My first computer was a Sanyo MBC-1100 with CP/M-80 OS.
As far as I know MS-DOS was a "copy" of CP/M. CP/M was actually big in the day and Intel (or was it IBM) was keen to buy it.
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My first computer was a Sanyo MBC-1100 with CP/M-80 OS.
Just because you got 15 years experience does not mean you know what your doing.
Oh and I suppose all of you that say linux is easier have installed the driver by double clicking on a executable?
Look I know for some of us it seams easy cause we know what we doing. All I was trying to say is put your Gran infront of Ubuntu and ask her to install Nvidia drivers without ever touching terminal.
Nope did not miss that, and even there I mentioned one issue. READ MTP(Media Transfer Protocol) that most Android phones use for USB and that most Linux Desktops does not support.
Who can explain this to a Linux n00b:
I'm considering installing Linux but can't decide between Ubuntu and Mint. I'm sort off leaning towardsMint but I believe they each come with an "app store"/repository. Do both contain the same apps or does the Ubuntu one have a crap load more stuff in there?
And since the major difference between the two is the window manager (I'm sure there is more to it) can I install Ubuntu and run Cinnamon on it?
can I install Ubuntu and run Cinnamon on it?
This has always been one of the main reasons for home users to stick with Windows. Hopefully, with Steam and others beginning to push Linux as a gaming platform this could change over the next few years.
A bit off topic, but I really enjoyed using CP/M on my old Spectravideo (Z80 based). I had Wordstar and Turbo Pascal for CP/M. I wrote some pretty heavy mathematical modelling programs to run on that machine. What made it so much fun was you only had 64kB to work in, and CP/M took a hefty chunk of that - I don't think many people these days appreciate code optimisation!
Yes and this is what I do as I bought software on Ubuntu store but not a fan of Unity.
Crap so each have their own stores :/
Nevertheless, Ubuntu it is then.
The free or shall I say GPL ones are mostly the same source, not so much for the paid software.
I am strongly considering moving to Linux (Linux Mint 14 [With Cinnamom GUI).
Ive gotten fed up with using Windows now. I want to move, but I just need to find a proper guide on installing Wine - I do have some Windows Applications I want to still use in Linux.
I have a Dell XPS L502X; I'm sure my laptop should have some Linux drivers and all.
I'll have to admit that the only reason I use Windows at home is because most games only work in Windows![]()