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Offline ManagarmTopic starter

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Re: New OS
« Reply #14 on: September 13, 2005, 06:06:17 PM »
Thanks for all the help everyone. I was at the North Thames Amiga meeting on Sunday and was VERY impressed by OS4 (First time I'd seen it.) To be honest if I was getting a PPC machine that's what I'd be after. The skins are a nice feature, if you're a sadist you can make it look like Windows XP. Zeta looked quite good too. I think the winner is SUSE Linux though. I get my beast of a machine on Friday and it will be Linuxed.

http://www.novell.com/products/linuxprofessional/overview.html
 

Offline leirbag28

Re: New OS
« Reply #15 on: September 14, 2005, 03:18:40 AM »
@Managarm

 I don't know why No one has mentioned this (Someone sort of did)  but Why not get Amiga OS 3.1 0r 3.9 on your PC? especially on the Pentium 4.YOu can run an almost )S4 like Amiga OS 3.9 through Amiga FOREVER (WinUAE with legal ROMS and  OS)

Dude.just get Amiga FOREVER CD from Cloanto..it boots straight from the CD.  I actually attached my REAL AMiga IDE harddrive to my PC and ran it through WinUAE and copied all the partitions.and now I have an exact copy of my REAL Amiga Harddrive on my PC and run the Same Amiga OS and applications :-).it was a 2.5gig HD.I can also burn this HD to a CD for backup :-)

CD32 is actually the best Amiga ever made by Commodore!...
 

Offline AmigaFreak

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Re: New OS
« Reply #16 on: October 13, 2005, 06:30:08 PM »
I have Ubuntu Linux on my main machine (AMD XP3300) And I have never had a problem with it, great applications, great OS!
-- Joshua E. Horn

"Um... I think my computer let out the blue smoke! What should I do?!?!?"
 

Offline cv643d

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Re: New OS
« Reply #17 on: October 13, 2005, 07:09:20 PM »
Sorry but it sounds like the easiest and best OS for what you want to do is XP.

Its very much like Amiga after all. Applications multitask and you can fire up a prompt just like Cli in Workbench. Better yet every web page you will want to view will look great because you can run Internet Explorer which is the de facto standard for web pages if you look at browser standards. And you can easily connect your digital camera to the USB port and transfer pictures. Windows is not that bad really. For me the choice is easy, I work as a web designer and I dont want to pay to be in the exclusive Apple club.

An XP machine feels like a good old Amiga on stereoids.
Amiga articles
"New shell. It was finished a while back, but I still see bugs, haha" - SSolie
 

Offline fx

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Re: New OS
« Reply #18 on: October 13, 2005, 07:20:52 PM »
I have to give my support to Ubuntu Linux. I have tried quite a few Linux distrubutions during the years and this is by far the easiest and nicest to use this far. Installation was extremely easy and it found all my hardware without any hassle. Works like a charm and the people on the official IRC channel was very friendly, unlike most other Linux IRC channels I've been to.
Slightly bored and severly confused..
 

Offline Insanity

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Re: New OS
« Reply #19 on: October 13, 2005, 09:41:30 PM »
As one of the windows-lamers (in my defence I am moving to gentoo+ I am installing openBSD on a machine right now), I have to add that runnning w95, w98, or millenium is about as smart as tieing your dog to your balls and throwing tennisball.
for security, stability and support resons run at least windows 2000.
:)

Btw, I read recently that vista will have a brand new feature  that sounded really cool. Some kind of "load stuff in ram-feature".

How long have you had that on AOS?
10 - 15 years?

/Insanity[RoX]
 

Offline detz

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Re: New OS
« Reply #20 on: October 13, 2005, 09:43:37 PM »


Quote
by cv643d on 2005/10/13 19:09:20

Sorry but it sounds like the easiest and best OS for what you want to do is XP.

Its very much like Amiga after all. Applications multitask and you can fire up a prompt just like Cli in Workbench. Better yet every web page you will want to view will look great because you can run Internet Explorer which is the de facto standard for web pages if you look at browser standards. And you can easily connect your digital camera to the USB port and transfer pictures. Windows is not that bad really. For me the choice is easy, I work as a web designer and I dont want to pay to be in the exclusive Apple club.

An XP machine feels like a good old Amiga on stereoids.


Yes, an amiga on steroids, but still struggling under the weight of a load of inefficient or superfluous crap. Having said that, XP is probably your best bet (personally I'd tell the guy not to install it then sorce your own copy elsewhere, if you know what i mean...) but yeah it's still not the same. The annoying thing is that this is a supposed 'professional' OS, with multimillion pounds of R&D poured into it, and yet there are still niggling flaws, and things that coming from the amiga background, and seeing how that works, tend to annoy (ie having to restart after making changes, long boot times, renaming a network took a couple of minute to update the other day- rather than just saving a file in the ENV like on amiga, also I had to go through the whole wizard to do so, there's probably another way but i've yet to find it.) Oh yeah, and the whole registry and indecipherable codes whichg mean that certain programs start up, and its not obvious how to change, unlike opening startup-sequence in a text editor. But I've come to think that old Billy boy wants the general public to know less and less about how computers actually work,  so he can get awa\y with a less efficient OS ( I mean on my PC, an AMD sempron if i waggle the mouse pointer about, the CPU usage goes up to about 50% - are we supposed to believe that it takes 1Ghz to move the pointer? How did computers used to work if so?  :crazy: )
and also so people are less inclined to migrate to another OS, or figure out that they don't need to buy a new computer (and pay for another copy of windows) just beacuse it's not running as fast as it used to, or the hard drive is full. (probably with lots of little pointless files and archives created by windows for that very purpose- I find that it get harder and harder to free up space on a drive the longer you've been using it)
 

Offline InTheSand

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Re: New OS
« Reply #21 on: October 13, 2005, 11:21:27 PM »
Quote

Managarm wrote:
I'd mainly be wanting to browse the net, emulate old games, store pictures from the digital camera I'm about to buy.


If this is what you want to do, there's no reason to install Windows XP as any modern Linux distribution will cater for this and more. Any distros mentioned by the other posters will be fine: Fedora Core, Ubuntu, Suse, Mandrake, etc. If you just want to give Linux a quick "test drive", download an ISO of Knoppix as this'll boot straight from the CD into a nicely configured environment.

The E-UAE Amiga emulator is available for Linux, as are a number of emulators for old computers / consoles / arcade machines, so you should be sorted there.

Firefox's Linux version differs little from its Windows counterpart, as does the Thunderbird email client, so your web browsing needs will be covered.

OpenOffice.org is a free fully featured office-type suite (word processor, spreadsheet, etc) and that'll cater for the main productivity-type tasks.

IMHO, the only reason for a home user to install Windows XP is to either run the latest games or if there's a specific requirement to run an application that's XP-specific where a reasonable alternative doesn't exist for Linux.

Quote

cv643d wrote:
Its very much like Amiga after all. Applications multitask and you can fire up a prompt just like Cli in Workbench.


Hmm... Windows XP unfortunately still shows MS-DOS roots - the CLI is woefully inadequate when you compare it to an AmigaDOS shell. The whole notion of fixed drive letters is soooo 1981!  :-)

Multitasking works well enough in XP most of the time, I'll give it that. But IMO, it's less efficient with resources than Linux on the same hardware.

Quote

cv643d wrote:
Better yet every web page you will want to view will look great because you can run Internet Explorer which is the de facto standard for web pages if you look at browser standards.


Err? Cough! Internet Explorer actually breaks a number of web standards and is not fully compliant. Granted, IE does display web pages as the designers intended, but this is only because those designers have to botch the standards to work around IE's non-compliance.

IE is one of the biggest security risks you can install on a PC if you leave it in its default configuration. If you use Windows, junk IE... Mine is relegated to performing Windows Update tasks and nothing else.

Anyway... all of this is just my 2c worth, I'm sure others will disagree!

 - Ali
 

Offline Tomas

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Re: New OS
« Reply #22 on: October 14, 2005, 01:15:11 AM »
Quote

Managarm wrote:
Nice one, thanks. I'll Google the ones you've told me and see what comes up. Is Linux really difficult to install?

Suse linux 9.3 is in my opinion much easier to install than windowsxp, unless you have some tricky unsupported hardware. It also autodetects and setup things like usb camera, usb disks and such when you plug them in. It even found my blutooth adaptor and 1min later i was transferring files between my nokia 6600 and my suse 9.3 box.

Everything was done using a graphical installer or gui. I never had to touch the cmd line at all.
 

Offline amigadave

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Re: New OS
« Reply #23 on: October 14, 2005, 02:11:08 AM »
What do you want to do with this PC that was given to you that you can't do already on your Amigas?  What speed and memory is the PC?  If it is at least 500mHz or faster Pentium 2 or 3, it is fast enough to run WinUAE/Amiga Forever.  Probably your best bet for non-Amiga, non-Windows OS is SuSe Linux 9.3 as others have suggested.
How are you helping the Amiga community? :)
 

Offline SCabit

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Re: New OS
« Reply #24 on: October 14, 2005, 03:06:01 AM »
Hi Managarm,

  I went through a similar thing .. I used my Amiga 1200
daily until the end of 1999, then I needed to get a PC to be
able to do work at home. I never really liked it. Today at
work I use a laptop PC 1.6 GHz with an 80 Gig hard disk
and the best software my company can buy...and I still don't
like it.
  Last December I was looking around the internet and found
to my shock that Amiga OS4 was being developed on a new PPC
based Amiga. I was sceptical at first, but after seeing
what it could do and seeing that it had the nearest thing to
the "Amiga" feel of any OS I've used (including BE and QNX)
I bought an AmigaOne. Now I use my AmigaOne exclusively
while my wife plays lame internet games on my PC. I am very
impressed with it and it does everything I want a computer
to do...plus its an Amiga and has the old Amiga "feel".
  So if you are looking for an Amiga-like OS, why not try
Amiga OS4? If it does what you want ... try to use one if
you can find someone who owns one.
  I'm glad that I did!

Scott
 

Offline ratty

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Re: New OS
« Reply #25 on: October 14, 2005, 08:51:49 AM »
OK I gotta put my 2p's worth in here. I use linux and have done for about four years now. I started with redhat which didn't agree with my laptop then moved to madrake (from 7.0 to 10.0) I now use fedora and I have to say it's about the best distro I've tried. I wish you luck with suse from what I've heard it's a good distro and is currently cover mounted on a couple of magazines (linux user and PC Plus I think) If Suse don't do it for you I would recomend Fedora.

Rat
 

Offline ManagarmTopic starter

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Re: New OS
« Reply #26 on: October 14, 2005, 10:12:34 AM »
Thanks for the replies everyone, I thought this thread had died. I ended up installing Ubuntu on my new machine the other week. It seems pretty cool but I'm still getting to grips with the Terminal. I'm currently trying to install the java compiler and it's a bit troublesome. I loved the fact that you don't need to find drivers for sound and graphics which was quite annoying when I got the Windows '95 machine.

I now don't know what to do with my Pentium II, Windows '95 PC. It really only serves two purposes at the moment: Providing the Amiga with a HD floppy and CD through PC2Amiga and playing Golden Axe 3 on the Megadrive emulator. I was thinking of just storing some of my music on it but I'm not sure it's worth it as it's only got a 4gig hard drive.

Does anyone know of a good piece of software that does what PC2Amiga does with a Linux machine?
 

Offline orange

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Re: New OS
« Reply #27 on: October 14, 2005, 01:37:39 PM »
since everyone already mentioned allmost all available OSes..
you can also try updated OS/2:
link

it should be on 'live' CD so no need to install it.
Better sorry than worry.
 

Offline InTheSand

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Re: New OS
« Reply #28 on: October 15, 2005, 02:36:39 AM »
It's a shame IBM didn't open source OS/2 once it got to the end of its life... would have been interesting to see the direction it could have taken...

 - Ali
 

Offline tbest1975

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Re: New OS
« Reply #29 from previous page: October 19, 2005, 05:43:35 AM »
well iv played around a little with Be|OS its clean runs fast very compairible to amiga runs on x86 hardware more info at bebits.com i think it is its been awhile since i did much with it but its very stable OS and was designed as in the Amiga "way": multitasking/video etc runs great on low end machines got a Mac/linux feel to it ..hope this helps .. probley should have looked at how old this post was but ohh well.