On Saturday 22 January 2005 03:42 pm, JR wrote:

>
> I think what I'll do is make her windows environment as linux-like as
> possiblel firefox, thunderbird and so forth. Then I'll install linux (she
> has plenty of disk space) and show her how easy it is. She will always have
> the choice - but she will surely find linux easier. I dread going near her
> laptop with windows on it and it's brand new! What a shame.
>


Coming in at the end of this thread, some of this may have been commented on 
earlier...

I did exactly as you did with my wife's laptop. In Windows I installed Firefox 
with a bunch of excellent extensions , and Thunderbird. After I described 
some of the extensions and let her experiment with how much better browsing 
is with Firefox, it became the browser of choice.  Thunderbird does email 
nicely, and the switch was painless.

I've a bunch of machines here that dual-boot, so I began having her walk 
through the Windows update procedures on them while I watched. The idea was 
to get her familiar with the pain that updating Windows is.

Once she became familiar with the browsing and email programs on Windows, I 
had her boot into Mandrake and begin using the programs there. I did show her 
Kmail, which she prefers to T-Bird. Once she got over the double-click 
madness of Windows and learned how to single-click, everything went smoothly. 
All of my machines run so much faster under Mandrake than they do under 
Windows with all of the protection apps running, that it was really noticable 
to her. 

A bit later I showed her how to update Mandrake using MCC, and she never fails 
to comment at how easy keeping her machine up to date is. (I go over the 
updates usually yet on one of the machines, but she happily offers to update 
the other Mandrake machines, and does a fine job.) Soon, she'll be on her 
own. 

I've used a few wireless cards under 10.0 and 10.1 and earlier releases. 
Orinoco and Avaya cards (all cards 802.11b) worked fine, as did Prism 2.5 
cards and IBM's mini-PCI based Prism cards. I haven't done anything with g 
yet.

I don't know if anyone mentioned yet, but Mandrake has Mandrake Move 
available, a CD-ROM based distro that runs without installing anything on the 
computer,  and one of the versions will support a USB memory stick, so your 
values , passwords, and configuration can be saved across boots. You could 
experiment with Linux without installing it, if all of your hardware is 
supported under the limited set of supported hardware of Move. It isn't as 
sweet as a real install, but it is non-intrusive.

I've used lilo as a boot loader for years without issues on my dual-boot 
machines here. 

One thing you may want to look at is getting a recovery disk set for the new 
laptop. That way, should something go wrong, at least you'll be able to 
restore the original setup. I always get them for machines I have, and had to 
use them but once, for a non-Linux related issue.

 Rick Kunath


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