This is in response to BBC's review of Ubuntu on its blog, spending only 24 hours with it, that too after they made erroneous statements about Ubuntu while advertising Windows 7 on their breakfast show. This follow-on for reviewing Ubuntu by BBC, after that faux pas on the show, was initiated by Canonical.
Most of it has been said, I'll try to say some things that got left out. Not one person made a point about how simple Ubuntu install can be for a Windows user who wants to try his toe in the water: wubi (ubuntu installer for windows)! Just download wubi.exe, run it from Windows, define how much space to use for Ubuntu, choose login creds, take a coffee/ lunch break, return to your comp with a dual install! Days of Linux install have become simpler since Knoppix launched a live CD that announced vocally on what devices are detected and installed! Just when I thought it doesn't get any simpler than that, Ubuntu gets better with each release.
Microsoft is so greedy, that when I bought my Toshiba laptop, I was forced to buy it with Vista, with a caveat that said "Installing any other OS voids the warranty". Even if I wanted to have dual boot, I couldn't do that in warranty. Funnily enough, any reinstall of Vista and other Windows flavours arrogantly overwrites any other OS! Why?
For almost everything that Linux can do with a command line for a desktop user, Ubuntu can do with GUI. Another thing about people who just hate to use keyboards are missing a loud point even in Windows GUI: all those menus have keyboard 'short'-cuts! Sometimes, keyboard is faster than the mouse.
If you've tried detecting and transferring files between XP and Vista on your network, that would tell you why expecting all your Windows machines to just popup on your Ubuntu map, without any protocol setups, is plain bias.
MrFaulty talks of WiFi install issues as a techie. WiFi on Vista has been a pain for me; it gets some godforsaken IP on a DHCP mode and I need to hardcode it to work well! Windows should have perfected it by now, but no; OTOH, it works smoothly in Ubuntu. And he also talks of RAID 0 when the article is about a layman desktop user. What you can do with Win for RAID, a similar experienced person on Ubuntu can do it in a jiffy too. But then again, if you are a technology person, you ought to mention developers, rate at which bugs get fixed on Ubuntu and umpteen development tools that come free, all of these things beat down Windows to death.
Getting hold of Wine to run Spotify is not as much of a bother as needing to get hold of Win7 pro version to do something as simple as getting an XP app/ device to work! The latter means shelling more money out to get Win7 do something that your XP did initially, which you'd already paid for, and MS made you buy Win7 instead. The former means installing Wine with a couple of steps and you're ready to go... simpler than buying local wine! :)
Finally, Rory, I think Ubuntu survived your 24 hours with it. Had you been a Linux user as long as you were using Windows and had to spend 24 hours with Windows 7 instead, I'm certain you'd have flushed the Windows netbook/laptop by now! :)
This blog is about anything technically opensource or copyleft-ed/ GPL-ed, obviously most of it Linux or connected to Linux in some way.
Saturday, October 24, 2009
Friday, September 11, 2009
Getting Firefox backspace work on Ubuntu
For some like me who love the keyboard, more than mouse at times, Firefox on Ubuntu could get a little irritating to navigate between already surfed pages. On WinDoze, Firefox by default allows backspace to take you back to last visited page (while shift+backspace takes you one page forward). Of course, this is only with default settings and mostly everything is customizable. However, being the lazy me, I didn't do anything about it thus far.
Today, I did the following simple change to get it working and it didn't even need a browser-restart :)
i) Go to about:config by typing the same in the URL.
ii) Promise to be careful with it :)
iii) Type backspace in the filter-bar.
iv) Change the value of browser.backspace_action to 0 (by default, its 2)
You're done. No need to close the browser. Just press backspace and go back to where you left off before irritating yourself because backspace didn't work! ;)
Today, I did the following simple change to get it working and it didn't even need a browser-restart :)
i) Go to about:config by typing the same in the URL.
ii) Promise to be careful with it :)
iii) Type backspace in the filter-bar.
iv) Change the value of browser.backspace_action to 0 (by default, its 2)
You're done. No need to close the browser. Just press backspace and go back to where you left off before irritating yourself because backspace didn't work! ;)
Firefox Shiretoko
Firefox 3.5, code-named Shiretoko, has a brand new feature called private browsing. Its very useful if you share the laptop with some visitors every now and then, but not often enough for them to have a Firefox profile.
This feature, as some might think, is not proxy-browsing which hides and translates your IP into something else. Its also not really a setting which deletes all your history, cache and cookies when you close the browser. Its some of it and a little more. With Shiretoko, you can privately browse while keeping your old tabs intact. So if your friend drops by and wants to check his mail on your laptop, you just give him private browsing, without actually logging out of your mail and other accounts, while he gets a clean browser and leaves it clean too. Shiretoko continues just where you left off when he's done browsing privately!
This feature, as some might think, is not proxy-browsing which hides and translates your IP into something else. Its also not really a setting which deletes all your history, cache and cookies when you close the browser. Its some of it and a little more. With Shiretoko, you can privately browse while keeping your old tabs intact. So if your friend drops by and wants to check his mail on your laptop, you just give him private browsing, without actually logging out of your mail and other accounts, while he gets a clean browser and leaves it clean too. Shiretoko continues just where you left off when he's done browsing privately!
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Matrix in Windows!
You've to watch this if you liked Matrix and/ or like Ubuntu and/ or dislike Windoze: "Ubuntu. I'm going to learn Ubuntu".
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Epson TX101 installation
Update, Jaunty onwards: Epson has a new release with libtdl7 support. Try that first instead of wasting your time doing the following. The following works only for Intrepid 8.10 and perhaps, Hardy 8.04 release with an Epson driver for libtdl3.
(In case you hit this page to find how-to install, skip blabber, jump straight to end of this weblog for stepwise instructions)
I bought Epson TX101 printer-scanner-copier a few days back and was waiting for the Epson chap to install it due to warranty issues that the seller told me of. Needless to say, when he turned up yesterday, not only didn't he know Ubuntu installation, but he hadn't even heard Ubuntu or Linux for that matter! He did some basic Vista install and looking at his "expertise", I had to ask him to just make the installation report and leave.
My efforts on getting it to work on Ubuntu took long U-turns due to my stupidity. First of all, I tried things yesterday night when I was barely keeping myself awake on the chair! Back to technicality, I tried gutenprint, iscan, xsane, CUPS and pips, when things didn't work by default when I plugged in the USB. Of course, I made the mistake of typing in xane instead of xsane earlier on. But today, I started afresh when iscan install cried for libltdll3 in the night! Later I found out that iscan was (perhaps) installed by default on Kubuntu, with a dependency error; same thing as libltld3.
Intrepid, possibly Hardy too, uses libltdl7. So a simple fix is to make a soft link to libltdl3 and I should have been on the way, but it didn't work. It needed a simple replug of USB cable and not only iscan, xsane worked too!
Steps:
(In case you hit this page to find how-to install, skip blabber, jump straight to end of this weblog for stepwise instructions)
I bought Epson TX101 printer-scanner-copier a few days back and was waiting for the Epson chap to install it due to warranty issues that the seller told me of. Needless to say, when he turned up yesterday, not only didn't he know Ubuntu installation, but he hadn't even heard Ubuntu or Linux for that matter! He did some basic Vista install and looking at his "expertise", I had to ask him to just make the installation report and leave.
My efforts on getting it to work on Ubuntu took long U-turns due to my stupidity. First of all, I tried things yesterday night when I was barely keeping myself awake on the chair! Back to technicality, I tried gutenprint, iscan, xsane, CUPS and pips, when things didn't work by default when I plugged in the USB. Of course, I made the mistake of typing in xane instead of xsane earlier on. But today, I started afresh when iscan install cried for libltdll3 in the night! Later I found out that iscan was (perhaps) installed by default on Kubuntu, with a dependency error; same thing as libltld3.
Intrepid, possibly Hardy too, uses libltdl7. So a simple fix is to make a soft link to libltdl3 and I should have been on the way, but it didn't work. It needed a simple replug of USB cable and not only iscan, xsane worked too!
Steps:
- Download the correct package from http://www.avasys.jp/lx-bin2/linux_e/spc/DL1.do.
- Make sure you have sane and sane utils installed. Use sudo synaptic to find out.
- Also make sure you have libltdl7. (Of course, you can't get a libltdl3! :) )
- Install Image Scan and Print system by running sudo dpkg -i --ignore-depends=libltdl3 iscan_2.17.0-3_i386.deb (or whatever the name/version is).
- Do a sudo find / -name libltdl.so.7. cd there. (Of course, one level higher!!!)
- Create soft link by ln -s libltdl.so.7 libltdl.so.3.
- For some reason (read above blabber), I did the following too. Do it if you need to.
- Do a sudo find / -name libltdl7. cd there. (Of course, one level higher!!!)
- Create soft link by ln -s libltdl7 libldtl3
- Create soft link by ln -s libltdl7 libldtl3-dev
- Plug-out (if plugged in) and plug-in the TX101 USB cable. I didn't do this and wasted a lot of time finding out why iscan and/ or xsane wasn't working. Both were needing me to replug the TX101!
- You're done.
- Test printer: Go to http://localhost:631 for CUPS, check if you've the printer right. Do a test print. You'll get the print below.
- Test scanner: Open iscan or xsane. Scan works as below. :)
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Intrepid Ibex on laptop
I've managed to get to Kubuntu on my Toshiba laptop, downloading a wubi based install throughout the day yesterday. Kubuntu kept me awake nearly till 0200 with its vibrant GUI and new apps. I was trying to get all work at once, but succeeded with some till sleep took over.
This morning, I found out that although I got the latest version 8.10 running, I've stumbled upon a non-LTS (Long Term Support) release post Hardy Heron 8.04. The next LTS release is Kubuntu 9.10 way ahead in Oct 2009, while another non-LTS Jaunty Jackalope is scheduled for April 2009.
A few days back, I made a wubi shift on my 64-bit dualcore AMD Anthlon XP2 desktop too, of course on NTFS now, but intend to make it a pure ext3 Linux machine. I want to continue shuffling WinDoze Vista for a while on the laptop alongside Kubuntu, just because I was forced to buy it in the laptop price! ;)
This morning, I found out that although I got the latest version 8.10 running, I've stumbled upon a non-LTS (Long Term Support) release post Hardy Heron 8.04. The next LTS release is Kubuntu 9.10 way ahead in Oct 2009, while another non-LTS Jaunty Jackalope is scheduled for April 2009.
A few days back, I made a wubi shift on my 64-bit dualcore AMD Anthlon XP2 desktop too, of course on NTFS now, but intend to make it a pure ext3 Linux machine. I want to continue shuffling WinDoze Vista for a while on the laptop alongside Kubuntu, just because I was forced to buy it in the laptop price! ;)
Thursday, February 26, 2009
Why's Ubuntu special?
Ubuntu's very special due to simplicity, and absolute simplicity at that, has 32/ 64 bit versions, support for almost all the devices/ peripherals and speedy fixes. But I've a single reason above all those reasons. Its based on the best of the distributions: Debian. I'm not sure I'm loud and clear here, so I'll go on...
Debian was once the most complicated installation, with hardly any other flavor than the German. Its installation was in German, all docs, everything. Not many could install it back then and therefore, very few got to use it. It was still the best distribution then. What is interesting to note is that the makers of Ubuntu built on Debian, the best distribution available then, available in the least user-friendly way and turned it the most user-friendly distribution without messing up the best things.
Whats more, you get to pick between plain vanilla Ubuntu with Gnome, Kubuntu with KDE, Xubuntu which is packaged for speed, Edubuntu for education and Gobuntu thats totally GNU/ FSF!
Debian was once the most complicated installation, with hardly any other flavor than the German. Its installation was in German, all docs, everything. Not many could install it back then and therefore, very few got to use it. It was still the best distribution then. What is interesting to note is that the makers of Ubuntu built on Debian, the best distribution available then, available in the least user-friendly way and turned it the most user-friendly distribution without messing up the best things.
Whats more, you get to pick between plain vanilla Ubuntu with Gnome, Kubuntu with KDE, Xubuntu which is packaged for speed, Edubuntu for education and Gobuntu thats totally GNU/ FSF!
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