![]() At some point when it started formatting partition, I’ve selected the option of checking for bad sectors – MY MISTAKE! it has reported that my hard drive has lots of bad sectors, and it doesn’t recommend to continue installation – and aborted the whole procedure. The installation GUI was UGLY AS A HELL, but I did manage to navigate through it. After trying several times, I gave up on Mandrake as well.įinally, I’ve decided to try Red Hat 9.0 which is available from our school download server. On booting LInux, it got stucked while ‘testing for new hardware’. I’ve downloaded ISO images, went through installation without any problems. There should be an option of some low-level keyboard-navigation based installation procedure. ![]() Certainly they have very nice installation GUI, but if something goes wrong, you’re screwed up. Doesn’t matter, still I’ve lost my mouse and couldn’t finish the installation.Īt this point I’ve decided I’m pretty much done with SUSE. Next I repeated the same procedure again, but this time when it has prompted me to load USB drivers, I said “NO”. I’ve tried to navigate with keyboard to continue installation, but clearly the whole installation GUI is designed with mouse in mind. I’ve clicked on OK, and next I’ve lost my mouse (which is a touch pad type). When it has identified that I have USB interfaces it has prompted me for OK to load USB. After I’ve loaded the proper driver, and plugged all the necessary network parameters, it has found the server, downloaded files, and started installation.Īt some point it has started identifying different devices and loading the drivers, every time I have to confirm the action or say DO NOT. Fortunately - because I did have WinXP installed – I rebooted XP, went to the hardware browser and learned that I have Intel Pro/100.īack to the SUSE. So I had to manually pick up the appropriate module. The first suprprise was that the install procedure couldn’t identify my network card, just couldn’t find it. Downloaded and burned bootstrap ISO image and started installation. So I’ve pocked around and found fairly fast server. The disk was already partitioned, the 1st partition (NTFS) contained Windows XP, the rest was unformatted.īecause I’ve heard a lot about SUSE 9.0 release and how great they support the laptops I’ve decided to give it a shot, but because I wasn’t sure whether it would work or not, I’ve decided to try with remote install first, and if I like it – go ahead and purchase the PRO version. The only drawback is that it isn't compatible with some older Cygwin addons, but in most cases this won't matter.About a couple weeks ago I’ve decided to do my first ever Linux install, on Toshiba s5205-503. Whether or not these mean anything to you, they're there, and make the shell incredibly easy to use. For those who do want to make more use of the shell's provisions, and have a Linux-lite environment running right on their non-Linux desktop, there's a package manager called pact, proxy support, plugins, and high-end xTerm compatibility. Let's put it this way: Babun provides Cygwin functionality with little to no setup if all you want to do is run an ancient UNIX-based game. Plus, it's free! No need for the nitty-gritty ![]() This shell makes it very easy, and provides some additional features, to boot. Some of these are as simple as games, but the difficulty of getting your average shell up and running is a large barrier to entry. ![]() There are many pieces of Linux software designed to be used with Cygwin, another shell. ![]() Softonic review There's no need for Cygwin with Babunīabun is a shell, meaning that it can be used to run many different command-line programs. ![]()
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