issue68:mon_histoire
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issue68:mon_histoire [2013/03/13 17:58] – auntiee | issue68:mon_histoire [2013/03/14 10:16] (Version actuelle) – auntiee | ||
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**My first computer was a used Fujitsu-Siemens with 128 MB of RAM, loaded with Windows XP. It was 6 years old when I got it in 2005. Up to that point I had used machines at work using Windows 95 on a company network, using Lotus Notes. I had a bit of fun with this machine, which eventually died giving me a nice blank blue screen. I searched the support sites but eventually checked the hardware for faults and, lo and behold, poor contact of the RAM modules was rectified and I was back on the air. Up to this point I was working with dial-up, and then I got broadband. I then got a desktop built by the local shop based on an ASRock board with 1 GB of RAM and Windows XP. This was followed by a wireless router from my ISP which I used to set up a network with a Toshiba laptop with Win XP, which both my wife and I could use downstairs while my router and desktop were kept upstairs with the printer. So I got my wife using email! An ability to run iPlayer, and show photos from the laptop on TV, was also well received. There was no way she would allow the living or dining room to be permanently cluttered up with a desktop computer and printer. To improve performance, | **My first computer was a used Fujitsu-Siemens with 128 MB of RAM, loaded with Windows XP. It was 6 years old when I got it in 2005. Up to that point I had used machines at work using Windows 95 on a company network, using Lotus Notes. I had a bit of fun with this machine, which eventually died giving me a nice blank blue screen. I searched the support sites but eventually checked the hardware for faults and, lo and behold, poor contact of the RAM modules was rectified and I was back on the air. Up to this point I was working with dial-up, and then I got broadband. I then got a desktop built by the local shop based on an ASRock board with 1 GB of RAM and Windows XP. This was followed by a wireless router from my ISP which I used to set up a network with a Toshiba laptop with Win XP, which both my wife and I could use downstairs while my router and desktop were kept upstairs with the printer. So I got my wife using email! An ability to run iPlayer, and show photos from the laptop on TV, was also well received. There was no way she would allow the living or dining room to be permanently cluttered up with a desktop computer and printer. To improve performance, | ||
- | Mon premier ordinateur était un Fujitsu-Siemens d’occasion avec 128 Mo de RAM, équipé de Windows XP. Il avait 6 ans quand je l'ai eu en 2005. Jusque-là, au travail, j' | + | Mon premier ordinateur était un Fujitsu-Siemens d’occasion avec 128 Mo de RAM, équipé de Windows XP. Il avait 6 ans quand je l'ai eu en 2005. Jusque-là, au travail, j' |
**So, now I had a home network, wireless, powerline ethernet, broadband, printing and laptop. My son’s Fujitsu of the same vintage had by this time also died, so for the fun of it I brought it back from the dead with a new hard drive, which I successfully fitted. But what about the operating system? It was then I discovered that to get the machine back on, I had to buy a Windows XP CD at what I thought was a high price, and had things called product codes which are a pain. As luck would have it, I found a magazine which offered a free CD with Ubuntu 10.04 LTS. I tentatively installed this, not knowing a thing about live CDs or Linux, and, with fingers crossed, got Ubuntu up and running. It took a while to get a printer working with a suitable driver from the Internet; and then, eventually, I successfully added the machine to the network.** | **So, now I had a home network, wireless, powerline ethernet, broadband, printing and laptop. My son’s Fujitsu of the same vintage had by this time also died, so for the fun of it I brought it back from the dead with a new hard drive, which I successfully fitted. But what about the operating system? It was then I discovered that to get the machine back on, I had to buy a Windows XP CD at what I thought was a high price, and had things called product codes which are a pain. As luck would have it, I found a magazine which offered a free CD with Ubuntu 10.04 LTS. I tentatively installed this, not knowing a thing about live CDs or Linux, and, with fingers crossed, got Ubuntu up and running. It took a while to get a printer working with a suitable driver from the Internet; and then, eventually, I successfully added the machine to the network.** | ||
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**By this time I was struggling up think up another feasible but interesting project, and started reading various Linux magazines. A lot of the content initially seemed beyond me, so I thought I would investigate C programming. It seemed a bit more academic than the projects I had already tried, and it was a job I could fit in at spare moments. A netbook seemed the answer, so I got a Toshiba unit – because my old Toshiba laptop still worked after 5 years of continuous use, although I had recently upgraded to a newer unit which runs Windows 7, which my wife was happy with. The Netbook came preloaded with Windows 7, so I dual loaded it with Ubuntu 12.04 LTS. I got most of my Windows programs running on it with the current exceptions of the chess program Fritz 8, which I use on the Netbook Windows 7 operating system, and Active sync for my pda, which I use on my old Win XP laptop. The difficulty which I have not solved is that I cannot get Wi-Fi to work on Ubuntu 12.04. I have made do with a Netgear USB wireless dongle to date. I am coming to grips with the terminal and using the command line, and am gradually trying out some of the ideas in magazines such as Full Circle and Linux Format. I am studying the Cloud, Virtual Box, and LXC containers to see what I am best able to make use of.** | **By this time I was struggling up think up another feasible but interesting project, and started reading various Linux magazines. A lot of the content initially seemed beyond me, so I thought I would investigate C programming. It seemed a bit more academic than the projects I had already tried, and it was a job I could fit in at spare moments. A netbook seemed the answer, so I got a Toshiba unit – because my old Toshiba laptop still worked after 5 years of continuous use, although I had recently upgraded to a newer unit which runs Windows 7, which my wife was happy with. The Netbook came preloaded with Windows 7, so I dual loaded it with Ubuntu 12.04 LTS. I got most of my Windows programs running on it with the current exceptions of the chess program Fritz 8, which I use on the Netbook Windows 7 operating system, and Active sync for my pda, which I use on my old Win XP laptop. The difficulty which I have not solved is that I cannot get Wi-Fi to work on Ubuntu 12.04. I have made do with a Netgear USB wireless dongle to date. I am coming to grips with the terminal and using the command line, and am gradually trying out some of the ideas in magazines such as Full Circle and Linux Format. I am studying the Cloud, Virtual Box, and LXC containers to see what I am best able to make use of.** | ||
- | À cette époque, je tentais d’imaginer d’autres projets intéressants et réalisables, | + | À cette époque, je tentais d’imaginer d’autres projets intéressants et réalisables, |
**As far as hardware is concerned, I have faulty sectors on my Asus desktop hard drive, so the immediate task is to decide what to do regarding a backup and a new hard disk. I am very disappointed with this 1 TB Samsung hard disk. I have looked at tablets and phones, but apart from perhaps Android based devices, I see no real advantage for me at low cost. I am continuing with the programming tutorial and reading magazines, so perhaps some ideas will emerge from that work. I considered building a router on an old PC but the existing router supplied by my ISP is likely to be far more reliable than one based on a hard drive in an old PC. In fact, I have never bought a new desktop, only revived old ones or built custom units.** | **As far as hardware is concerned, I have faulty sectors on my Asus desktop hard drive, so the immediate task is to decide what to do regarding a backup and a new hard disk. I am very disappointed with this 1 TB Samsung hard disk. I have looked at tablets and phones, but apart from perhaps Android based devices, I see no real advantage for me at low cost. I am continuing with the programming tutorial and reading magazines, so perhaps some ideas will emerge from that work. I considered building a router on an old PC but the existing router supplied by my ISP is likely to be far more reliable than one based on a hard drive in an old PC. In fact, I have never bought a new desktop, only revived old ones or built custom units.** | ||
- | Sur le plan matériel, j'ai des secteurs défectueux sur le disque dur de mon Asus de bureau, de sorte que l’urgence du moment consiste à envisager une sauvegarde et un nouveau disque dur. Je suis très déçu par ce disque 1 To Samsung. J'ai regardé du côté des tablettes et des téléphones, | + | Sur le plan matériel, j'ai des secteurs défectueux sur le disque dur de mon Asus de bureau, de sorte que l’urgence du moment consiste à envisager une sauvegarde et un nouveau disque dur. Je suis très déçu par ce disque |
**In conclusion, I now have a total of 7 machines available to me: 2 running Win 7, 2 running Win XP, 2 running Ubuntu 10.04 and 2 running Ubuntu 12.04. I have one dual booted and one XP virtual machine, one is dedicated to printing and one I use for backup. I am reluctant to install other distros without long term support. I mainly use Linux, but my wife uses Windows 7, which was preloaded in the new Laptop at purchase. The jury is out as to where to go next, but the journey has been great fun.** | **In conclusion, I now have a total of 7 machines available to me: 2 running Win 7, 2 running Win XP, 2 running Ubuntu 10.04 and 2 running Ubuntu 12.04. I have one dual booted and one XP virtual machine, one is dedicated to printing and one I use for backup. I am reluctant to install other distros without long term support. I mainly use Linux, but my wife uses Windows 7, which was preloaded in the new Laptop at purchase. The jury is out as to where to go next, but the journey has been great fun.** | ||
- | Pour conclure, j'ai maintenant un total de 7 machines qui s' | + | Pour conclure, j'ai maintenant un total de 7 machines qui s' |
issue68/mon_histoire.1363193929.txt.gz · Dernière modification : 2013/03/13 17:58 de auntiee