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More lately, I’ve been working to focusing my advising practice on helping people implement opensource software (mostly server-side) in their organizations, providing advice and training. But here’s Ubuntu week 1, not edited or smoothed out. My first step was to make sure the laptop booted. It booted fine.
Home About Me Subscribe Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology Thoughtful and sometimes snarky perspectives on nonprofit technology Giving up, a little August 6, 2007 As you might know, I migrated from using a MacBook Pro laptop as my primary desktop, to eating my own dogfood, as it were, and using Ubuntu Linux as my primary desktop.
I’m actually quite happy – I can run both Windows 7 and Ubuntu Linux on my laptop, and I like Android (and my Droid 2 phone) a lot. And, of course, using Ubuntu on the desktop is fun. It does feel a bit weird to use Windows sometimes, considering my years as an opensource advocate.
Home About Me Subscribe Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology Thoughtful and sometimes snarky perspectives on nonprofit technology Goodbye Microsoft… March 29, 2007 Just today, I received in the mail some Sony Vaio Picturebook laptops, courtesy of Gavin’s regular potlatch program. at 5:33 am Which Ubuntu? Be Helpful.
There are a number of reasons for my deciding to slowly leave the Macintosh platform: I want to focus more energy and time on free and opensource platforms – I might donate what I would have spent on Leopard to some deserving projects. at 7:57 pm You make some very good points and I think I will “go Ubuntu&# too.
August 9, 2007 It’s been 7 weeks of using Ubuntu 7.04 (better known as Feisty Fawn) as my primary desktop. The only time I shut down this laptop is when I’m taking it somewhere, which is relatively rarely. I have no problem getting just about all of my work done using Ubuntu. I love apt-get/aptitude. Be Helpful.
I’m on week 3 of my Ubuntulaptop migration – things are smoothing out – I’ve got audio working, I can listen to mp3 and audio streams. I still haven’t figured out how to get higher resolution on my laptop screen, but that’s mostly due to lack of time trying to get it to work. Be Helpful.
In Kubuntu, the distribution of Ubuntu I had installed, the WPA-enabled Network Manager isn’t installed by default (or at least it seemed not to have been installed when I did it – could have been my fault.) Needless to say, I’m doing that right now. This does, for sure, hobble the usability of Linux on the desktop.
Desktop Linux can run on your Windows 7 (and older) laptops and desktops. For all your other desktop software needs, there’s usually a free, open-source program that can do just as good a job. The best-known include such distros as Debian , openSUSE , and Ubuntu. Gimp , for example, instead of Photoshop. Which Linux?
At some point, when I’ve saved up enough pennies, I’m going to buy a Mac laptop again. On the Windows side the hardware manufacturers make proprietary drivers for Windows, and very few make drivers for Linux, or opensource their drivers so that Linux developers can use them. I use Ubuntu on a dual-boot (XP) machine.
But what was once solely an internal project at Google has since been open-sourced and has become one of the most talked about technologies in software development and operations. One person with a laptop can now accomplish what used to take a large team of engineers. For good reason.
You’re working in R, writing in RStudio on a Ubuntu machine, and your data are such and such collected during an in vitro observation. Most have also been used by others, either to replicate or try something new, and some, like ultra-specific opensource code libraries, have been used by thousands.
This means that the application will run the same way, no matter where the Docker container is deployed — whether it’s on your laptop, a colleague’s machine, or a cloud server. This setup lets me run a Linux environment, specifically Ubuntu, on my Windows PC. We’re using the open-source Rest Countries Project.
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