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  • A alex barylski

    For ever now I've wanted to switch, if not fully at least partially. I installed RH and played with it...I must say...*nix is damn cool but quite differnt from windows or DOS... I've learned a few interesting things about OS'es...for instance...I had no clue wildcard expansion was done by the shell...I always thought it was the programs responsibility to expand wildcards at the CLI...perhaps I've seen windows programs in the past which did this...I dunno where I got that from, but that is what I assumed... It's neat having that done by the shell... Linux is such an interesting approach to modularity...because everything is source code...you can pretty much just compile what you want and have a lean mean monolithic executable machine... :P RedHat has a feature called RPM...which is like an idea I had years ago...where I used the diff between two files to basically patch an existing application instead of having to download and re-install the whole thing... Needless to say, RPM does a much better job, I believe it catalogs everything so rollbacks are possible...which as a developer we all know is totally kick bum :) Yep I'm having a blast experimeting with RH and Knoppix...such a pleasure to have such fine grained control over everything...as i'm a hardcore power user even on windows always looking to tweak and customize everything, but severely limited in scope on Windows, unlimited on *nix :) Such a different approach, so it's confusing at times...and I find the culture of linux developers much differnt than that of Windows programmers, like found here :P It's almost interesting :) I highly suggest you all look into the coolness Cheers

    It's frustrating being a genius and living the life of a moron!!!

    L Offline
    L Offline
    Luis Alonso Ramos
    wrote on last edited by
    #8

    Hockey wrote:

    I had no clue wildcard expansion was done by the shell...I always thought it was the programs responsibility to expand wildcards

    In Windows the OS does the wildcard expansion (just not automatically, since it doesn't know what your real intentions are.) FindFirstFile/FindNextFile just work. And in the old times you had _dos_findfirst and _dos_findnext (did anyone remember that?) and INT 21h AX = 4Eh and 4Fh (I cheated - I looked them up in Ralf Brown's interrupt list) :) I haven't used Unix in ages (at least 12 years), but I have been wanting to install a copy of Linux in a spare PC I have at my office,I just have not given myself the time. Oh well, I also want to install Vista and Office 12...

    Luis Alonso Ramos Intelectix Chihuahua, Mexico

    Not much here: My CP Blog!

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • D David Stone

      I tried Ubuntu. And then I tried Debian. And Debian is waaaay cooler than Ubuntu. And it too just works. :)

      Once you wanted revolution
      Now you're the institution
      How's it feel to be the man?

      L Offline
      L Offline
      l a u r e n
      wrote on last edited by
      #9

      yeah... debian with kde is my os of choice ... if only there were all the apps i needed available *sigh*


      "there is no spoon"
      {some projects} {about me}

      E 1 Reply Last reply
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      • A alex barylski

        For ever now I've wanted to switch, if not fully at least partially. I installed RH and played with it...I must say...*nix is damn cool but quite differnt from windows or DOS... I've learned a few interesting things about OS'es...for instance...I had no clue wildcard expansion was done by the shell...I always thought it was the programs responsibility to expand wildcards at the CLI...perhaps I've seen windows programs in the past which did this...I dunno where I got that from, but that is what I assumed... It's neat having that done by the shell... Linux is such an interesting approach to modularity...because everything is source code...you can pretty much just compile what you want and have a lean mean monolithic executable machine... :P RedHat has a feature called RPM...which is like an idea I had years ago...where I used the diff between two files to basically patch an existing application instead of having to download and re-install the whole thing... Needless to say, RPM does a much better job, I believe it catalogs everything so rollbacks are possible...which as a developer we all know is totally kick bum :) Yep I'm having a blast experimeting with RH and Knoppix...such a pleasure to have such fine grained control over everything...as i'm a hardcore power user even on windows always looking to tweak and customize everything, but severely limited in scope on Windows, unlimited on *nix :) Such a different approach, so it's confusing at times...and I find the culture of linux developers much differnt than that of Windows programmers, like found here :P It's almost interesting :) I highly suggest you all look into the coolness Cheers

        It's frustrating being a genius and living the life of a moron!!!

        E Offline
        E Offline
        El Corazon
        wrote on last edited by
        #10

        why switch? I have Vista, several Linux flavors and BSD all running in Parallels VM. It lets me test without having to give up my host OS yet. Of course I could always run Linux and XP as a guest OS... but I am not quite ready for full Linux support on my work software. :)

        _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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        • L l a u r e n

          yeah... debian with kde is my os of choice ... if only there were all the apps i needed available *sigh*


          "there is no spoon"
          {some projects} {about me}

          E Offline
          E Offline
          El Corazon
          wrote on last edited by
          #11

          l a u r e n wrote:

          if only there were all the apps i needed available *sigh*

          what apps do you need?

          _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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          • E El Corazon

            l a u r e n wrote:

            if only there were all the apps i needed available *sigh*

            what apps do you need?

            _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

            L Offline
            L Offline
            l a u r e n
            wrote on last edited by
            #12

            reliable dvd ripping backup software ... vs.net ... video editing software ... games of course ... just stuff like that really


            "there is no spoon"
            {some projects} {about me}

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            • D David Stone

              I dunno. I thought apt-get was pretty darned slick. And I kinda wish I had iptables on Windows. And there's a few other things that are pretty nice. I like Gnome a lot. :)

              Once you wanted revolution
              Now you're the institution
              How's it feel to be the man?

              S Offline
              S Offline
              S Douglas
              wrote on last edited by
              #13

              David Stone wrote:

              wish I had iptables on Windows

              That would make for an excellent Article, porting IP Tables to Windows. Hint hint. :)


              I'd love to help, but unfortunatley I have prior commitments monitoring the length of my grass. :Andrew Bleakley:

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              • E El Corazon

                why switch? I have Vista, several Linux flavors and BSD all running in Parallels VM. It lets me test without having to give up my host OS yet. Of course I could always run Linux and XP as a guest OS... but I am not quite ready for full Linux support on my work software. :)

                _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

                L Offline
                L Offline
                l a u r e n
                wrote on last edited by
                #14

                i tried to run debian + kde inside of parallels and inside of vmware ... both were miserable failures so i went back to dual boot ... i was *so* looking forward to having them both running all the time :|


                "there is no spoon"
                {some projects} {about me}

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                • L l a u r e n

                  reliable dvd ripping backup software ... vs.net ... video editing software ... games of course ... just stuff like that really


                  "there is no spoon"
                  {some projects} {about me}

                  M Offline
                  M Offline
                  malockin
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #15

                  uhmm.... let's see.... DVD Ripper: dvd::rip http://www.gnomefiles.org/app.php?soft_id=517[^] (there are probably versions/other applications for KDE too) VS.NET: Mainsoft Grasshopper http://dev.mainsoft.com/[^] (off an ad from CP :)) Video editing: http://www.gnomefiles.org/subcategory.php?sub_cat_id=94[^] (also there must be applications for KDE) And for gaming try: http://www.transgaming.com/[^] anything else? ;) -- Nicola

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                  • M malockin

                    uhmm.... let's see.... DVD Ripper: dvd::rip http://www.gnomefiles.org/app.php?soft_id=517[^] (there are probably versions/other applications for KDE too) VS.NET: Mainsoft Grasshopper http://dev.mainsoft.com/[^] (off an ad from CP :)) Video editing: http://www.gnomefiles.org/subcategory.php?sub_cat_id=94[^] (also there must be applications for KDE) And for gaming try: http://www.transgaming.com/[^] anything else? ;) -- Nicola

                    L Offline
                    L Offline
                    l a u r e n
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #16

                    ummmmm 1.dvdrip just doesnt do as good a job as dvdshrink and dvd-decrypt 2. grasshopper is for java ... im not into that 3. there is kino and a few others but again just not as good as premiere 4. again there are just issues using this stuff that go away when you use windows i love using linux and do so for my main system most of the time but when its either jump thru hoops to get something kinda working or just reboot into windows and it just works i'll reboot ... im not anti-windows ... i just prefer linux when it does as good a job thnx tho ;)


                    "there is no spoon"
                    {some projects} {about me}

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • A alex barylski

                      For ever now I've wanted to switch, if not fully at least partially. I installed RH and played with it...I must say...*nix is damn cool but quite differnt from windows or DOS... I've learned a few interesting things about OS'es...for instance...I had no clue wildcard expansion was done by the shell...I always thought it was the programs responsibility to expand wildcards at the CLI...perhaps I've seen windows programs in the past which did this...I dunno where I got that from, but that is what I assumed... It's neat having that done by the shell... Linux is such an interesting approach to modularity...because everything is source code...you can pretty much just compile what you want and have a lean mean monolithic executable machine... :P RedHat has a feature called RPM...which is like an idea I had years ago...where I used the diff between two files to basically patch an existing application instead of having to download and re-install the whole thing... Needless to say, RPM does a much better job, I believe it catalogs everything so rollbacks are possible...which as a developer we all know is totally kick bum :) Yep I'm having a blast experimeting with RH and Knoppix...such a pleasure to have such fine grained control over everything...as i'm a hardcore power user even on windows always looking to tweak and customize everything, but severely limited in scope on Windows, unlimited on *nix :) Such a different approach, so it's confusing at times...and I find the culture of linux developers much differnt than that of Windows programmers, like found here :P It's almost interesting :) I highly suggest you all look into the coolness Cheers

                      It's frustrating being a genius and living the life of a moron!!!

                      M Offline
                      M Offline
                      Marcin Gil
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #17

                      Thie hie.. I've been Linux user for 7+ years.. I've tried many of them: Slackware, Debian, RedHat, Mandrake, Suse, Vector, Ubuntu/Kubuntu.. And finally.. I've settled on Gentoo. If you're a developer you should see this: everything in the system build from source code with YOUR optimizations.. Port/ebuild system to quickly compile and install an app with FULL UNINSTALL/UPGRADE capabilities.. You've written an app? Have full autotools (or cmake or else) chain set up to create makefiles and build instructions? Create an ebuild for your app and quickly deploy it in the system, test and remove. You can even create an RPM from ebuild.

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • A alex barylski

                        For ever now I've wanted to switch, if not fully at least partially. I installed RH and played with it...I must say...*nix is damn cool but quite differnt from windows or DOS... I've learned a few interesting things about OS'es...for instance...I had no clue wildcard expansion was done by the shell...I always thought it was the programs responsibility to expand wildcards at the CLI...perhaps I've seen windows programs in the past which did this...I dunno where I got that from, but that is what I assumed... It's neat having that done by the shell... Linux is such an interesting approach to modularity...because everything is source code...you can pretty much just compile what you want and have a lean mean monolithic executable machine... :P RedHat has a feature called RPM...which is like an idea I had years ago...where I used the diff between two files to basically patch an existing application instead of having to download and re-install the whole thing... Needless to say, RPM does a much better job, I believe it catalogs everything so rollbacks are possible...which as a developer we all know is totally kick bum :) Yep I'm having a blast experimeting with RH and Knoppix...such a pleasure to have such fine grained control over everything...as i'm a hardcore power user even on windows always looking to tweak and customize everything, but severely limited in scope on Windows, unlimited on *nix :) Such a different approach, so it's confusing at times...and I find the culture of linux developers much differnt than that of Windows programmers, like found here :P It's almost interesting :) I highly suggest you all look into the coolness Cheers

                        It's frustrating being a genius and living the life of a moron!!!

                        S Offline
                        S Offline
                        Stuart Dootson
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #18

                        Hockey wrote:

                        I had no clue wildcard expansion was done by the shell

                        It is in Unix-stylee shells, not in Windows (well, not by CMD, anyway!). I get my Unix kicks from OS X - Unix power, Macintosh pretties on top :-)

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                        • S Stuart Dootson

                          Hockey wrote:

                          I had no clue wildcard expansion was done by the shell

                          It is in Unix-stylee shells, not in Windows (well, not by CMD, anyway!). I get my Unix kicks from OS X - Unix power, Macintosh pretties on top :-)

                          M Offline
                          M Offline
                          Marcin Gil
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #19

                          There is a flavor of unix utils ported to Windows: http://unxutils.sourceforge.net/ You get things like shellutils (sh! wildcard expansion at your hand; throw away cmd :) ), bc, wget, gzip, findutils (ever used find . -iname foo -exec bar {} ';'?)

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                          • R Ryan Binns

                            Hockey wrote:

                            I highly suggest you all look into the coolness

                            Coolness? I thought you were talking about Linux... I use Linux all the time (most of our development at work is on Linux), and I have it installed at home and have to use it every couple of days, but I have yet to come across anything "cool" about it. It's a pain to use, mainly because to do anything slightly complex involves dropping to a command prompt and typing in an indeterminate number of very obfuscated commands. I use it because I have to, not because it's "cool".

                            Ryan

                            "Punctuality is only a virtue for those who aren't smart enough to think of good excuses for being late" John Nichol "Point Of Impact"

                            A Offline
                            A Offline
                            Anand Vivek Srivastava
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #20

                            which distro do you use? which version?

                            R 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • D David Stone

                              I tried Ubuntu. And then I tried Debian. And Debian is waaaay cooler than Ubuntu. And it too just works. :)

                              Once you wanted revolution
                              Now you're the institution
                              How's it feel to be the man?

                              B Offline
                              B Offline
                              benjymous
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #21

                              David Stone wrote:

                              And Debian is waaaay cooler than Ubuntu. And it too just works.

                              Yeah, my web server (A Linux virtual machine/[^]) runs Debian. It "just works" up until I decide to reconfigure something, and manage to stomp over the wrong config and break it all :-S I keep putting off re-installing SpamAssassin, as email is working fine right now, and every time I try to change it I end up breaking something (usually only finding out a week later that my Mum hasn't been able to recieve emails) :sigh:

                              -- Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit! Buzzwords!

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                              • M Marcin Gil

                                There is a flavor of unix utils ported to Windows: http://unxutils.sourceforge.net/ You get things like shellutils (sh! wildcard expansion at your hand; throw away cmd :) ), bc, wget, gzip, findutils (ever used find . -iname foo -exec bar {} ';'?)

                                E Offline
                                E Offline
                                Ed Poore
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #22

                                http://unxutils.sourceforge.net/[^]


                                As of how to accomplish that have you ever tried Google? Failing that try :badger::badger::badger:.

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                                • A Anand Vivek Srivastava

                                  which distro do you use? which version?

                                  R Offline
                                  R Offline
                                  Ryan Binns
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #23

                                  avsrivastava wrote:

                                  which distro do you use? which version?

                                  At work we use RedHat 7 and 9, and Ubuntu 6.06. At home I have Fedora Core 4, and have run Debian (can't remember which version) in the past.

                                  Ryan

                                  "Punctuality is only a virtue for those who aren't smart enough to think of good excuses for being late" John Nichol "Point Of Impact"

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                                  • C Chris Austin

                                    Tried it years ago. Got bored with the anti-whatever nonsense, the elitism of some of the community and, (this was killer for me at the time) the lack of high quality first run games. Not to say that there wern't some games, but there wasn't much depth to the selection.

                                    Hey don't worry, I can handle it. I took something. I can see things no one else can see. Why are you dressed like that? - Jack Burton

                                    realJSOPR Offline
                                    realJSOPR Offline
                                    realJSOP
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #24

                                    I try to try it once every year or so. Unfortunately, I currenly have a system that absolutely refuses to let me install linux on it. That's honestly the first time I've had that experience.

                                    "Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
                                    -----
                                    "...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001

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                                    • A Anand Vivek Srivastava

                                      Try ubuntu (it comes with a live cd as well), and the first time you install it you will be surprised(atleast I was) of how it just works. I mean right out of the box installation is good enough. Gone are the days when linux was only for geeks and mircosoft haters. I though fall in the intersection of these two sets ;P.

                                      B Offline
                                      B Offline
                                      BoneSoft
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #25

                                      Yep, Ubuntu with Gnome. It's frustrating knowing vast amounts about Windows and next to nothing with Linux. But some of these new distros make it much easier to get into it. For us novices, Gnome is the way to go. KDE looks kewl, but it's a bit more complicated. The drive for me is development and games, and I'm not a C++ programmer. I'll be happy when C# is more main-stream on Linux. I've tried several versions of SharpDev's Linux product with no luck. The IDE always dies on me before I can do anything.


                                      Try code model generation tools at BoneSoft.com.

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                                      • M Marcin Gil

                                        There is a flavor of unix utils ported to Windows: http://unxutils.sourceforge.net/ You get things like shellutils (sh! wildcard expansion at your hand; throw away cmd :) ), bc, wget, gzip, findutils (ever used find . -iname foo -exec bar {} ';'?)

                                        S Offline
                                        S Offline
                                        Stuart Dootson
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #26

                                        I've always used the utils from GnuWin32[^]. I'll have to investigate the unxutils ones - thanks! I'm certainly aware of the splendour of find - as I said, I get my Unix kick on OS X - and I've always got a shell window or three open :-) I've even been known to use sed on Windows as well.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • A alex barylski

                                          For ever now I've wanted to switch, if not fully at least partially. I installed RH and played with it...I must say...*nix is damn cool but quite differnt from windows or DOS... I've learned a few interesting things about OS'es...for instance...I had no clue wildcard expansion was done by the shell...I always thought it was the programs responsibility to expand wildcards at the CLI...perhaps I've seen windows programs in the past which did this...I dunno where I got that from, but that is what I assumed... It's neat having that done by the shell... Linux is such an interesting approach to modularity...because everything is source code...you can pretty much just compile what you want and have a lean mean monolithic executable machine... :P RedHat has a feature called RPM...which is like an idea I had years ago...where I used the diff between two files to basically patch an existing application instead of having to download and re-install the whole thing... Needless to say, RPM does a much better job, I believe it catalogs everything so rollbacks are possible...which as a developer we all know is totally kick bum :) Yep I'm having a blast experimeting with RH and Knoppix...such a pleasure to have such fine grained control over everything...as i'm a hardcore power user even on windows always looking to tweak and customize everything, but severely limited in scope on Windows, unlimited on *nix :) Such a different approach, so it's confusing at times...and I find the culture of linux developers much differnt than that of Windows programmers, like found here :P It's almost interesting :) I highly suggest you all look into the coolness Cheers

                                          It's frustrating being a genius and living the life of a moron!!!

                                          M Offline
                                          M Offline
                                          Miszou
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #27

                                          Hockey wrote:

                                          I had no clue wildcard expansion was done by the shell...

                                          Hockey wrote:

                                          It's neat having that done by the shell...

                                          Filename Expansion[^]


                                          The StartPage Randomizer | The Timelapse Project | A Random Web Page

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