My life with Linux: Day 3 - The daily ups and downs of switching to open source

My life with Linux: Day 3 -  The daily ups and downs of switching to open source

Stuart Turton spends the third day of his one week odyssey with Linux, fighting Fedora monitor hassles, wishing for Ubuntu at work and discovers that forums can be a Linux user's new best friend.

In days one and two of his seven day experiment with Linux, Stuart Turton handed his life over to the alternative OS, trying to ignore the spell of Microsoft and getting busy with his first ever Ubuntu and Fedora install. 

Now on day three, Stuart continues to trade barbs over those tricky Fedora settings,embraces forums for advice and blames Nvidia for the source of his current woes.

But will Stuart even manage to setup something as seemingly basic as a printer, using his new found powers of Linux?



Day 3: My life with Linux

My investigations into yesterday's monitor problem reveal it's all Nvidia's fault: the drivers for my graphics card are detecting my monitor, but choosing to ignore it, much as you would your girlfriend's annoying mate.

Normally you just head into the control panel to fix this, but in true Linux fashion having the drivers is no guarantee of having the software allowing you to play with them.

Another scout around the Internet and I find the command to download the control package, and after a quick fiddle Fedora lurches onto my monitor, but at the price of completely rogering both displays. More fiddling only makes the situation worse, until finally I luck out on the forums and find the command to make it all better.

A quick jaunt to safe mode, a few lines of commands later and hey presto, TwinView is enabled and it's almost as if I'm computing in 2008.

With the monitor problem solved in a world record-equalling hour-and-a-half I'm bristling with confidence, and turn my attention to that pesky email problem.

An hour later, as the office fills up with my Windows-loving workmates, I've tried every combination of account information, every plug-in, read every help document and I'm no closer to fixing anything. Our weekly newsletter beckons and in pure desperation I flip over to Ubuntu and try setting it up there instead.

Two minutes later I'm reading my work email. No fuss, no drama. I typed in exactly the same settings and it worked. I've killed men for less.

I bash out the newsletter and soon the time comes to print it for proofing, which means getting the office printer set up. Remarkably, and through no fault of my own, it works first time.

I just type in the IP address of our HP LaserJet and 30 seconds later I've killed a tree. Easy life. So easy, in fact, I decide to ditch Fedora for Ubuntu at work as well.


Keep up with Stuart Turton's week with Linux, by reading up on all his journal entries:

Day 1:  Which OS? MP3 playback nightmares and Windows withdrawal 
Day 2:  Fedora anxiety, DVD playback issues and retreat to Vista

See more about:  linux  |  open  |  source  |  os  |  vista  |  microsoft  |  windows  |  nvida  |  twinview  |  ubuntu
 
 
Comments: 2
Xenu
25 November 2009
1) The NVidia drivers are proprietary and closed source, but they work quite well on my Ubuntu system. I don't have any trouble running the advanced features and they're actually quite useful
2) While it may have been necessary this one time, you really need to break the habit of looking for software out on the internet. The software repositories are the best part of using Ubuntu.
3) You were right to ditch Fedora. Its a cutting edge distro not intended for newbies.


Comment made about the PC Authority article:
My life with Linux: Day 3 - The daily ups and downs of switching to open source?
Stuart Turton spends the third day of his one week odyssey with Linux, fighting Fedora monitor hassles, wishing for Ubuntu at work and discovers that forums can be a Linux user's new best friend.

What do you think? Join the discussion.
Xenu
25 November 2009
4) Linux drivers do tend to worry about simple function above being fancy, but the good thing is that 99% of them are built directly into the kernal. That means you usually know immediately if something is going to work or not.
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