sailorman
Well-Known Member
Is it normal to pay up front prior to using it
Contribution $16
what to do & is it worth the cost
TIA
Contribution $16
what to do & is it worth the cost
TIA
Getting blue screen with Open cpn on W7 now & then so thought another OS might be better
Getting blue screen with Open cpn on W7 now & then so thought another OS might be better
... I think you already know that your BSODs may be to do with drivers for devices that aren't W7 specific? Maybe its time to upgrade your serial-USB adapters?
I agree with lustyd though, if you can't sort out a BSOD in Windows you'll really struggle with Ubuntu/Linux.
I wouldn't have the first clue about "sorting out" a BSOD on Windows (proven, in fact - in a spirit of curiosity I recently installed Windows 7 on my second machine at work, it started regularly bluescreening, I've turned it off and ignored it). But I've used Linux as my desktop exclusively for seven years at work, and for most of four years of uni before that (uni-owned machines were Solaris though). Machines I remotely log into have been AIX, Solaris, HP-UX, Linux, z/OS, and very occasionally i5OS.
For personal stuff I use a Mac, though, which is better than any of them
Pete
Is it normal to pay up front prior to using it
Contribution $16
what to do & is it worth the cost
TIA
But then you are quite geeky and a professional user of such thingsI wouldn't have the first clue about "sorting out" a BSOD on Windows (proven, in fact - in a spirit of curiosity I recently installed Windows 7 on my second machine at work, it started regularly bluescreening, I've turned it off and ignored it). But I've used Linux as my desktop exclusively for seven years at work, and for most of four years of uni before that (uni-owned machines were Solaris though). Machines I remotely log into have been AIX, Solaris, HP-UX, Linux, z/OS, and very occasionally i5OS.
For personal stuff I use a Mac, though, which is better than any of them
Pete
not the current RedHat 6 either <smugnerdface>
5.1 was distributed on floppy disks and RPMs added during install from online sources, there was as far as i know no official cd. it's still available from some sources but impossible to run because it checked the CPU before install and x686 class processors make it say no to installation
I recently threw away some old CDs, I think there was a Red Hat 5.1 among them.
Had to get yer Linux by post in those days, downloading it over a home Internet connection would have been an absurd idea.
Pete
5.1 was distributed on floppy disks and RPMs added during install from online sources, there was as far as i know no official cd.