Forum Moderators: phranque
The question is:
1. Is it possible to play any PC games
2. Can I have any software on the system, like from Microsoft (frontpage,word... (we cant live with or without them)
Like I said Im totaly new to Linux, but I want a secure system, so Microsoft is not the way to go.
zeus
Your most common microsoft office programs come in the flavour of Openoffice for linux.
this thread talks about its update to version 1.1
[webmasterworld.com...]
wruk999
[webmasterworld.com...]
Seems like the Mozilla and IBM SiteBuilder options are the only real way to go
wruk999
I moved over to Linux last year, and there's no way I'm going back. However, I must admit that it is a big change, and you should think carefully beforehand in identifying your needs. If gaming is important, Linux is perhaps not ideal. As for MS Office, OpenOffice 1.1 is an excellent replacement unless you need MS Access (there is no real equivalent in Linux). Mozilla is very good as a browser and email client, but if you need to connect to an Exchange server in a corporate envoronment, it's more difficult.
The best way to get the feel of some of the applications in Linux is to download the Windows versions beforehand and see if you like them. OpenOffice 1.1 for Windows can be downloaded from openoffice.org, and can be installed next to MS Office with no problems. Try it and see if it can open all your Office documents, and whether it works to your liking. Could you live with it? Hey, you may prefer it to MS Office (I do!). Go to mozilla.org and download Mozilla 1.6 for Windows. Import your email, and use the browser to visit your favorite sites. It's a great browser, with pop-up blocking, great standards support and a whole host of other features. It's streets ahead of IE in my opinion, but what do you think? Same goes for loads of other open source programs. Think of it as "try before you buy"!
If you do choose to go for Linux, you need to find a "distribution" - that is, a flavour of Linux which suits your needs. Linux offers a huge choice, and it can be difficult to find your way at first. I would strongly recommend looking at Mandrake Linux, from www.mandrakelinux.com. The current version is 9.2. It is the easiest distribution to install, it includes only 100% free software, is downloadable as 3 ISO images (which you can burn directly to 3 CDs). Put the first CD in, choose the defaults for everything, and you'll get a great system with very little hassle.
Good luck!
PS. Don't forget Linux, Unix and *nix like Operating System forum [webmasterworld.com] here at WebmasterWorld, where there are loads of people to help out when you get stuck.
I used Linux as a secondary OS (the primary being Windows) for about 6 months. I finally decided that I couldn't cope with it, and bought a Mac instead. I haven't looked back, and I now use Mac OS X as my primary operating system.
If you really must have Linux as the operating system on your next computer (although I would definately recommend that you got a Mac instead), then you should probably go with one of those super-easy distros like LindowsOS.
The other advantages to getting a Mac would be that you would be able to run Microsoft Office and some of the games which you had on Windows (even if it would mean buying them again). Other operating systems that where it's easy to install software are OS/2 Warp and BeOS. You might want to consider one of them, although unfortunately, they seem to be two of those OSs that are just "no longer supported".
About to buy a mac, I had a mac ones it was great, but the problem is you can not upgrade the hardware and you can not use every software.
I hope Linux will soon be able to accept every software like Microsoft or maybe its time to buy to computers linux for the internet and Microsoft for fun and webmaster stuff.
zeus
About to buy a mac, I had a mac ones it was great, but the problem is you can not upgrade the hardware and you can not use every software.
Second
I want a secure system, so Microsoft is not the way to go.
This is only partly an OS issue and mostly an operator issue. I don't want to get into a flame war, but the vast majority of *nix system out there are probably not very secure (read Herb Kohl's Cuckoo's Egg, which though old, but things are probably worse now). They aren't hit as much because they are a smaller target and many virus propagators don't have access to a *nix machine. If one distro of Linux were to achieve 90% of the desktop and server market, they would be getting hit all the time.
Most attacks that have seriously crippled Windows machines lately exploited security holes that MS had patched as many as six months earlier, but so many people fail to install the patches, regardless of which OS they use.
I think securing a system you know well is likely to give better results than installing a system you know nothing about and making it publicly available. *nix is not inherently secure. It needs to be made that way. That said, if you were an expert in both systems, you would probably have a more solid setup with *nix. If you are a neophyte, you are unlikely to be very secure unless you unplug the machine from the world (I used to work at a place that ran classified stuff on *nix systems and that's what they did - it could only run on a machine that was not connected to any network - and they had serious computer security people). Short of that, everything is more or less vulnerable.
Tom