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<font size="+1"><font face="Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif">As loyal
readers here might recall, I’ve been playing with - no, working with -
various Linux distros in order to run digiKam in its native OS. (Is
that loyalty, or what? Many dozens of hours!) I’ve come to some
finalizations, which I will summarize here:<br>
<br>
Oh, native OS for me is Windows XP Pro, Service Pack 3, running on an
AMD 3800+ with 3GB (soon to be 5GB) RAM. I have my hard drive broken
into two partitions, C which is the Windows, Virtual Box, and dual boot
Wubi OS’s and supporting files, and D which is all of my data. Why, I
hear you ask? A long ago experience of having data wiped in an aborted
Checkdisk run. I’ve gotten used to this and it’s very safe from
machine or human error. <br>
<br>
The problem for me, using two partitions, with Ubuntu/Wubi/Mint Linux:
As designed, the installer is prevented from having, or using, or
becoming a root user. That means no access to the drive the Linux OS
is installed on, “C” or hda1 to those who insist. That has been my
default database location, although my photos are on easily accessed
D. For Windows users on Wubi, it appears you just can’t get access to
your C drive without going through the annoyance of Secret Instructions
and Terminal. Maybe someday when I need another challenge in my life,
I’ll correct that.<br>
<br>
For Virtual Box, The Winner Is: PC Linux OS. I tried a lot of distros,
maybe a dozen. Some would not install, several I aborted because I
wasn’t confident that it wasn’t going to partition my C drive, several
insisted on pretending that the live CD was installed after VB
installation and hence, not the subsequent OS. BZZZZZT!<br>
<br>
Standard KDE PCLOS went in w/o a problem (although like many other
distros, my screen resolution required constant sliding downward to see
the Forward type buttons during the installation), reboots w/o a
problem, and with the Guest Additions installed, sees my C and D
partitions without a problem. I have found the overall look and feel
welcoming to this Windows user. Not too simplistic, not too complex,
just right. Nice large screens and icons. Visually robust.<br>
<br>
So, I’ve been hanging around the PCLOS community, and I guess “ease of
use” on a desktop is the priority of development. No server edition.
Also, a “When its ready" philosophy, which leads to great stability. I
also like the rolling distribution, just update via Synaptic now and
then. The independent on line magazine is stunning in its usefulness
and teaching. <br>
<br>
I like it well enough that I might re-re-partition my primary drive for
Linux again, or run PCLOS (What an awkward name! Of course it’s an
OS!) on a different hard drive. <br>
<br>
If you’ve not tried this distro and don’t feel you must continue down
the loyalty path of whatever you are using, give it a whirl. <br>
<br>
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