Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

The Fine print: The following are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.

Journal by mcgrew

Note: Typed this out last year but never got around to posting it.
        I’ve been meaning to install Linux on this notebook for quite some time, and finally got around to it Friday.
        I started using Linux back in 2002 with Mandrake, and I loved it. They later renamed it Mandriva, and I kept using it. Then I found out that they were disbanding and patches would stop coming, so I switched to kubuntu, which is Ubuntu with a KDE desktop instead of that God-awful Gnome desktop. It ran happily on an old HP tower for years until the old tower had a severe hardware failure. I still need to take its hard drive and video card out and install them in the old Dell, which isn’t on my network because it’s running XP.
        My first notebook I had like this one was stolen in a burglary five or six years ago. It was the same model as this, and it ran kubuntu very well, far better than its native Windows. With Windows I had to run a program from the ISP to get wi-fi working on it, but it just worked fine on kubuntu without my having to do anything.
        So Friday I put it on this notebook dual-boot, since I need Microsoft Word even though I hate Microsoft Word. Knowing it would take a while I plugged in its power, and plugged it into the network for more speed. It took ten minutes to get my part of the installation done, and watched the news as Linux installed.
        I booted it up when I was done, and egad, KDE! What have you done?! Yes, it’s a beautiful desktop, but it isn’t the same KDE I’ve been using for almost fifteen years.
        What the hell, you stupid wet behind the ears software designers, are you NUTS? Look, you dumbasses, changing an interface all around for no good reason is just brain-dead stupid. I don’t want to learn a brand new God damned interface unless it’s instantly recognizable as an improvement, and this is about the same stupid move Microsoft made with Windows Eight. Look, you morons, if I wanted to learn a new interface I’d install Gnome or something.
        Next I wanted to hear music, so I needed on the internet. I tried to connect to my server but simply couldn’t get on with the wi-fi. Strangely, I was able to connect with someone else’s unsecured wi-fi. It had gotten on the internet easily with the network card plugged in.
        Someone had said that Libre Office could read and write .doc files well, so I tried it. First I opened an Open Office document, and the font face was some cartoonish sans serif font instead of Gentium Book Basic.
        Then I opened a .doc file, and it opened, although instead of Courier it had a different sans serif face.
        I wanted to get at some files on my external hard drive, so I plugged the network cable in. It indicated a connection, and I could get on the internet through the router, but the external drive didn’t show up.
        I doubt that’s the OS’s fault, though, since it wouldn’t let me connect with my own wi-fi but was fine with someone else’s. I’m pretty sure it’s that damned modem-router that the cable company makes me rent. I’d change ISPs if I weren’t planning to move next Spring.
        At any rate, KDE now sucks. Someone said XCFE was good, I’ll have to try it.

(Note: I've been way too busy)

Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Reply to Comment Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 2) by urza9814 on Friday March 18 2016, @11:47PM

    by urza9814 (3954) on Friday March 18 2016, @11:47PM (#320228) Journal

    Yeah, I followed a similar path from Mandrake 9.2 until Mandriva 2011 or so, at which point I jumped to Arch. KDE4 on Arch isn't all bad, and I usually only did two tweaks to get it usable -- change the launcher menu back to an actual damn menu, and shrink the taskbar back down to a reasonable size.

    But I too started having issues with KDE. I've got a 2.8GHz Core i7, an SSD, an Nvidia GTX 860M and 12 gigs of RAM. And KDE was still SLOW. Sometimes unbearably so. And it crashed -- not as often as Windows, but still enough to be obnoxious. Or it would crash halfway, some components would die and others would keep running...it was a bloated mess.

    So I decided to try Enlightenment. Tried it a few times in the past and never really figured it out, but I'm so glad I finally did. It's got some instability too, but nothing major. Mostly it just sometimes thinks a program crashed when I closed it intentionally (it pops up a dialog window just telling you that something crashed). Otherwise it's great. Due to some graphics driver issues (I swear, this is the LAST DAMN TIME I ever buy an Nvidia card...) I had to switch back to KDE recently and basically I just got no work done for a week until I got Enlightenment working again. Just having more than one window open at a time in KDE felt...claustrophobic.

    Basically I'm using Enlightenment as a halfway tiling window manager. No taskbar (it's an option; I disable it) -- I never hide or minimize windows, and I put a clock/notifications/etc all on my desktop with some Conky scripts. So I've got a HUGE virtual desktop (2x3) that I flip through with keyboard shortcuts. I use ALT+arrow -- it's far quicker to reach down and tap that than to scan a taskbar for the right window. I always keep windows in the same location so switching windows is pure muscle memory at this point. And I think seeing the windows slide off the screen like it's physically moving around helps with the mental context switching too. Usually I have just one or two windows on each virtual desktop (17" screen, so I often do ~60% width for a browser/editor and ~40% for a terminal -- semi-transparent terminal so I can still see Conky). And the programs menu is super+m or click an empty spot on the desktop -- and since I don't stack windows I'm always on an empty desktop when I want to open something anyway.

    Took a little longer to do the initial configuration exactly as I wanted...but it was definitely worth it. Of course, between the unfamiliar UI and the Dvorak keyboard layout, nobody else can ever use my computer. But that's just a nice bonus ;)

    Starting Score:    1  point
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   2