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Archived from groups: alt.comp.hardware.pc-homebuilt (More info?)
>>Unless Linux can be made to recognize and work with common
>>> hardware, it isn't going anywhere on the desktop, no matter what
>>> Linux apologists say. Try Ubuntu. It seems to be the most
>>> friendly, from what I've heard lately. I tried it. It wouldn't
>>> handle Winmodems on both my computers, and wouldn't recognize my
>>> Epson scanner on my main computer. Still, you might want to try it.
>
>
> Kubuntu would be a better choice for a first time Linux user, as it's Ubuntu
> based on KDE rather than Gnome. However, once installed, you can install
> either KDE or Gnome to the other and it's all the same.
>
> I have a big problem with Ubuntu/Kubuntu: When logged in as user, and you
> need to do something administrative, it asks for your _user_ password - not
> your _root_ password. This seems to almost be as wide open as Windows...
> Maybe I'm wrong, but I don't like it at all. I'm sure there's a way to
> change it, but I just didn't bother to dig that deep.
I've heard about Kubuntu but haven't run across a copy yet (I
can't download since I'm on dial-up). It's Ubuntu with KDE added,
right? I like KDE, which I got used to in Mandrake, but really, I
find that the simplicity of Gnome is not bad. It seems more
transparent to me, somehow.
>>Unless Linux can be made to recognize and work with common
>>> hardware, it isn't going anywhere on the desktop, no matter what
>>> Linux apologists say. Try Ubuntu. It seems to be the most
>>> friendly, from what I've heard lately. I tried it. It wouldn't
>>> handle Winmodems on both my computers, and wouldn't recognize my
>>> Epson scanner on my main computer. Still, you might want to try it.
>
>
> Kubuntu would be a better choice for a first time Linux user, as it's Ubuntu
> based on KDE rather than Gnome. However, once installed, you can install
> either KDE or Gnome to the other and it's all the same.
>
> I have a big problem with Ubuntu/Kubuntu: When logged in as user, and you
> need to do something administrative, it asks for your _user_ password - not
> your _root_ password. This seems to almost be as wide open as Windows...
> Maybe I'm wrong, but I don't like it at all. I'm sure there's a way to
> change it, but I just didn't bother to dig that deep.
I've heard about Kubuntu but haven't run across a copy yet (I
can't download since I'm on dial-up). It's Ubuntu with KDE added,
right? I like KDE, which I got used to in Mandrake, but really, I
find that the simplicity of Gnome is not bad. It seems more
transparent to me, somehow.