Kevitivity
Member
I have some Ubuntu 6 machines still in service after over 6 years, with multiple users, and have never experienced OS slowdown.
Does whatever system monitor you have show high memory or CPU usage or spikes while using any programs?No, not really.
It's not really slow to the point where it gets in the way of my day to day routine, just sluggish at times and causing some annoyances.
Are there any Linux SysAdmins out there that use CentOS or Ubuntu, because I got questions...
That would be me.
Thanks I'll try that.
I mostly use Chromium, that's what seems to take up the most CPU usage.Does whatever system monitor you have show high memory or CPU usage or spikes while using any programs?
Thanks I'll try that.
I mostly use Chromium, that's what seems to take up the most CPU usage.
Is there any special reason why you're installing 12.04 and then upgrading to 13.04 rather than just installing 13.04? The amount of files it pulls down from the net to upgrade you might as well download 13.04 . Plus you're far better off with a fresh install imo, than upgrading.Tried to update Gnome 3.6 to 3.8 via cmd line tonight. Total. Failure.
It essentially nuked my whole OS. I've been using Ubuntu for years but I'm still not 100% comfortable with it nor command line so I follow instructions on sites like OMGUbuntu with full confidence. Now I'm fresh installing 12.04 (only one I had on a USB stick) and hoping the upgrade to 13.04 will go smoothly after and that I can install Gnome 3.8 properly.
Worst part is that this had to happen right before E3. >_>.
Tried to update Gnome 3.6 to 3.8 via cmd line tonight. Total. Failure.
It essentially nuked my whole OS. I've been using Ubuntu for years but I'm still not 100% comfortable with it nor command line so I follow instructions on sites like OMGUbuntu with full confidence. Now I'm fresh installing 12.04 (only one I had on a USB stick) and hoping the upgrade to 13.04 will go smoothly after and that I can install Gnome 3.8 properly.
Worst part is that this had to happen right before E3. >_>.
Is there any special reason why you're installing 12.04 and then upgrading to 13.04 rather than just installing 13.04? The amount of files it pulls down from the net to upgrade you might as well download 13.04 . Plus you're far better off with a fresh install imo, than upgrading.
I had lots of freezing problems with Gnome 3.8 although I admit that was in a Virtual Machine so take it with a grain of salt.
Tried to update Gnome 3.6 to 3.8 via cmd line tonight. Total. Failure.
It essentially nuked my whole OS. I've been using Ubuntu for years but I'm still not 100% comfortable with it nor command line so I follow instructions on sites like OMGUbuntu with full confidence. Now I'm fresh installing 12.04 (only one I had on a USB stick) and hoping the upgrade to 13.04 will go smoothly after and that I can install Gnome 3.8 properly.
Worst part is that this had to happen right before E3. >_>.
I just ended up downloading Ubuntu 13.04 and made a bootable USB stick. It works fine now but I have to redownload some applications I had previously, but damn is my machine faster.Yea there were a rash of audio problems related upstream to the Linux Kernel but I thought that was solved mostly with the latest kernel and updates.
A lot of the problems were related to alsa and pulseaudio just not loading at boot and a reboot sometimes would fix the issue. If not you need to start digging in your sound properties to see if your card is being detected.
Also look in Software and Updates(???) and check the last tab to see if any additional wifi drivers are available.
I downloaded Mint as well and made a bootable USB stick but I haven't tried it yet. Might give it a go in the future.Did the gnome session fail to open? I had this exact issue a week ago. I fresh installed 13.04, updated everything, then upgraded to Gnome 3.8, nothing else. On reboot the session wouldn't load and everything I tried failed to fix it. After much frustration I ended up just going with Mint 15.
Yea there were a rash of audio problems related upstream to the Linux Kernel but I thought that was solved mostly with the latest kernel and updates.
A lot of the problems were related to alsa and pulseaudio just not loading at boot and a reboot sometimes would fix the issue. If not you need to start digging in your sound properties to see if your card is being detected.
Also look in Software and Updates(???) and check the last tab to see if any additional wifi drivers are available.
Was this only for VMs?
I usually keep my kernels pretty up-to-date and don't remember any audio problems.
That is the whole reason for the "slim" redesign. They like everyone else are coming out with new Haswell models.
System 76's laptops work and perform very well and you don't have to worry about drivers.
Still for the price ie once you actually customize the thing for more RAM and an SSD it isn't cheap. It isn't expensive compared to the competition per say, but for that price point I expect a little better industrial design work.
Wow RHEL 7 is shaping to be the best release ever.
- Gnome shell classic, so finally a nice desktop
- Kernel 3.11
- Open vSwitch!!
- XFS by default
- Parallel NFS (YAY!)
- MariaDB (Fuck you Oracle )
About time they updated RHEL, way too many improvements in the last couple of years.
Also in my quest for "my" perfect Distro, I've landed on OpenSUSE. RPM packages which are widely available, doesn't break like Fedora, isn't as dated as CentOS for a desktop environment in Xfce is damn near perfect. Running it at home and at work for connections into all my CentOS boxes and I'm loving it.
Their tumbleweed feature is really what sold me.
The DVD installer let's you choose. Of course I only use xfce!But opensuse comes with KDE by default instead of xfce, which means that they are wrong in everything!
Is there a xfce-opensuse or did you just downloaded the DVD/Network image?
Gotta try it sometime...
EDIT: Wait im stupid...SuSe Studio of course.
Is cloud9 in Chrome a good programming environment for a noobie? Or are there easier ways to program in Ubuntu?
Not quite sure. I want to learn a language... any suggestions? What's a fairly easy language for beginners?What kind of programming?
There is always desktop IDEs.
Not quite sure. I want to learn a language... any suggestions? What's a fairly easy language for beginners?
Not quite sure. I want to learn a language... any suggestions? What's a fairly easy language for beginners?
Only a horrible person would tell someone touse JavaScript if he doesn't have to.I want to recommend JavaScript but I kinda don't.
Besides the Python suggestion, Java is a pretty good learning language if you want to get into object oriented languages.Not quite sure. I want to learn a language... any suggestions? What's a fairly easy language for beginners?
Not quite sure. I want to learn a language... any suggestions? What's a fairly easy language for beginners?
C is a good starting point if you consider ever going deeper into programming or plan to learn some more languages. It has a rather steep learning curve since it's missing a lot of "comfort" of more modern languages, but it teaches you the very basic underlying concepts of programming. If you don't care about that, and just want to learn a language, I'd stick to Python or Java.
Only a horrible person would tell someone touse JavaScript if he doesn't have to.
Not quite sure. I want to learn a language... any suggestions? What's a fairly easy language for beginners?
Python - it's a great starter language and it's on everything. Mac, Win, Linux, Unix.
Also if you've never learned a language I'd recommend some of the online stuff that is laid out for you. There are some Coursera online courses as well as some things like Code Academy and Code School.
On a side note do any of you Linux users feel safer, happier, maybe vindicated etc... for using Linux now that all of the PRISM stuff leaked about the US Government surveillance?
Do you actually feel more secure than say using Windows or even OSX? Do you even care? Do you think using Linux is even really a benefit in cases like this?
Also if you've never learned a language I'd recommend some of the online stuff that is laid out for you. There are some Coursera online courses as well as some things like Code Academy and Code School.
On a side note do any of you Linux users feel safer, happier, maybe vindicated etc... for using Linux now that all of the PRISM stuff leaked about the US Government surveillance?
Do you actually feel more secure than say using Windows or even OSX? Do you even care? Do you think using Linux is even really a benefit in cases like this?
There was the idea floated out there though that MS was specifically holding back patches for security holes in Windows in order for the US Govt to use them before they pushed the patch to the end users.
It really depends on the distro in question. It's an open source thing rather than just being Linux. Ubuntu's stance on the matter for example has been quite appalling.On a side note do any of you Linux users feel safer, happier, maybe vindicated etc... for using Linux now that all of the PRISM stuff leaked about the US Government surveillance?
Do you actually feel more secure than say using Windows or even OSX? Do you even care? Do you think using Linux is even really a benefit in cases like this?