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Ubuntu 8.10

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Another glorious application. In my case, my ’s CD drive has gone kaput for reasons unknown to me. Although I had ordered Ubuntu 8.10 from shipit, it would take weeks before I could get my hands on it. To make matters worse, if the other CD did not work on it, it would be difficult to have it loaded on my system.

For all practical purposes, I have come to loath . Its a memory hogging crappy OS and remains a watered down version of their previous avatar XP. I had to load up to run some software which does not have equivalent; although I didnt realise that I could use Wine for the same. Nevertheless, I hunted for installing Ubuntu via a bootable pen drive and the good folks at Ubuntu had their entire documentation on their forums.

It took about 20 minutes to boot into a fully usable OS. There is no dramatic incremental change in the OS as compared to the previous versions; this seems to be a fair enough review.

I do install and the msttcorefonts because I cannot imagine the life without them. Unfortunately, the fonts offered as a default install are ugly. Hence, I had to revert back to MS fonts. Surprisingly, Open Office is available in it’s old avatar. I dont have many issues with it because the major incremental improvement for their presentation version was in the use of tables. I wish, it had a more refined look than the clunky sozzled up appearance it has. It’s a matter of time though that they catch up with the mainstream software once they realise that looks do matter.

Overall, I am happy to find my nirvana. I am signing off their post by a compiz fusion video. It remains the perfect example of how open source can easily outdo the existing feature on Vista. Enjoy.

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The open source hassles

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I have been an proponent over the past 4 years and realised the frustration over the period of time by sticking on to it. At the centre of debate is the copyright versus copyleft scenario which has no easy solutions and answers. There are proponents of two theories and considerable amount of money and energy is being devoted towards promoting their respective agendas.

has been dominating the computer scene for over tow decades now ever since the personal came into picture. It is immaterial as to how they achieved their “dominance”. To them, stealing intellectual property rights and passing it off as their own is second nature. They have a whole army of lawyers to battle the companies and frequently tends to settle out of court by paying in huge monies. The owner is the world’s richest man and grows richer by the second. The employees are well paid and I believe that they are taken care off.

On the other hand, there are a group of “hackers” who pit in their brains to make the “free” software work. Their de facto spokesperson which includes the likes of Richard Stallman go around the world propagating . Much of the work has been done by these renegade folks who work behind the scenes to create software which is open source which means that anyone can modify their work and release in public.

Much of criticism of Microsoft has been about their stranglehold over the hardware manufacturers. This was evident over the release of which required users to “upgrade” to be able to use a fancy interface which by itself is utterly useless. Still, the company piled on cash to advertise the “features” by trying to induce people to use something that wasn’t really worth it.

Idealism apart, the incremental nature of the hardware complexity has meant that there is a bewildering array of choices in front of a consumer. It becomes difficult to choose and not to fall for the glitz. With the release of new software, the support for the previous versions slowly vanes away. With every version release and “features” the users are forced to upgrade their hardware in order to make the features work.

I faced similar predictament a week back. I have been using Ubuntu on my but howsoever hard I tried, I could not make my webcam or my work. I have been facing issues with my trackpad not working out of the box; it was next to impossible to get the support from the forums or the designated support structures. My usage for the laptop was suboptimal because I could not use the hardware that I had paid my hard earned money to use.

However, I could easily set up the same hardware in Vista which had come previously installed with the same. Wireless worked flawlessly and so did the data transfer. Setting up the network was “easy” and it was a matter of getting used to putting the right buttons to click.

How does this user experience matter? I have been waiting for the “perfect” distribution that would be truly plug and play. No doubt that a lot depends on the hardware manufacturers to release their drivers in the Open Source. Still, the usage for remains sub optimal in the sense that even though the hardware is made to work, the full functionality is not utilised. For example, my laptop speakers are dolby enabled and can create a variety of sound effects depending on the equaliser settings in Vista. Even though the sound works in , the effects don’t. In effect, it doesn’t really translate into “customer delight”.

I installed (which is rpm based distro) and started missing the convenience of Debian. Still, it has really come in a long way from what the earlier versions had been and as I understand, a lot of work is being devoted to making majority of laptops work. I feel that at this pace, it would truly take a lot of time before anything meaningful materialises and an ordinary user would really need some working knowlede of command line interface to make things work for him/her in Linux.

This brings us to the questions that I had raised about copyright and the copyleft. There are no clear cut winners here and it only depends on the nummber of people propping up either side of the divide. I have my system in a dual boot and for “emergency” while travelling or for access, I have to depend on Vista. Maybe perhaps, in the near future, the distros would be polsihed enough to translate into a happy user experience. Otherwise, presently, I am sticking on to Dual Boot solely because of idealism for Linux and nothing else.

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Finally!

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Finally, I am able to access , courtesy . It’s just been installed in my premises after a tough fight with the dodos who had very specious arguments about “ports” and “pairs”. I literally had to throw a fit time and again to make it work out; all’s well that ends well. Despite the screw up in the final legs of installation, I must appreciate their professional approach to their new connection. There was a seperate team to collect cash on my doorstep, seperate team to install the wiring, another team to activate the voice line and finally an “engineer” to set up the modem.

I shudder to think of the time being spent in the dingy waiting hall of (I moved to New Delhi recently- thats a seperate story). Or wait for the lineman to appear at my doorstep. It was all over in a jiffy and I am online. It took 72 hours to connect me to the infobahn highway; minus the 36 hours it took me in the hospital doing my night duties.

I still have not been able to install my favourite Ubuntu on my new Lenovo due to some quirk in not recognising the trackpad. I am at my wits end because the last time I had used it, it was absolutely flawless. I am forced to use which I am very keen to get rid off like an itch in my ass.

I shall get with the regular updates as and when I am able to have some iota of time at my disposal. Cheers and stick around for some exciting bitching of the first order!!

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