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nic777 said:Nice!!
I've been using Linux for 3 years, with 2.5 years of Linux being my only desktop, so if you have any questions, don't hesitate to post your questions here
nic777 said:Nice!!
I've been using Linux for 3 years, with 2.5 years of Linux being my only desktop, so if you have any questions, don't hesitate to post your questions here
sludge said:Can I also ask some q's?
1.What games can you play on linux?
2.Which is the best one to use?
3.OpenOffice runs on linux too, right?
4.How's the driver support nowdays?
Thanks alot!![]()
graviti said:To install nVidia driver is quite easy. As in all linux applications, read the README.
Basically, you need to be in single user run time. or init 3. I'm guessing you're logged in graphically. open a command prompt and su to root. Once root, type init 3. This will log you out the graphical mode, and load single user mode. (This might not always work. PM for another way to get there) Once in init3, browse to the directory that holds the driver you have downloaded. Then type in ./nvidia-driver-name-goes-here.sh. This will run the .sh script that contains the drivers. It will then ask you a few questions, and then it loads. There are some settings to change in order to use TV out and stuff, but this can be obtained from the readme. There is also quite a nice utility that nVidia released which allows for GUI adjustments to basic nVidia settings.
sludge said:Can I also ask some q's?
2.Which is the best one to use?
No really best in linux - it depends what you want out of it. I can recommend Kubuntu and Debian
4.How's the driver support nowdays?
I don't have problems and for wireless I use ndiswrapper which can use windows 'drivers', so that works.
Thanks alot!![]()