Help!

Pengyou plug-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us
Tue, 1 Oct 2002 05:35:51 -0700 (PDT)


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I am an American teaching English in Beijing.  I do not make much money so I cannot keep up with the endless parade of upgrades of software that keep coming out.  In fact, I don't even want to try....I took my first computer programming in 1979, Fortran 77.  I have had classes in COBOL and BASIC.  I was a computer apps teacher for about 10 years in the states.  I guess I should admit this, though I never have publicly and come out of the closet....I LOVE DOS!!!  For many reasons I am looking to make the switch to LINUX.  I have a couple of computers.  One is a '486 (donated from a friend) that I want to use as a voicemail machine, leave it running all the time to answer my telephone.  The second is an AMD K63-400.  I want to stash it with 4 CD-R's, load it with about 756-1,000 MB or RAM, give it a RAM disk and use it to do nothing more than make CD's of lesson materials and tutorials that I am preparing in preparation for my masters degree.  The third computer I have (also donated) is a dual pentium 2, model r440lx, that I will use to talk to the other computers and also surf the net.  From prior experience with o/s's, I am guessing the general process is to format the HD, install the kernal, then install the necessary drivers and then the applications.  Is there a more flushed out outline somewhere that I can follow?  What version of Linux would you recommend?  Is Linux networkable by itself or do you have to install another "utility"?

Thanks

Tom Connolly



---------------------------------
Do you Yahoo!?
New DSL Internet Access from SBC & Yahoo!
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<P>I am an American teaching English in Beijing.&nbsp; I do not make much money so I cannot keep up with the endless parade of upgrades of software that keep coming out.&nbsp; In fact, I don't even want to try....I took my first computer programming in 1979, Fortran 77.&nbsp; I have had classes in COBOL and BASIC.&nbsp; I was a computer apps teacher for about 10 years in the states.&nbsp; I guess I should admit this, though I never have publicly and come out of the closet....I LOVE DOS!!!&nbsp; For many reasons I am looking to make the switch to LINUX.&nbsp; I have a couple of computers.&nbsp; One is a '486 (donated from a friend) that I want to use as a voicemail machine, leave it running all the time to answer my telephone.&nbsp; The second is an AMD K63-400.&nbsp; I want to stash it with 4 CD-R's, load it with about 756-1,000 MB or RAM, give it a RAM disk and use it to do nothing more than make CD's of lesson materials and tutorials that I am preparing in preparation for my masters degree.&nbsp; The third computer I have (also donated) is a dual pentium 2, model r440lx, that I will use to talk to the other computers and also surf the net.&nbsp; From prior experience with o/s's, I am guessing the general process is to format the HD, install the kernal, then install the necessary drivers and then the applications.&nbsp; Is there a more flushed out outline somewhere that I can follow?&nbsp; What version of Linux would you recommend?&nbsp; Is Linux networkable by itself or do you have to install another "utility"?</P>
<P>Thanks</P>
<P>Tom Connolly</P><p><br><hr size=1>Do you Yahoo!?<br>
New <a href="http://rd.yahoo.com/evt=1207/*http://sbc.yahoo.com/">DSL Internet Access</a> from SBC & Yahoo!</a>
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