My neighbor's friend gave me a laptop that was suppose to be dead and is a few years old...3-4...Toshiba.
Anyway all the issues pointed to a problem hard drive as the first choice to replace as windows would not boot and showed to have a corrupted registery.
So I was looking on the net to see what current versions of linux was out and if it was a good bit more mature since I looked at it before, some 2 -3 years ago.
Well the answer is yes... various web sites recommended Ubuntu...so you can download it free from their site and then make an install cdrom from the image file.
Install worked flawless, I wiped the old hard drive and did a clean install of ubuntu and its recognized and configured just about everything that I've tried...without any input from me. Wireless works, email and web work, various ports and apps unique to a notebook work. It also was able to install and configure two older printers that I have both are OKI, using only the network and the internet.
Great option for someone looking for a computer for internet use and whatever else... I'm not sure how well it work windows software (but it will) and you would have to test it out if you were dependent on using ms office applications for work...
Anyway just thought I would post up a good alternative.
Tests show the present hard drive on this notebook has bad sectors so after I mess around with it a while I'll get a new hard drive for it and do a clean install of ubuntu...
I've not tired any in-depth file sharing or anything beyond everyday web, email...and general stuff. But free is pretty good. You can buy the formal cd media from the distributor, for minimal charge.
I would offer the internet support and documentation is good for stuff I've been trying to figure out, but I doubt you'll find much hands on support anywhere unless you have a friend who has interest in linux. So far my experience has been good and its not required me to know any obscure settings or whatever. I do know that you can go crazy with downloading programs and get some conflicts but its easy to wipe that out and start over with a clean install.
For the price of a new hard drive you can have a very nice stable system, or potentially run a dual boot system or just wipe your present hard drive and do a clean install of Linux.
I think a lot of folks coming from windows will like the KDE desktop that you have to install yourself if you don't like the default setup. Anyway just thought I would post this up if anyone is looking for an alternative setup. Linux runs rather smooth and is not near as a resource hog as windows7. Of course I think most of the linux crowd are hardcore computer folks.
There are a number of flavors of linux (distributions) but this one is user friendly so far.
Home | Ubuntu
KDE - Experience Freedom!
Anyway all the issues pointed to a problem hard drive as the first choice to replace as windows would not boot and showed to have a corrupted registery.
So I was looking on the net to see what current versions of linux was out and if it was a good bit more mature since I looked at it before, some 2 -3 years ago.
Well the answer is yes... various web sites recommended Ubuntu...so you can download it free from their site and then make an install cdrom from the image file.
Install worked flawless, I wiped the old hard drive and did a clean install of ubuntu and its recognized and configured just about everything that I've tried...without any input from me. Wireless works, email and web work, various ports and apps unique to a notebook work. It also was able to install and configure two older printers that I have both are OKI, using only the network and the internet.
Great option for someone looking for a computer for internet use and whatever else... I'm not sure how well it work windows software (but it will) and you would have to test it out if you were dependent on using ms office applications for work...
Anyway just thought I would post up a good alternative.
Tests show the present hard drive on this notebook has bad sectors so after I mess around with it a while I'll get a new hard drive for it and do a clean install of ubuntu...
I've not tired any in-depth file sharing or anything beyond everyday web, email...and general stuff. But free is pretty good. You can buy the formal cd media from the distributor, for minimal charge.
I would offer the internet support and documentation is good for stuff I've been trying to figure out, but I doubt you'll find much hands on support anywhere unless you have a friend who has interest in linux. So far my experience has been good and its not required me to know any obscure settings or whatever. I do know that you can go crazy with downloading programs and get some conflicts but its easy to wipe that out and start over with a clean install.
For the price of a new hard drive you can have a very nice stable system, or potentially run a dual boot system or just wipe your present hard drive and do a clean install of Linux.
I think a lot of folks coming from windows will like the KDE desktop that you have to install yourself if you don't like the default setup. Anyway just thought I would post this up if anyone is looking for an alternative setup. Linux runs rather smooth and is not near as a resource hog as windows7. Of course I think most of the linux crowd are hardcore computer folks.
There are a number of flavors of linux (distributions) but this one is user friendly so far.
Home | Ubuntu
KDE - Experience Freedom!