Full time Linux user now...

For everything that's not in any way related to PureBasic. General chat etc...
Beach
Enthusiast
Enthusiast
Posts: 677
Joined: Mon Feb 02, 2004 3:16 am
Location: Beyond the sun...

Full time Linux user now...

Post by Beach »

I had two machines here and lost one to a storm recently. One was running XP (quite well) and the other one was running Ubuntu Linux. I only used the Linux machine occasionally. After the Windows box died, I combined all the good stuff into one box and have been tweaking it out for a couple of weeks now. I loaded VMWare in anticipation of not having everything I needed on Linux, I was wrong. I have not had to boot the virtual machine yet. Everything I do is here and works very well. Dual monitor support, DVD ripping, Lame encoding, web, multimedia, HTML/PHP coding, PureBasic, etc... There were a few things that I could not find a suitable replacement for, but Wine loads them very nicely.

I don't have a grudge against Microsoft or anything and I suspect I will always have a Windows based machine at work. I just thought I would come here and testify after having burned a Lightscribe label with no drama.

-Beach
Num3
PureBasic Expert
PureBasic Expert
Posts: 2812
Joined: Fri Apr 25, 2003 4:51 pm
Location: Portugal, Lisbon
Contact:

Post by Num3 »

I also was surprised with ubuntu, everything seems to work!

Even my HP F370 printer / scanner works. Curiously there are no drivers for it in Vista, HP drivers just don't work for this model !
Beach
Enthusiast
Enthusiast
Posts: 677
Joined: Mon Feb 02, 2004 3:16 am
Location: Beyond the sun...

Post by Beach »

You reminded me that I had not tested my Canon scanner, but it was fine. Xsane is every bit as good as what I had with Windows. 8)
Foz
Addict
Addict
Posts: 1359
Joined: Tue Nov 13, 2007 12:42 pm
Location: Manchester, UK

Post by Foz »

I have kept a Windows partition for games (no matter how good Wine is, it still has its share of problems with games).

I also have a Windows virtual machine and a Ubuntu x32 virtual machine with VirtualBox (installed on both the Windows partition and my Ubuntu x64 partition) for purposes of development only.

It sounds weird to do so, but it means that I can keep working on my projects no matter which partition I boot up in. :)

Well, welcome to the mad house club :)
Beach
Enthusiast
Enthusiast
Posts: 677
Joined: Mon Feb 02, 2004 3:16 am
Location: Beyond the sun...

Post by Beach »

Yeah, I guess I should should say that I have been blocked by things that use DirectX. I don't do that much in the way of games, but I might fiddle with Grub and see if I can point it to my old Windows drive so I can still boot up in Windows. Google has a crazy virtual chat thingy that I would like to see. I enabled 3D graphics support for VMWare, but I blue-screened after starting up the chat program. No biggie. It probably saved hours for me this weekend by not working. :wink:

-Beach
garretthylltun
Enthusiast
Enthusiast
Posts: 346
Joined: Wed Oct 26, 2005 2:46 am
Contact:

Post by garretthylltun »

Seriously, there's only a few area's where Linux lacks right now, Games being one of them. That's a big area too and may never be filled, and likely, Wine will never be able to catch up and keep pace at all. There are of course some alternatives. You could purchase like Cedega which allows some of the more recent games to run on your Linux system. It's probably a Wine base that's been worked on more exensively to work with games.

http://www.cedega.com/start/
'What you do not want done to yourself, do not do to others.' - Confucius (550 b.c. to 479 b.c.)
· Necroprogramming FTW! - "Wait.. Is necroprogramming legal?"
· http://www.freewarehome.com/ <-- Freeware listings since 1996
garretthylltun
Enthusiast
Enthusiast
Posts: 346
Joined: Wed Oct 26, 2005 2:46 am
Contact:

Post by garretthylltun »

I should note though that Cedega is not free, it's a subscription based service. Which is why I don't use it myself. I'm not into subscription fee.. I'd rather pay once, use it, and not pay again unless I upgrade.
'What you do not want done to yourself, do not do to others.' - Confucius (550 b.c. to 479 b.c.)
· Necroprogramming FTW! - "Wait.. Is necroprogramming legal?"
· http://www.freewarehome.com/ <-- Freeware listings since 1996
User avatar
pdwyer
Addict
Addict
Posts: 2813
Joined: Tue May 08, 2007 1:27 pm
Location: Chiba, Japan

Post by pdwyer »

How easy is DVD ripping on linux these days?

Living outside of my DVD zone I often need to rip DVD's I buy from overseas in order to watch. On XP, dvddecyptor takes the zone off in the time it takes to copy the dvd to hdd (15mins) shrink to singe side and drop unwanted languages/menus (5mins) write to new blank dvd (10-15mins). Including manual time to click buttons, change disks etc it's all done in well under an hour

I have it down to a fine art now with high quality and (on top of games) this is one area I'm wondering if linux is as easy. I know ripping dvd's really started on linux but I haven't heard that it's as easy or as fast.
Paul Dwyer

“In nature, it’s not the strongest nor the most intelligent who survives. It’s the most adaptable to change” - Charles Darwin
“If you can't explain it to a six-year old you really don't understand it yourself.” - Albert Einstein
User avatar
Rook Zimbabwe
Addict
Addict
Posts: 4322
Joined: Tue Jan 02, 2007 8:16 pm
Location: Cypress TX
Contact:

Post by Rook Zimbabwe »

@Paul:

http://www.world-import.com/dvd.htm

I don't think most of the new Blu-Ray players are regioned but that is a squirrelly fact in my brain... I will check it out

http://www.world-import.com/dv-400DV.htm

but I woul double check the specifications to make sure the output is 1080p at a minimum
Binarily speaking... it takes 10 to Tango!!!

Image
http://www.bluemesapc.com/
User avatar
pdwyer
Addict
Addict
Posts: 2813
Joined: Tue May 08, 2007 1:27 pm
Location: Chiba, Japan

Post by pdwyer »

Actually we are thinking of buying one of those bluray HDD recorder things soon... that's a $1000+ purchase though so I'm not sure I want to get it shipped intl...

then again, I don't think BD's are cracked yet anyway so I might want to think about this with this next generation :?
Paul Dwyer

“In nature, it’s not the strongest nor the most intelligent who survives. It’s the most adaptable to change” - Charles Darwin
“If you can't explain it to a six-year old you really don't understand it yourself.” - Albert Einstein
Beach
Enthusiast
Enthusiast
Posts: 677
Joined: Mon Feb 02, 2004 3:16 am
Location: Beyond the sun...

Post by Beach »

pdwyer wrote:How easy is DVD ripping on linux these days?
I tried many combinations of Open Source stuff - but could not find anything that is as consistent as DVDFab. Here is the current method that seems to work best for me:

- DVDFab HD with Wine to decrypt the DVD to the drive
- OGMRip to convert it to Xvid/MP3

If I need to make a backup of my DVD, I still have to use DVDShrink (with Wine). I have not found an equal application for Gnome.
KarLKoX
Enthusiast
Enthusiast
Posts: 681
Joined: Mon Oct 06, 2003 7:13 pm
Location: France
Contact:

Post by KarLKoX »

Beach wrote:If I need to make a backup of my DVD, I still have to use DVDShrink (with Wine). I have not found an equal application for Gnome.
gDvdShrink ;)
"Qui baise trop bouffe un poil." P. Desproges

http://karlkox.blogspot.com/
Post Reply