Oh, you'd better be prepared to learn just a little bit of
"Hebrew."  :-)

You know, just enough to get by.  Things like "cd"  and "rm" and "apt-
get install firefox".

Really, you're going to have to do this unless you want to pay for
support.  Believe it or not, Windows works this way too; you have
probably learned more nerdy Windows stuff than you're aware of.

O.K.?

Shalom.

On Sep 4, 3:38 pm, nopposan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If you want to use Linux now and you don't want to play around trying
> this and that distribution, then I'd advise you to just use straight
> Ubuntu 8.04; there are other distributions which are just as good or
> even better, Debian is my favorite, but Ubuntu has many new users and
> it caters to them -- Ubuntu is the OS that gOS is based on and it
> seems to me that the only things gOS has over Ubuntu can be
> categorized as "bells and whistles"; besides, gOS is a relative
> newcomer and it's got a few kinks to work out.  Alternatively, I'd say
> wait until the next version of gOS is released.  It's good to try the
> live distro out; however, I've used many distributions and I've
> discovered that one cannot safely assume that the installation will be
> as simple and trouble-free as the live CD was.
>
> On Sep 3, 7:18 am, Geoffrey McCaleb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>
> > How would your students be using the computer? Write email/simple
> > documents? General surfing? Games?
>
> > I've only been using gOS for a few days now but I am convinced it is
> > the first Linux OS that I could get my folks to use. And, generally
> > speaking, Linux  doesn't require you to have the latest and greatest
> > Hardware. For example, the PC I am trialing gOS on is over 4 years old
> > and I find the performance excellent, even when comparing against my
> > Mac and work XP machine (both of which are new).
>
> > The only point I can't speak to is gaming. Linux has traditionally
> > lagged far behind Mac and XP in terms of official games. However,
> > there are a lot of independent developers out there making great Linux
> > games, and there is of course WINE, which allows you to install select
> > Windows applications (though I don't know what they support).
>
> > My advice, download gOS and give it a try via the LiveCD. I'm sure you
> > will be impressed.
>
> > Geoffrey
>
> > On Sep 2, 9:16 am, murcia spain <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > as a simple guy who just wants to save money and have a good pc ,linux
> > > is cheaper than windows and if it works as well or better than its for
> > > me.i like reading here the tek stuff but its hebrew to me(as the
> > > chinese say when THEY dont understand something). I just want
> > > affordable good computers for me wife 3 kids..
> > > i know notthing about LINUX or crome or voip. I just need good and
> > > cheap..
> > > we teach english and we really need fast as well for students and for
> > > work...
> > > murcia ingles clases
> > > NATIVEingles
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