Re: Nervious wannabe new user asks for advice.

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Dale Sykora wrote:
thebearwitchproject wrote:

Hi

I would like to go over to FC3 from Windows, but I am
a bit nervious of doing so. I am not exactly software
literate, hardware fine and dandy, software hesitant.
therefore I would like to ask a few questions, and if
they have been asked before please be patient with me.

I assume most of my hardware will be compliant, but I
will give those details later if they are wanted. My
main worry is my ADSL modem and my printer. I have

Jay,
You might want to download and burn a "run from the cd" distro of Linux to check compatibility with your asdl modem and printer. I would suggest that you try knoppix. If knoppix works with your hardware, then FC3 will probably work too (or atleast can be made to work).


Thanks,

Dale

I would tend to support that, except for one thing--sometimes FC3 will work where Knoppix won't work, as strange as that might seem. Knoppix will, however, test your network interface to see whether it complies with open-hardware compatibility standards. The test is simple: if Knoppix recognizes it, then almost any other distro of Linux will, including Fedora Core.


May I also observe that FC3 is the nearest thing yet to something that gives you all the functionality of a Windows system without the Windows hassles. At a minimum, FC3 is "Windows-equivalent" in its desktop, the automatic mounting of CD's and DVD's and now USB mass-storage devices, and in certain applications that distribute with it or that you can install on it afterward: OpenOffice, Firefox, Thunderbird for e-mail and news, Adobe Reader version 5 (a good enough version for my needs, anyway), Java Runtime Environment (or even the full-blown Software Development Kit, if you go straight to Sun to get it), program development, and even managing your finances. And it doesn't cost you one red cent (or penny or centime or pfennig or centavo or lire or yen or whatever).

Right now, I'd like to see a slightly less confusing way to mount a floppy disk, and definitely a "system-config-iptables" to help you configure precisely what zones you want to open (or what Internet domains), and precisely what ports, in the precise context you want. (First prize would be an option that says, "Recognize this IP address, or range of addresses, for all ports required to run Samba or NFS or whatever." Second prize is that someone here tell me what ports I need to open, and which protocols.) And anyone here who has experience with WINE, I'd like to hear from you--I have some special-purpose software written for Windows that I'd like to try to load.

Other than that, I have far fewer complaints about FC3 than I have about Windows, and that's all I can reasonably ask at any price--especially when that price is zero.

Temlakos


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