I suggest "The Not-So-Short Guide to LaTeX." I've found it in the past, but I didn't find it quickly today (even with Google). The filename is lshort.pdf in the version I've got, which should let you know if you're on the right track.
In most (lame user install-it-all-with-rpm) versions I know of, the 'Not-So-Short-Guide' comes with the latex distribution... check texmf/doc...
If their evaluation version is the same that they let german newspapers distribute --- then it's quite ok but **clearly** on the small side; doesn't even have the fortune cookie generator!!
I have SuSE 5.3 and thought I'd get a good deal when upgrading to 6.1 with one of these magazine-cds. Result: since 5.3 is libc5 and 6.1 glibc2, most of my applications went dead... luckily I discovered it when I installed the whole shaboom on a friend's computer; he wanted to discover it a bit and got a (partly) working SuSE with the advice of buying himself the distribution asap...
Now I'm just waiting for my next salary so that I finally can enter the world of glibc2 myself... (SuSE 5.3 can run glibc2 programs, but that hack seems to be above my abilities...)
Yes, I want my Linux to be a breeze with potential for a hurricane. Since I still consider myself a newbie, the YaST approach appeals big time to me. I don't want to have to swap back to Win98 (necessary due to crappy HW) everytime I need to find a new config file or do something else a bit more complicated. By and by, I get into the more advanced tasks --- and SuSE allows for that *as well*, apart from being **really** nice to the newbies!!
The fact that I was introduced to Linux in a village just outside Nuremburg has biased me.
As well as:
t m
a ck /sdmi-attack.htm
.-)
http://f858.rom.su.se/sdmi-attack/sdmi-attack.h
http://www.users.wineasy.se/johanssons/sdmi-att
(just mirrored
// Mikael Johansson
In most (lame user install-it-all-with-rpm) versions I know of, the 'Not-So-Short-Guide' comes with the latex distribution... check texmf/doc...
Or you can try the CTAN-link
Here is a couple of really good plots of some elliptic curves.
[censored by bilateral communications]
> A graphical login including the gnome environment
Umm.... I'm not totally certain as of what you mean by including gnome, but AFAIK I can start up gnome from kdm on my SuSE 5.3 (sic!)...
If their evaluation version is the same that they let german newspapers distribute --- then it's quite ok but **clearly** on the small side; doesn't even have the fortune cookie generator!!
I have SuSE 5.3 and thought I'd get a good deal when upgrading to 6.1 with one of these magazine-cds. Result: since 5.3 is libc5 and 6.1 glibc2, most of my applications went dead... luckily I discovered it when I installed the whole shaboom on a friend's computer; he wanted to discover it a bit and got a (partly) working SuSE with the advice of buying himself the distribution asap...
Now I'm just waiting for my next salary so that I finally can enter the world of glibc2 myself...
(SuSE 5.3 can run glibc2 programs, but that hack seems to be above my abilities...)
Yes, I want my Linux to be a breeze with potential for a hurricane. Since I still consider myself a newbie, the YaST approach appeals big time to me. I don't want to have to swap back to Win98 (necessary due to crappy HW) everytime I need to find a new config file or do something else a bit more complicated. By and by, I get into the more advanced tasks --- and SuSE allows for that *as well*, apart from being **really** nice to the newbies!!
The fact that I was introduced to Linux in a village just outside Nuremburg has biased me.