Linux question...
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- Dirty Sennin
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Linux question...
What places do you use to get linux skin stuff?

NARUTO + BLEACH doesn't even come close to the BEST MANGA= ONE PIECE
wow, this would be the third time i relisted this stuff... and I'm sure this has nothing to do with Linux as there isn't any Linux specific skins, just application specific skins and thus making this question more suitable for the Art & Graphics sub-forum. I would be more than happy to help out with actual Linux related questions though. ^_^
anywho, go here:
http://www.evil-genius.us/forums/viewtopic.php?t=296
Linux is a kernel, the layer between hardware and application software.
A Linux based distrubution is a operating system plus applications that use the Linux kernel.
You can't skin the Windows XP kernel, because the end user never looks at it. Same goes for Linux, BSD, etc etc.
anywho, go here:
http://www.evil-genius.us/forums/viewtopic.php?t=296
Linux is a kernel, the layer between hardware and application software.
A Linux based distrubution is a operating system plus applications that use the Linux kernel.
You can't skin the Windows XP kernel, because the end user never looks at it. Same goes for Linux, BSD, etc etc.
I've never messed with slackware personally, but from what I hear it is pretty solid distro. It should come with it's own artwork, look and feel.
I'm more of a Gentoo and Debian guy personally. Really, the fundamentals are the same, it is just that the applications differ from user to user, once you get into that you are no longer asking questions about Linux, but more Application specific topics.
Examples of skinnable 'things': Firefox, Thunderbird, xmms, bmp, gnome, kde... the list goes on and on. It just so happens that these things also run on top of Mac and Windows too.
My visual choice has been KDE and Baghira which is a MacOSX 'clone' theme/template for KDE.
I'm more of a Gentoo and Debian guy personally. Really, the fundamentals are the same, it is just that the applications differ from user to user, once you get into that you are no longer asking questions about Linux, but more Application specific topics.
Examples of skinnable 'things': Firefox, Thunderbird, xmms, bmp, gnome, kde... the list goes on and on. It just so happens that these things also run on top of Mac and Windows too.
My visual choice has been KDE and Baghira which is a MacOSX 'clone' theme/template for KDE.
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- Dirty Sennin
- Posts: 2146
- Joined: Wed Jan 12, 2005 11:18 pm
- Location: Worcester, Massachusetts.
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Its good to know that firefox works with linux. another reason linux would be good for me is It can be made to look graphically appealing much better eye candy if you will than windows, the only think I am not too good with is commands.

NARUTO + BLEACH doesn't even come close to the BEST MANGA= ONE PIECE
You make it seem as though Linux was a second class citizen. Firefox came out first on Linux before someone decided to port it to Windows. Right now Firefox is maintained for multiple platforms on multiple Arch's.
Well, the command line thing is something you get used to. I can't help myself when I'm using windows, I immediately go for a DOS-Shell(box) and have at it because it takes to damn long to click on the icons and drill down to the information I need. Basically, Microsoft got it right in making administration easy by making sure everything can be manipulated with a mouse. The problem with this is that it takes forever. Anything you can do with a mouse click, you can do in the command prompt. Just takes practice.
I've been in a command line environment since 1985 when my dad sat me down in front of his work's VMS based systems. I think they also had some HP-UX stuff too.
Well, the command line thing is something you get used to. I can't help myself when I'm using windows, I immediately go for a DOS-Shell(box) and have at it because it takes to damn long to click on the icons and drill down to the information I need. Basically, Microsoft got it right in making administration easy by making sure everything can be manipulated with a mouse. The problem with this is that it takes forever. Anything you can do with a mouse click, you can do in the command prompt. Just takes practice.
I've been in a command line environment since 1985 when my dad sat me down in front of his work's VMS based systems. I think they also had some HP-UX stuff too.
- Devil_Dante
- Crusher of Dreams
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- Devil_Dante
- Crusher of Dreams
- Posts: 1629
- Joined: Fri Apr 22, 2005 3:47 pm
- Location: In the middle of nowhere
Eh, it isn't like you can run MS Office nativly on Linux so there isn't a judge. How ever, I tend to be able to get what I need to get done under Linux faster than on Windows. That is subjective. You can find benchmarks all over the Internet that show stuff like Quake3, ET, UT2004 all running faster or slower depending on the hardware, it's drivers, and other tweaks.
Official view: That is an un-answerable question, because fast is subjective and has so many quantitative values.
Example: how fast can you encode an MP3, well that is a software package thing. Not OS. how many fps can you get with game X, that is dependent on drivers provided by nvidia or ati. That is also not OS dependent.
You see, Linux is a Kernel. The interface between hardware, and user applications which typically is the stuff you use.
I hope this helps, I'm sorry if it doesn't answer you question. You question isn't simple enough to answer and I'm not qualified to say "Fuck yeah it pwnes Winderz" because that just isn't true for 100% of the cases.
obi-pie: I don't know, never messed with Redhat's quota stuff. You might want to hit up google.
Official view: That is an un-answerable question, because fast is subjective and has so many quantitative values.
Example: how fast can you encode an MP3, well that is a software package thing. Not OS. how many fps can you get with game X, that is dependent on drivers provided by nvidia or ati. That is also not OS dependent.
You see, Linux is a Kernel. The interface between hardware, and user applications which typically is the stuff you use.
I hope this helps, I'm sorry if it doesn't answer you question. You question isn't simple enough to answer and I'm not qualified to say "Fuck yeah it pwnes Winderz" because that just isn't true for 100% of the cases.
obi-pie: I don't know, never messed with Redhat's quota stuff. You might want to hit up google.

I think you have it confused a bit, Linux itself is a kernel. If you are going to compare apples to apples, then compre a Linux Distribution like Redhat, Gentoo, SuSE, Debian to Windows. If you want to compare Linux to anything, compare it to the Windows Kernel, or BSD Kernel.
That is a big problem today is that people ask is Linux better than Windows and that is wrong. It is like saying, what is better, a shipyard or an aircraft carrier.
That is a big problem today is that people ask is Linux better than Windows and that is wrong. It is like saying, what is better, a shipyard or an aircraft carrier.
- Arresty
- Conversation Killer
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In my experience redhat is teh easiest to use. Well depends on what version you are using but I would recommend updating to the Fedora Core 3, if you aren't using that already. It is still a pain to do some things though. I just finished installing it the other day. But once you get the hang of it its pretty easy. There are just a few things you have too look up on your own. Google is god man, it answered every question I came across.
And on another note, I am not a proud member of the Linux community again. Windows has pissed me off for the last time.
And on another note, I am not a proud member of the Linux community again. Windows has pissed me off for the last time.