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How-Tos

The Easy Way to Switch to Linux

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Bring Your Email Over
Getting your email to Linux seems like a tricky proposition, but it’s actually not that hard. First, you’ll need an IMAP email account—if you don’t have one already, you can sign up for a free one at www.aim.com. While you’re still in Windows, you need to configure your existing email client to use the IMAP account (for AIM, just point the IMTP server setting to imap.aol.com), then copy your mail to folders on that account. Once you’ve installed Linux, open Thunderbird (you’ll need to install it via Applications, then Add/Remove) and point it to the same IMAP account (see image below)—all your mail will be there waiting for you. You can drag the mail back down to the desktop and reconfigure your client to use your normal servers.

Playing Video on Linux
The default app for playing video on Ubuntu is Totem. However, like Windows Media Player, it’s just a front end that relies on external codecs to play properly. Remember those restricted packages you installed earlier? They included a whole bunch of codecs designed to work with Totem; you should have good support for most MPEG-4-based codecs, including Xvid and Divx. If you plan to watch movies encoded with AC3 audio, you’ll also need to install the ffmpeg gstreamer plugin; search Synaptic for it. And since Totem won’t play DVDs, you should search Synaptic for Gstreamer0.8-DVD and Gstreamer0.8-MPEG2dec for that purpose.

About Printing
Here at Maximum PC, we’re firm believers in the paperless office. Not because we particularly love the environment, but because we really, strongly dislike printers. They’re always running out of ink at the most inopportune times, and most of them (at least the consumer-friendly inkjets that everyone uses) don’t work very well in Linux. We could easily double the size of this article by listing all the printers that are incompatible with Linux, but instead of doing that, we’ll point you to the Linux Foundation’s guide to printing on Linux.

Keeping OpenOffice.org Compatible
As much as it pains us to choose a proprietary format over an open one, the secret to keeping OpenOffice and Word working happily together is for OpenOffice to always save documents using the Microsoft formats.

There’s a trick to using OpenOffice.org, and that is to use the proper default file format. If you use OO.o’s native file format, whether it’s for a text document, a spreadsheet, or anything else, Microsoft Office users will be unable to open it. You need to go into the options for each OO.o program you use and under Load/Save, in the General section, set the default file format to the most recent Microsoft option (for the word processor, it’s Microsoft Word 97/2000/XP; for the spreadsheet it’s Microsoft Excel 97/2000/XP).

COMMENTS:25
COMMENTS
avatarTracking

Just Tracking Thanks

I love Ubuntu

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avatarGood to see you touting Linux

The first time I tried Linux it was Debian 1.3.1 I think. It was on a CD that came with the Nov. 97 Boot Magazine. It's been downhill ever since and now all my computers at work and home run some distro of Linux. It's good to see that this magazine has gone from Booting to being the Max and that Linux has gone from three days of trying to get an ISA SB16 to finally work to just clicks away from a fully working installed OS. Apps and all.

 You both have matured well. Cool.

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avatarplease update this article

muximum pc you guys really need to update this article, days has gone fast and ubuntu 8.10 is the current version...that also means tha we are facing diferent configuration problems :)

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avatarUbuntu Hardy

When is this going to be updated for Ubuntu Hardy?

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avatar no flash.......................NO FLASH!

The bulk of my problems with any form of Linux I've installed so far is Flash. Until the web, which is so Flash oriented, runs properly on Linux, all distros of Linux will remain on the smallest partitions of my smallest hard drive & can never be my primary operating system.

"When a decision is made, confusion ends"

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avatarHow bootable off USB?

I love Unbuntu. Just like to know how you make it portable off a USB drive.

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avatarAudio Drivers and Swtiching in gereral

Just in case any of you are still looking creative does have beta drivers for the X-Fi sounds cards, which is good as that's what I use.
As far as dumping Vista for Ubuntu or any other version, well from what I have read and seen if you are using your system for 'office' use over all it should work well, but if you play games and use the system for basically everything else or as a non-office system - Myself I'll stick with Vista until I can play my games and run my other apps using it. While it is in many ways a better O/S it still has a long way to go for everyday use - IMHO

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avatarNot so easy

Switching from Windows to Linux may be easy for a programmer maybe, but from the normal user point of view this will be madness. Maybe he can learn how to use applications that look and feel more and more like their Window rivals, but what a man can do when there is a problem? In Windows we'll always have restart :)

Download free Linux software

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avatarReal men switch to FreeBSD.

Real men switch to FreeBSD. ;)

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avatarUbuntu 7.10 rules!

Hey all. I have switched over to linux on my home box. As well, I go to a technical institute where I've already obtained my A+ cert and working towards my net+... but anyways lol we are slowly introducing ubuntu as the secondary OS. If you're skeptical as I was, you shouldn't be! Ubuntu linux is the easiest flavor of linux to learn and use! Please give it a try! And for those of you who can't live without your call of duty 4 or orange box, they have WINE which emulates a Windows environment.

Good Luck Ubuntu!

Fultz

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avatarWireless Ubuntu Question

Once Ubuntu is successfully installed (with correct drivers etc), does it show you all available wireless networks, either through the OS or an application?

I'm considering my laptop as an Ubuntu canidate.
I currently use it as a wireless atlas while I travel.

Thanks in advance.
Somercy Hamilton

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avatarLinux or Unix...

Nick00
Has anyone ever heard of or tried pcbsd? Like to hear more about it.

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avatarUbuntu Linux failures

Hi,
Video Editing is not one of the areas that Linux has seen strong development - at least not for free! I've seen a few programs out there, but they cost a bit(!) so I wont be getting them.
What are they like compared to Windows programs? I dont know as I 've never used Windows Editing Suites either (except WMM, which doesn't count).

Linux develops because users want to create or develop a certain app or game for it. Someone creates a base version. others add a function, some add two or three, others modify those functions with cool graphics abilities, etc and after a couple of years you have a fantastic program. Think it takes 3-6 months to develop WoW??? Think again. Those gaming companies burn through developers and game writers faster than you can say where did my life go. (and over 6-8 years life cycles for games).
Linux , I believe, has a shorter development life (I dont have anything to base that one except casual observation though). It can produce a lot more applications as the same code base is used and simultaneously developed for multiple programs.

I found Tremulous, Alien Arena, Neziuz and Open Arena all worked as is on my Linux laptop (that isnt powerful enough for Windows). Eve also works (sort of), but crashes in 30 seconds of the game. But I'm not surprised when I'm running under half Min spec on a non-supported Graphics card! The fact it runs at all is a tribute to Linux Developers everywhere and the support of the Linux community. If you want something, then others would have too and you will have a very good chance of finding it with a simple Google search.

In short Linux does work, it is ready for 90% of all desktops everywhere and is smaller, faster and a lot better than Windows. Ubuntu makes it easy and makes it happen, easier! (IMHO)

Regards,

Jason Brisbane

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avatarhmmm

Ubuntu has made some really great strides in the linux desktop arena. However, there is one seriously overlooked distro that does some things better than ubuntu, and is just as user friendly if not more in some cases.

That is Sabayon Linux.

I suggest anyone curious check it out...

Sabayonlinux.org

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avatarThat's not fair!

That's not fair! I edit videos for a living....
and none of it is good enough to be on youtube!!! (haha)

seriously though, I think many edit system providers are waiting to jump at the chance to base their system on Linux, but are waiting till it's friendliness is fully mature. Install friendly and better graphics drivers should be the key to that. Only problem is...would their editing apps have to be open source?

---
Hey Will, since it's a CC publication, would you be opposed to someone making available a printworthy word doc version they put together? It would include proper credit to the original authors, to this website, and link to the cc terms page of course. If you prefer not...than that person will just keep it for themselves.

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avatarAnd now, another reason to love your penguin.

This is funny for all those windows haters.
http://tinyurl.com/yo7bnn

**********
Every morning is the dawn of a new error.

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avatarI would love to switch to

I would love to switch to linux but unless you use only word processing surf the web it is pretty useless. If I could use Premier and after effects on it with out any issue I switch in a second. My next comp will be a mac for sure.

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avatarLinux may be useless for YOU...

Ask yourself about the type of software vendors that target the Linux community. Three specific programs come to mind. AutoCAD, Maple, and MATLAB. Now, many programs like this are available for Windows or Mac, but, of the few commercially supported programs available for Linux, most are of this nature. This is because they know the kind of people that use Linux (i.e. Engineers, Scientists, etc.). If your main concern when choosing an operating system is "video editing apps", then you should be fine with Windows or Mac. Now, run along and edit your little video and post it up on youtube.

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avatarCC license = good!!! Thank

CC license = good!!! Thank you kindly.

No easily printable version = bad! Where's that PDF link????

regardless, I was planning on trying Linux in the next few weeks (after finishing my slipstream PC re-install on my in-laws pc). Good timing, Thanks for this!

=====

Re: DiRTDOG..., why would you switch to mac just to use premiere and AFX? The PC versions are always first to be updated and released, and often include functionality the mac versions don't have or don't get until later. That's reason right there to stay pc based.

====

There's no time like the future.

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avatar===== Re: DiRTDOG..., why

=====

Re: DiRTDOG..., why would you switch to mac just to use premiere and AFX? The PC versions are always first to be updated and released, and often include functionality the mac versions don't have or don't get until later. That's reason right there to stay pc based.

====

Good point bro, Im just tired of the ustability and bloat of M$ products. I have a very decent system to run video editing apps and they still run slow compared to when I use them on a mac. I have 2gb of ram and the system alone takes up 1/4 of that just to run. It will be a few years before I need a new comp so time will tell on whether or not I go the mac side. The OSX is extremely stable.

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avatarPDF Versions

We actually don't make PDF or single-page versions of web articles right now. That's something I'd like to add to the next revision of the site though. Stay tuned.

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avatarThis will be nice when it

In Reply To WillSmith:

This will be nice when it happens!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Did you went to school?
What do you think?
Maybe, It would take a lot of work... and someone on the inside...
I could call in a few favors... but only if you're REALLY serious...
the blue one!

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avatarMaximum Linux

Yep I remember getting (and still have) Maximum Linux mags. Could it be that Maximum Linux can now be part of Maximum PC?

Love the Linux hardware/driver and gamming reviews as well. ;-)

Love Linux and 3D Linux Games :)

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avatarMaximum Linux coverage

I too have a few MaximumLinux mags around (I think 1,2,4,5 just fyi), by far my favorite Linux mags even now.  Alas, I'm a procrastinator-extraordinaire and never got around to subscribing to MaximumLinux or switching to Linux (lol but I've installed it dozens of times over the intervening years).

I'd love to see in-depth Linux coverage come to MaximumPC! (especially since I have a subscription to it and won't have to drive 40 miles like I did to find a newstand with MaximumLinux.)

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avatarLinux can be part of Maximum PC

Linux can be part of Maximum PC, I like this idea, Maximum PC can both have windows & linux?, just as parallels workstation, with the ability to use in multiple operating systems on a single Maximum PC, that will be cool.

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