preface:
I'm interested in the state of Linux in the desktop area; about once a year, I load a distro on one of my old PCs I have lying around and see how much better it has gotten since the last time I tried it. Up to now, I've always given up on it after a few days of tinkering, as either my problems couldn't be fixed or required too much effort to fix.
So, this weekend it was time to test the following distro:
Xubuntu 8.10, as it's supposed to be light-weight compared to the bloated default installs on other distributions. And the pc it's going to be installed on is not high-end in any way:
P3-450, 256MB RAM, SB16, Intel 100Mb NIC, Matrox G400, SCSI HDD, IDE DVDRW.
Experiences:
Installation:
the 'partitioning wizard' part of the Xubuntu installer could use some work, as I needed to enter some stuff that a computer illiterate user would not be able to do (regarding which partition types to create, how to make the proper partition active, where to put the bootloader). Oh, and the timezone selection part of the wizard is really a pain to use.
First Xfce startup experience:
it takes ages... at least twice as long to boot up as Win98 does on the other partition.
And.. no sound! let's see if there's any gui to load the snd-sb16 driver module (or better: auto-detect, as most illiterate people wouldn't know the name of their soundcard). Nope! can't find anything!
So... after adding snd-sb16 to /etc/modules, I now get sound... but only when I use sudo for the programs that have to access the soundcard! wtf is going on here???
Knowing somewhat about linux, my guess was that somehow my user wasn't included in a user group that had audio access. After troubleshooting a bit on the web and IRC, this indeed seems to be the case. So, because Xubuntu didn't detect my soundcard when installing it decided that I never would need audio! tell someone without knowledge about how linux works how to fix that without help...
how to get rid of those horrid Firfox and Thunderbird applications?
Just pressing 'uninstall' from the add/remove programs entry doesn't seem to do the trick, as other packages depend on those two? It tells me to use the synaptic package manager. Ok, so I load up the synaptic package manager. After trying to find out how it works, I can only conclude that it looks like it's primarily designed this way to confuse people. I decide it is too much hassle to find out how it works and to remove the firefox and thunderbird applications. Time to tackle the next problem...
enable AIGLX and compositing:
people keep telling how great linux works on older hardware, as it is not as demanding as Windows Vista and XP (though my experiences about the latter seem to disagree for non-lightweight distros). One of the things that attract me to desktop linux is AIGLX and compositing, like Vista does but also on hw that is of an lower class than 'DX9'. My Millennium G400 is 'DX6 class', so I'm curious just how much lower class gives you a nice compositing experience.
However, I'm told that I need to install an unofficial driver as the default Xorg driver doesn't seem to support AIGLX properly. So I head over to some tuxhome site and download the latest unofficial drivers, install them and reboot the box.
Unfortunately, I get an error saying abouthing about undefined symbol: xf86ScreenIndex in the mga_drv.so. Something with the latest Xorg being incompatible with this unofficial driver. Oh well, seems like I have to wait till its fixed (if it ever will be), or use an older Xorg version (not going to try that this time round).
Mouse thumb buttons not working:
haven't digged into editing xorg.conf yet, but my mouse thumb buttons (Logitech MX400) do not work on a standard install. Haven't yet checked if the multi-media keys of my MS Internet Pro keyboard work.
Conclusion:
Linux (or at least Xubuntu) still needs work before it's a serious alternative to Microsoft Windows (or apple OSX for that matter).
I'm interested in the state of Linux in the desktop area; about once a year, I load a distro on one of my old PCs I have lying around and see how much better it has gotten since the last time I tried it. Up to now, I've always given up on it after a few days of tinkering, as either my problems couldn't be fixed or required too much effort to fix.
So, this weekend it was time to test the following distro:
Xubuntu 8.10, as it's supposed to be light-weight compared to the bloated default installs on other distributions. And the pc it's going to be installed on is not high-end in any way:
P3-450, 256MB RAM, SB16, Intel 100Mb NIC, Matrox G400, SCSI HDD, IDE DVDRW.
Experiences:
Installation:
the 'partitioning wizard' part of the Xubuntu installer could use some work, as I needed to enter some stuff that a computer illiterate user would not be able to do (regarding which partition types to create, how to make the proper partition active, where to put the bootloader). Oh, and the timezone selection part of the wizard is really a pain to use.
First Xfce startup experience:
it takes ages... at least twice as long to boot up as Win98 does on the other partition.
And.. no sound! let's see if there's any gui to load the snd-sb16 driver module (or better: auto-detect, as most illiterate people wouldn't know the name of their soundcard). Nope! can't find anything!
So... after adding snd-sb16 to /etc/modules, I now get sound... but only when I use sudo for the programs that have to access the soundcard! wtf is going on here???
Knowing somewhat about linux, my guess was that somehow my user wasn't included in a user group that had audio access. After troubleshooting a bit on the web and IRC, this indeed seems to be the case. So, because Xubuntu didn't detect my soundcard when installing it decided that I never would need audio! tell someone without knowledge about how linux works how to fix that without help...
how to get rid of those horrid Firfox and Thunderbird applications?
Just pressing 'uninstall' from the add/remove programs entry doesn't seem to do the trick, as other packages depend on those two? It tells me to use the synaptic package manager. Ok, so I load up the synaptic package manager. After trying to find out how it works, I can only conclude that it looks like it's primarily designed this way to confuse people. I decide it is too much hassle to find out how it works and to remove the firefox and thunderbird applications. Time to tackle the next problem...
enable AIGLX and compositing:
people keep telling how great linux works on older hardware, as it is not as demanding as Windows Vista and XP (though my experiences about the latter seem to disagree for non-lightweight distros). One of the things that attract me to desktop linux is AIGLX and compositing, like Vista does but also on hw that is of an lower class than 'DX9'. My Millennium G400 is 'DX6 class', so I'm curious just how much lower class gives you a nice compositing experience.
However, I'm told that I need to install an unofficial driver as the default Xorg driver doesn't seem to support AIGLX properly. So I head over to some tuxhome site and download the latest unofficial drivers, install them and reboot the box.
Unfortunately, I get an error saying abouthing about undefined symbol: xf86ScreenIndex in the mga_drv.so. Something with the latest Xorg being incompatible with this unofficial driver. Oh well, seems like I have to wait till its fixed (if it ever will be), or use an older Xorg version (not going to try that this time round).
Mouse thumb buttons not working:
haven't digged into editing xorg.conf yet, but my mouse thumb buttons (Logitech MX400) do not work on a standard install. Haven't yet checked if the multi-media keys of my MS Internet Pro keyboard work.
Conclusion:
Linux (or at least Xubuntu) still needs work before it's a serious alternative to Microsoft Windows (or apple OSX for that matter).
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