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On 10/06/12 10:58, Benoit wrote:
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Le 10/06/2012 01:29, Kevin O'Gorman a écrit :
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cite="mid:CAGVXcSbMwY5X7PxGG5CeW2rZoKGrR05-zK1axe+RX0c5HxyE=w@mail.gmail.com"
type="cite">
<pre wrap="">You don't get a new Windows version every 6 months. Maybe there's a reason.
</pre>
</blockquote>
And for some of us who had installed an XP recently with :<br>
<ul>
<li>CD that hard to boot on</li>
<li>a partitionning process that had deleted your data partition
because you hadn't had the driver for your hard drive (sata
drives didn't exist in 2002).. and to make it works, you have
to boot on a floppy (very very slow when it works because USB
wasn't available before the service pack2 and wasn't included
in the install process before Vista),</li>
<li>as it's an old OS, you'll have a lot, and a lot of update to
make,</li>
<li>a lot of drivers to find on the manufacturer's sites<br>
</li>
<li>and after the complete installation when you want to
activate it they say you can't because you had already
installed it 5 times... 6 to 12 hours of hard work for
nothing.</li>
<li>And the viruses had made you reinstall Windows more than
once..<br>
</li>
</ul>
<p><br>
So I won't go back to Windows even for a million $ !<br>
</p>
<p>Don't forget that Linux is only the kernel. A distribution is
GNU/Linux.<br>
</p>
<p>You have a large choice of interfaces : KDE, Gnome
2/Gnome-Shell/Unity, Xfce, Lxde, Enlightenment,...<br>
</p>
<p>You have a large choice of distributions : <a
moz-do-not-send="true" class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="http://distrowatch.com/">http://distrowatch.com/</a><br>
</p>
<p>But also a large choice of filemanagers, network managers, ...
If the choice made by the distribution doesn't fit to you, you
can customize it..<br>
</p>
<p>First, ask and answer a few questions :<br>
- needs 9gig of ram to display what ?<br>
- texts ? videos ? games ?<br>
- if it's only text, 1gig is sufficient<br>
- is it an applications server ? So the RAM to share has to be
function of the users connected,..<br>
</p>
<p>The stable Ubuntu versions are the second versions of LTS
(12.04.1) as said before. But, you can use a genuine Debian for
your development and an Ubuntu/Xubuntu/Kubuntu desktop just for
the tests.<br>
</p>
<p>Precise your needs and, then, ask for help.<br>
</p>
<p>Benoit<br>
</p>
<br>
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Have you tried resetting XFCE's config?<br>
rm -rf ~/.config/xfce4<br>
Also, what graphics card do you have? Nvidia are known to be
problematic. If you want something highly stable, something like
debian with longer release schedules may be more suitable.<br>
Joshua<br>
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