Originally posted by: xtknight
Originally posted by: Markbnj
Btw, got Samba up and working in no time. Linux seems much faster at propagating hist and share names on the network than windows.
Indeed. Sometimes my network Explorer windows just freeze at 99% CPU (forever). And that's when I'm trying to use Windows in VMware...
Originally posted by: soonerproud
I applaud your persistence in getting Ubuntu up and running. In the early days of Ubuntu I had the same persistence that gave me valuable knowledge that helps to this day. Most people would run screaming Linux is not ready for the desktop the first time they ran into a problem.
Linux has a lot of potential and is very close to being able to fully compete with Windows on the desktop space. People like you are going to help make that a reality sooner than later.
Yup. :thumbsup: As for the others who instantly quit trying, their blood pressure is probably better off.
I do appreciate the compliments, but here's the reality: I've been doing systems programming and systems admin in DOS and Windows for 20 years, and general application design and development for much of that time. So I'm not really a good indicator of the experience a general user would have, if only because I have access to you guys here

. Furthermore, the general user population is much more likely to have a machine like the one I was working with in this thread, i.e. a bundle-box from some discount retailer with God-knows-what in it.
I think it's obvious that the general non-tech user would have given up on this install. Windows XP would have, and has, been installed on this same box without error or any technical user intervention. For my part, as I said earlier, I believe this has nothing to do with the quality of the implementation, and everything to do with having resources available to test out to the hairy edges of the hardware population. When you have billions in cash resources, and the industry clout to set standards and bring all OEMs to the table, you can make that happen.
Ubuntu has a ways to go in this regard, as do probably all the distros. I like to think that over time hardware issues like this will become even more rare, but will that happen because the Linux community gains more testing resources, or hardware vendors make more standardized and compatible machines? I don't know. I do expect hardware to make a lot less of a difference in computing in general decades from now, and that's good news for Linux.
Now I'm off to see if I can get that PCI FX5500 working, since the onboard only has 8 megs of video ram (ouch).