thumb]http://gyazo.com/29845312be6992cab47e62dbb8f61c1e.png[/img_thumb] I'm on Windows SSH VNCing into a friends spare VPS running CentOS and Xfce
Currently on an android phone
During class we actually used Linux. It was our first class on Linux. We installed fedora and learned about cd, pwd, ls, less, more, cat, and so on.
[QUOTE=Boris-B;26102873]During class we actually used Linux. It was our first class on Linux. We installed fedora and learned about cd, pwd, ls, less, more, cat, and so on.[/QUOTE] Must've sucked.
It was ok. The teacher knows I know all of this so we were messing around and all.
[QUOTE=Boris-B;26102927]It was ok. The teacher knows I know all of this so we were messing around and all.[/QUOTE] That's what's good about being in a class where you already know the content. It's easy and the teacher doesn't care if you tune them out when they're teaching. Using Arch atm.
not on my netbook
Im in a VM on centos trying to get a buncha stuff setup for my move to luinx on my real servers AKA learn what i need to do so i dont havea long downtime
Running two VMs, a Linux Mint 10 VM and an Ubuntu Server VM. I SSHed into the Ubuntu Server VM from the Linux Mint 10 VM, and from the server to that free IPv6 VPS thing that was going on before.
In front of a windows computer, ubuntu 10.4 in my lap.
Posting from a very basic Arch install using lynx.
[QUOTE=Lego399_1;26178522]Posting from a very basic Arch install using lynx.[/QUOTE] Why the hell did you create another account?
on my ubuntu laptop. soon to have a new ssd! even with a few tv shows / movies / albums loaded up in anticipation of travel I never use more than 15 GB of the current 250 GB HDD.
[QUOTE=ButtsexV2;26022031]you're a musician, what do you use to record, mix, and master audio in Linux?[/QUOTE] I have a separate machine for my audio stuff, which runs Windows XP. My day to day computer usage is on my laptop which runs linux exclusively. I recorded a couple of songs with Ardour as an experiment but I found jAck and all the related software cumbersome and temperamental.
[QUOTE=Tezzanator92;26183061]I recorded a couple of songs with Ardour as an experiment but I found jAck and all the related software cumbersome and temperamental.[/QUOTE] that's pretty much my biggest issue with Linux. I ended up building another computer to run Windows on so I could actually do anything decent with audio, without having to hassle with a dualboot.
Running Arch on my laptop and desktop and I'm running CentOS on a VM on laptop.
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