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William Tracy wrote:
>
> While I'm drifting off topic :-) does anybody know how well Windows
> tolerates having applications installed to removable media? I've been
> looking at one of those newfangled flash-based laptops for a family
> member, but I don't know if she can fit all her software into four gigs.
> :-(
>
If you're talking about the Asus eee, then it's Linux. So you've had it
if you're trying to put Windows apps into it. It's worth remembering
these things are built for quick mobile computing and internet access
not serious computing. However, having said that I've played with a
couple and for what they cost and offer they're good value for money
John
--
I will be brief but not nearly so brief as Salvador Dali, who gave the
world's shortest speech. He said, "I will be so brief I am already
finished," then he sat down.
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From: William Tracy
Subject: Re: 64 or 32.. what to do, what to do?
Date: 28 Mar 2008 17:07:06
Message: <47ed6c0a@news.povray.org>
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Doctor John wrote:
> If you're talking about the Asus eee, then it's Linux. So you've had it
> if you're trying to put Windows apps into it.
I'm thinking of getting one for my sister, and I'm worried that she'll
immediately want me to put Windows XP on it. :-P She can get around in
Linux, but I'm not sure that I've made a convert yet.
> However, having said that I've played with a
> couple and for what they cost and offer they're good value for money
That's what I thought when I looked at the specs. The amount of RAM is
plenty, the processor looks fast enough if you're not doing POV ;-) but
I'm on the fence about whether the flash drive offers enough space.
I haven't been able to physically get my hands one one yet. :-(
--
William Tracy
afi### [at] gmailcom -- wtr### [at] calpolyedu
One time I put my car into reverse while traveling 70 mph on the
freeway. It was a very exciting learning experience.
-- seen on Slashdot
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William Tracy wrote:
> Larry Hudson wrote:
>
>> For my secondary drive I use removable drives. I have three different
>> drives I can plug in (only one at a time, of course).
>> (I like to play with different Linux distros... :-)
>
>
> Are we talking about USB drives? What's the price/specs? :-)
>
No, they're IDE drives. The way this works is that the drives are
mounted inside holders that plug in and out of an adapter in the
computer. They have a lock that is both a physical lock (so they can't
be unplugged accidentally) and a power switch (for that drive). Of
course, you only swap them when the computer power is off.
As to size/price -- mine are all 120GB, and IIRC the price was somewhere
around $70-$80 (US). But I also have an external 200GB USB I use mostly
for backups and music files. (These music files are mostly MP3s I have
made from my rather large (and old) collection of LPs. Still working on
converting more, however. I might even finish someday.) ;-)
> It's been a while since I last got adventurous with Linux distros (I
> settled into Ubuntu and Debian) but I might give it another go sometime.
>
If you _really_ want to get adventurous, check out LFS -- Linux From
Scratch (linuxfromscratch.org). With this you install EVERYTHING by
compiling from source! I tried it once but ran into some problems
(probably my own fault) and didn't get it completed. But I do intend to
try again sometime. It's a very interesting project. As I said in my
earlier post -- I'm weird and geeky. ;-)
However, I primarily use Fedora. I think I would go with Debian as my
second choice, but Ubuntu is good too.
> While I'm drifting off topic :-) does anybody know how well Windows
> tolerates having applications installed to removable media? I've been
> looking at one of those newfangled flash-based laptops for a family
> member, but I don't know if she can fit all her software into four gigs.
> :-(
>
Yep, really OT... I don't think there would be any problems. If you
try to run a program that's on a drive that's not currently plugged in,
Windows would just come up with its 'scanning-flashlight, searching'
box. But it shouldn't harm anything. In Windows, I use my swappable
hard drives mostly for data only, but I have a few programs on them
which run with no problems.
-=- Larry -=-
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Larry Hudson wrote:
> If you _really_ want to get adventurous, check out LFS -- Linux From
> Scratch (linuxfromscratch.org).
Actually, that was next on "to try" list. It should be fun getting Wifi
running. ;-)
> Yep, really OT... I don't think there would be any problems. If you
> try to run a program that's on a drive that's not currently plugged in,
> Windows would just come up with its 'scanning-flashlight, searching'
> box.
Cool.
Okay, I'm done dragging this off topic. ;-)
--
William Tracy
afi### [at] gmailcom -- wtr### [at] calpolyedu
When you expect to live another two hundred years, you behave
differently from when you expect to live only twenty.
-- Kim Stanley Robinson, _Red Mars_
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On Fri, 28 Mar 2008 00:07:50 -0700, Larry Hudson wrote:
> FWIW, I use System Commander as my boot manager, much easier to use for
> large numbers of OS's. Especially with the removable drives -- it
> detects the changes automatically.
Wow, another System Commander user - I have a copy around here
*somewhere* (generally don't need more than 2 OSes any more these days
myself). :-)
Jim
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"William Tracy" <wtr### [at] calpolyedu> wrote in message
news:47ed4f76$1@news.povray.org...
>
> While I'm drifting off topic :-) does anybody know how well
> Windows tolerates having applications installed to removable
> media? I've been looking at one of those newfangled flash-based
> laptops for a family member, but I don't know if she can fit all
> her software into four gigs. :-(
>
portableapps.com
Put them on a USB stick, put them on a hot swap drive,
etc.
Windows registry don't even know the apps are there.
All your data is portable too.
Lots of portable work is done for MSWin and other
OSs.
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"Doctor John" <doc### [at] gmailcom> schreef in bericht
news:47ed545f$1@news.povray.org...
> --
> I will be brief but not nearly so brief as Salvador Dali, who gave the
> world's shortest speech. He said, "I will be so brief I am already
> finished," then he sat down.
OT of course, but the briefest would be: <standing up> "Thank you for your
attention." <sitting down> :-)
Thomas
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pan wrote:
> portableapps.com
>
> Put them on a USB stick, put them on a hot swap drive,
*Nice*.
Thanks! :-)
--
William Tracy
afi### [at] gmailcom -- wtr### [at] calpolyedu
In the land of the blind, the autopilot is king.
-- Kim Stanley Robinson, _Red Mars_
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From: Tor Olav Kristensen
Subject: Re: 64 or 32.. what to do, what to do?
Date: 8 Apr 2008 15:43:54
Message: <47fbcafa@news.povray.org>
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Jim Henderson wrote:
> On Thu, 27 Mar 2008 15:03:31 -0500, Mike the Elder wrote:
>
>> Many thanks to all.
>>
>> My next investment is going to be a second hard drive from which to boot
>> 64 bit Linux.
>
> BTW, you don't need a second hard drive, separate partitions is just fine.
Although it is not actually needed, I would recommend a Linux newbie to
install Linux on a second HD (e.g. 20GB or more).
That's because he might want to boot from the Windows install CD later.
And before doing that it is nice to be able to unplug the Linux HD, so
that Windows does not mess up the boot partition (that Linux uses for
dual booting).
Mike:
When Windows has been set up on the first HD, just plug in the second
HD and let the Linux installation program discover Windows on the first
HD and then set up dual booting from the second HD. That way the boot
sector on first HD will be untouched by Linux and Windows won't notice
that Linux is living alongside it on another HD. (If you now remove the
second HD, Windows will be able to boot itself from the first HD.)
--
Tor Olav
http://subcube.com
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Mike the Elder wrote:
> the best, but budget restrictions applied). Having heard that problems
> exist with Windows XP Pro 64 bit in regard to various programs not working
Just get Ubuntu 64 and be happy :)
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