The Well-Tempered Debian desktop
An anonymous reader writes "What happens when the editor of a popular Linux website attempts to install a Debian Etch desktop on an old ThinkPad? How does it turn out? Surprisingly well! The article comprises an entertaining account of the entire process, complete with lots of informative screenshots, from downloading the net-install to tangling with Wi-Fi and modem PCMCIA cards as the last step — and everything in between. A great primer for Debian newbies... Go Debian!"
Are you guys all having hang-over or what? I am getting the FP :) Merry Christmas everyone from a Gentoo Desktop.
Any idea why Etch is ripping off the classic Windows GUI? I mean, in a way, all all GUI-s ripp off each other, but look at the chrome of the Windows and the standard controls... ??
Tried to install Debian once; well actually make that a large number of times over 6 a 6 month period.
I might have succeeded too if my boss would have given me a year's sabbatical with pay in order to complete the job.
Thanks but NO THANKS!
I have better things to do with my time.
How about installing Debian Etch on an NSLU2?
What happens when the editor of a popular Linux website attempts to install a Debian Etch desktop on an old ThinkPad?
The real question is: what happens when non-popular-linux-website folks attempt to install a Debian Etch on an old thinkpad? I'm not sure the report would be so peachy...
"A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
``What happens when the editor of a popular Linux website attempts to install a Debian Etch desktop on an old ThinkPad? How does it turn out? Surprisingly well!''
Only if you don't know Debian and you don't know IBM ThinkPads. If you do know them, you know that Debian generally works really well. Of course, Linux support for laptop hardware isn't always stellar, but IBM seems to actually have made an effort to ensure their hardware, including ThinkPads, played nice with Linux. Alas, Lenovo seems to have no intention of continuing that tradition.
Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
Since Mark Shuttleworth made it clear in no uncertain terms that they're in it for the money, should Ubuntu users start looking into Debian? The article makes it very attractive to do so.
I just did the exact same thing myself. I don't know what type of computer this guy had, but I installed Etch on a Thinkpad 390X this past Friday. (That's like a 5 year old at least model I got for $40 used...) It went suprisingly simply actually. It even detected my wireless card no problems, which really surprised me.
The only hitch in the procedure that is even sorta the fault of Linux is that I don't know how to get it so that the computer will hibernate/resume.
This page describes install of Debian Etch on Dell Inspiron 1150, including tweaks for Compiz and Truecrypt encryption.
The only hitch in the procedure that is even sorta the fault of Linux is that I don't know how to get it so that the computer will hibernate/resume.
Oh yeah, and my sound card doesn't work.
Beautiful title, OP. Well done.
The article is interesting and all but it's not that useful. Installing Etch on a laptop that has components more recent than a PIII 600mhz cpu would be a much useful writeup. Most people are working with much newer equipment and seeing how well Etch supports recent laptop hardware would be much more useful for them.
"When you sit with a nice girl for two hours, it seems like two minutes. When you sit on a hot stove for two minutes, it
Does this mean that year 2007 will be the YEAR OF LINUX DESKTOP?
I kid, i kid! =)
I don't know about this article. The author wasn't able to completely fill his desktop with icons.
My only complaint about KDE is the klutter of it--all the stuff in the menus and all the included apps. A nice slimmed down KDE would be nice.
CDE open sourced! https://sourceforge.net/projects/cdesktopenv/
IBM ThinkPad 2662-35U, Pentium III 600MHz processor, 192MB of SDRAM, and a 20GB hard drive.
Not enough RAM.
- Download and install RealPlayer from real.com
- Download and install Adobe Reader from adobe.com
- Download and install Flash Player from adobe.com
- Download and install the Opera browser from opera.com
- Download and install Skype from skype.com
- Download and install Java from sun.com
- Download and install Crossover Office
- Microsoft Core Fonts
- MP3 non-free support
- Microsoft Video Codecs
- DeCSS!!!
Why don't you just install Windows? You've missed the entire point.Apparently dude've never read FHS. Say goodbye to your favorite packages when you apt-get upgrade.
The "dear editor" should try installing Etch on a LENOVO-built T60p, and then maybe, just maybe I'll be impressed!! (Writing this on an IBM-built T42p while my brand new LENOVO-built T60p languishes!!!)
i know i sound like a fanboy, but i simply love debian...
to the point of tattooing the swirl on my left arm.
and windowmaker's icon in my back.
and yes, i'm as geek as geek can be.
What ? Me, worry ?
I read the article on an IBM Thinkpad 560X with a Pentium 200MMX processor, 96MB of EDO RAM, and a 30GB Linux partition, running Debian Sarge. If his laptop is old, is mine an antique?
maybe i'm doing it wrong, but i run the mozilla firefox from /home//bin. that way i've got all the permissions i need to update without using su or sudo. it does pick up installed addons from the debian version, but to get flash working i just symlink to the libflashplugin.so installed by the flashplugin-nonfree.
the only restriction is you can't run both debian and official versions at the same time. which is fine since i run konqueror for nearly everything.
it will be the well tempered out-of-date Debian desktop.
From RTFA:
That's why aptitude's command "search" does exist.
e.g. "aptitude search sudoku" would search package names (and descriptions?) for string "sudoku". "dpkg -l '*sudoku*'" haven't really ever worked.
P.S. RTFA sucks. Judging Linux by ease of installation?? Give me a break. I use Linux precisely because (compared to Windows) I need to install it only once. And then it just works. Many of my friends use Linux precisely because of that stability - that allows people to actually concentrate on my own work. (M$Windows? You just have to reboot XP every week and reinstall it every year - to keep it running normally.)
All hope abandon ye who enter here.
What would be a better test of Debian Etch is seeing how it handles a *new* laptop. Everyone knows that Debian Stable is going to be easy to install on old hardware because they prioritize stability over timely release cycles and bleeding edge software. But that's exactly why so many people have trouble installing Debian, because they want to install it on new hardware that isn't supported by Debian Stable's outdated drivers.
Oh, how I wish they would do away with the Windows task bar. It works fine when you have just a few windows open, but pretty soon you will get too many windows to properly fit in the task bar.
There are some work arounds, like putting the task bar on the side (makes the buttons hard to hit) or grouping several windows under one button (so you have to go through multiple levels to get to the one you want - yech), but by far the best solution I've seen is the one from NEXTSTEP: use icons, with a small text to differentiate between documents in the same application. You can fit many more icons on the screen edge than you can taskbar buttons, and they are easy to hit.
Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
But it took basically everything I've learned over the last 3 years of using Fedora Core Linux to turn Debian into my customary desktop environment just to figure out what to install, and to track down dependencies not handled by Debian installers. If I knew then what I knew now, maybe I would have gone with Kubuntu.
I switched because I couldn't get FC6 to run my new Biostar GeForce6100 (Nvidia chipset) AM2 integrated motherboard video. And if you're using FC6. . . please, no more suggestions, assume that I've tried anything you can think of and it blew out with the same FPEexception message. Debian got the video working on the first try with vesa (NOT nv), and the second time around, the Debian-modified Nvidia driver worked just fine.
I'm surprised the article author didn't notice that under the hood, Lin/Freespire is Debian, too.
Agreed. Personally, I don't know why the community hasn't gone to static packages with all library dependencies installed with the program. It's not like disk space or broadband availability is a problem anymore. I'd rather put up with a longer download and waste disk space than have to install Yet Another Package from source.
Tech Public Policy stuff
Why the author of this article is going all that trouble to install firefox and real player and the such manually?
apt is the only program you need to install every package you want.
There are gazillions of deb repositories around the world which offer almost everything you want.
go to apt-get.org and search for your package, then add the repository's address to your sources.list file.
In the process of search on apt-get.org, you will find some great repositories, some even on universities offering whatever free software they use intenraly. Many of them do the hard job of packaging everything not present in official Debian repositories.
Find your way into the apt, (or if you are a GUI guy, use aptitude), instead of trying to shoot yourself in the foot by making manual symlinks here and there.
Seriously, do they hire clueless amateurs for writing these kinds of 'reviews'? So that they can point out 100 times in their writings that 'a user in the discussion forum attached to this article told me that I should do this and add that to my blabla.conf'? It's not even funny.
Debian Etch uses the same installer the current Knoppix does.
So drop in a Knoppix LiveCD and if it boots to the Desktop, go ahead with Etch.
Following this helpful hint is what got my desktop Linux box video working.
Tech Public Policy stuff
installer package most certainly does work. . . I couldn't make the FC6 installer work (as in result in working video) after a week of trying.
Tech Public Policy stuff
Not another "how I installed and rated distro X." We are all doomed.
..end of rant..
"LINUX" will never go mainstream for the home and this FA proves it yet again:
1. Linux doesn't exist as on OS - its just a kernel.
2. Fragmentation - too many distros with few standards or cooperation
3. linux fanboys think their fav distro is the "be-all and end-all" of existence
4. Its too hard for users to simply run the apps they want
5. package management sucks
6. hardware support sucks
I could go on and and on. Whoop dee doo...so he got debian "kinda-sorta" running on an old thinkpad. Whoopie.
What OS do I run, you ask? MS Windows 2000 and XP. Because they are true standardized OS with software and hardware support.
What Linux distro for speed and stability? Slackware. Because it is faster, more stable and has the best hardware compatibility there is among distros, and package management is simple, if simplistic. And believe it or not, a motivated novice can figure out how to edit a few text config files.
So I see the FA (and the linked distro comparison) and raise him 2 thinkpads, 2 compaqs, 4+ desktops ranging from Pentium266MMX to PII400 to PIII900 to AMD64. The only hardware issue was the laptops' Winmodens and those infrared ports. Oh and a cheap Leadtek Winfast TV card with MythTV. Everything else works "out of the box," especially Firefox and Thunderbird.
The WiFi and modem problems.. sure that's a good point. The rest of your shock at the "horror of it all", shows you don't understand what he was modifying. I am sure that a Windows "power user" tweaking a system would seem just as complicated to the average Windows newbie. I've said it before, I'll say it again.. to do complicated things is, well.. complicated.
waiting for ad.doubleclick.net
"A linux user installs a linux distribution on a computer"
Holy Snapples!
1. Linux doesn't exist as on OS - its just a kernel.
;)
Linux isn't - FreeBSD is. They have their own kernel, C library, and toolchain if you use TenDRA.
2. Fragmentation - too many distros with few standards or cooperation
See above.
3. linux fanboys think their fav distro is the "be-all and end-all" of existence
Debian fanboys are a particularly obnoxious breed. I don't consider FreeBSD perfect...hardware support admittedly is still sketchy...but it's a damn sight better than anything I've come across in the Linux scene.
4. Its too hard for users to simply run the apps they want
5. package management sucks
Ports is VASTLY more user friendly and stable than any form of package management I've used with Linux...don't take my fanboyish word for it, though. *grin* Try it yourself and see.
What Linux distro for speed and stability? Slackware. Because it is faster, more stable and has the best hardware compatibility there is among distros, and package management is simple, if simplistic.
Enormously agreed. Debian seems to have deviated from what used to be the norm (and is now only represented by Slackware, tragically) in seemingly just about every way possible, and the rationale generally seems to have been, "because we can."
From TFA:
Yeah. I know. And I like it that way.
Linux isn't - FreeBSD is. They have their own kernel, C library, and toolchain if you use TenDRA.
True. I have FreeBSD iso here somewhere but haven't yet had a chance to give it a whirl. Of course, my rant was directed at linux fanboys (of whom I am one) and not the Unix flavors. I do have enough spare parts about so maybe...
Basically, I searched the world over for an open source alternative to a proprietary OS that is simple and allows me to use the computer as the tool it is meant to be. As a computer hobbyist, sure I could fiddle and play with it all day; but as a user, I just gotta get shit done...Heck maybe I'll just stick with Slackware. After 10+ yrs I can set it up on anything.
It just rankles me that the open source world is so busy with maximizing choice that we spend more time playing with the OS (i.e "distro") than actually using the computer for anything. Oh, and don't get me started on the binary vs. compile-it-all-from-source and the "evils" of ever trying to make a living using open source.
Anyway, time to recompile the kernel..why? BECAUSE I CAN!