Welcome.

You have made the right choice. Or at least I think so :)

Debian releases may have been slow but its built on a solid foundation and as 
can be see now its release times are getting shorter. Debian may take awhile to 
get to where other distributions are but once it gets there it is rock solid. 
With the ingenious new GUI installer, installing Debian is very easy. The GUI 
installer is simple, easy to use and follow without all the fancy crap. It also 
looks good (plug for the Debian installer team).

If you have partitions you want to keep, during installation you can tell the 
installer where to mount them and leave their file system(s) intact. Or you can 
just tell it to ignore them and mount them later yourself.

Currently when you chose to install desktop support the installer installs 
GNOME only. Hopefully we can change that to choices for either GNOME or KDE or 
both. (hint, hint, Debian installer team.:)

From what I understand Debian will never/can never be bought out by any company 
or entity. Therefore it will always be free and open.

As for AutoCAD I've been looking for a drop-in full opensource replacement but 
so far no luck. Hopefully this will change soon. I've found drop-in full 
opensource replacements for everything else: office suite, drawing/graphics, 
audio editing, video editing, educational, financial, business operations, 
teaching, communications and more. Most of which can be found in Debian's 
repository. If you install the desktop, Synaptic is great for browsing through 
the Debian packages available.

I have not had a look at MS Vista. To be honest I most likely will not. After working on 
MS OSs for years and being certified by MS, I've had my fill of MS OSs. Know how much of 
a pain it is to install MS Exchange server and what a nightmare it is to recover it when 
it fails! In Debian it takes 2 minutes to (re)install Exim4 and then just copy e-mail 
onto the server from your backup. Simplicity that works! :) Its been a year since I've 
moved all my machines over to Debian and I haven't looked back since. :) The learning 
curve may seem to be great but one just as to think logically. As one should with 
computers. Then learning Linux becomes simple. We've just been taught to think 
illogically when it comes to computers by MS. Just be ready to scratch your head and kick 
yourself in the a*s when you think "its that simple, why didn't I see that straight 
off." I've had a few of those and I'm sure I will have more. :)

I've being having lots of fund learning Debian Linux over the pass year and a 
half. Sometimes its difficult but that can be said of any OS. You may want to 
check out this web site and buy these books.

http://www.aboutdebian.com
Debian GNU/Linux Bible
The Debian System
Moving to Linux kiss the blue screen of death goodbye

The aboutdebian website deals with Sarge and you can support the site by buying 
related books (including the ones I've listed) via its links. The instructions 
there can get you up and running with many different type of servers; DHCP, 
SAMBA (MS share), Web server, NFS, FTP, Webcam sever, etc. It shows how quickly 
and easy it is to get these servers up and running. Please read the 
introduction page fully.
The latest versions of both Debian books are based on Sarge. You may want to 
wait and see if there are releases for Etch. You can still use the Sarge 
release but a lot of things have change between Sarge and Etch; procedures, 
program configurations, etc. But you can learn on Sarge and  read the updates 
for the Etch versions. For example the default location of Apache's web folder 
and home-page file have changed between Sarge and Etch.

Moving to Linux.... list Linux drop-in replacements for popular programs in MS 
and how to use them under Linux. The book is not a Debian specific book but is 
very helpful.

As other here have stated Etch is frozen and about to become stable so you may as well go with it. Upgrading 
is simple. So you can always upgrade after its become stable. I've been using Etch since it became 
"Testing" and have had no serious problem and besides it lets you join in the bug crunching. You 
can doing testing and supply bug reports which help to reduce the amount of time it takes for 
"Testing" to become "Stable".

You may also want to look at the docs on the Debian site. Read the definition of 
"Stable", "Testing", etc. You may find that the definition of Stable is a bit 
paranoid in relations to workstations and some types of servers. Debian Stable is judged in 
relation to servers; high security, reliability, zero reboot, 24/7 operation, zero crashes, strict 
access controll, etc. Which is great!

If you're running a workstation to do e-mails, download pictures from your 
camera, write a novel :), do some spreadsheets, listen to music, edit the 
family videos, watch DVDs, brows the web, learn Debian, etc. you don't need to 
worry to much about the above but its good to know that you can or will have 
that stability on your workstation.

One of the things I like about Debian is that there is no real distinction 
between server and workstation. There is no separate server distribution and 
workstation distribution. Just install the user applications and/or daemons you 
want and off you go. And the best part is that you can change this whenever you 
like without doing a clean install. Just take out what you no long need and add 
what you do.

A piece of advice on new hardware especially new complete computer system. 
Download and burn onto CD a live distribution like Knoppix. Knoppix is based on 
Debian.
When you go into the computer store to buy that new zing bang faster-er 
computer, take the Knoppix CD without and ask the sales rep. if you can test 
drive the computer with your Knoppix CD. Do explain that it does *not* change 
anything on the computer. This will give you a good idea of how compatible the 
computer is with Debian. If the sales rep. refuses tell him it wasn't a problem 
at his competitor's place and he's now forcing you to spend your $1K to $20K 
there. Would you spend $1,000 on a new stereo without testing it? Would you not 
test it with one of your own CDs to hear how it plays your music? :)



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