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Messages - Spectere

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5491
Random Chat / Re: The Official S.net "The Lame Replies Thread" Thread
« on: September 27, 2007, 12:25:02 AM »
I love how easy SMF is to update (note the slightly-increased version number below).

I'm getting freaking silly intarwebs here at school, I did a speed test, and got something like 20mb/s download.

Oh yeah, you're going to have fast speeds at colleges and universities, especially during off-peak hours.  A lot of campuses (and even local school districts) are connected via fiber now because the Internet is so widely used in education now (thank goodness).

Nope, just normal old uTorrent. So, yeah, maybe. One can only hope.

Hmm, nice. :)  And yeah, that would be very nice if they dropped that bit of idiocy.

5492
Random Chat / Re: The Official S.net "The Lame Replies Thread" Thread
« on: September 26, 2007, 11:40:33 PM »
I'm getting >200 down, >120 up!

On a torrent!

WITH A COMCAST CONNECTION!

I was just getting >500 down and >150 up on a Comcast connection. <3

Are you using a ipfw or anything like that?  If not, maybe they stopped blocking RSTs and stuff.  That would be nice.

Also, I's in May-rilland now.  Woot.

5493
Random Chat / Re: My mom's computer sucks, help me fix it.
« on: September 26, 2007, 01:28:45 PM »
KDE4 comes out in December though. <3

Woo! :D

I like how KDE4 looks so far.  I can't wait.  Not only does the environment itself rock, but they're probably going to be porting some of the stuff to Windows as well (which is awesome for me, given how much I use both systems).

5494
/ Re: be an idiot
« on: September 26, 2007, 04:03:56 AM »
BIG BAG.  BIG BAG.  BIGA-BOOGA-BIGGA-BIG BAG!
BIG BAG.  BIG BAG.  BIGA-BOOGA-BIGGA-BIG BAG!

5495
Random Chat / Re: The Official S.net "The Lame Replies Thread" Thread
« on: September 26, 2007, 03:58:02 AM »
Also: how well does Wine work?

Its compatibility list is a bit weird.  It's kind of a hit-or-miss thing.

From what I hear, it'll run Steam and HL/HL2 with a bit of work.  It runs WoW.  Neverwinter Nights, from some accounts, runs better via Wine than with its native Linux version (which is kinda sad).  IE6 and Office 2003 both work (I've used Word, Excel, and PowerPoint extensively under Wine, though some Office components don't run well, if at all).

Your best bet would be to check the application compatibility database on their site.  Also, bear in mind that some games, like the Quake series and the UT series, have native Linux ports available.  I've played Quake 1, Doom 3, and UT2004 extensively under Linux and they run just as well as they do under Windows.

SKETCH BOOK RAPE.

SAVVVVVVEE MEEEEEEEEEE

NOT AGAIN :O

5496
/ Re: be an idiot
« on: September 26, 2007, 01:49:27 AM »
oh gawd XD

5497
Random Chat / Re: The Official S.net "The Lame Replies Thread" Thread
« on: September 25, 2007, 08:47:02 PM »
on a somewhat related note, using ati drivers in general may be a bad idea.

I was actually surprised that ati-drivers went in smoothly in my last Linux installation.  Usually I wind up spending an hour (at least) getting the driver not to crash my system on startup.

Of course, I did use the xorg.conf from my previous installation.  Maybe I finally got it to be "just right."

Quote from: Bobbias
(yay for dependancy hell)

Some distros are better than others.  Judging from what Tox said, Ubuntu is pretty good.  I've had very good experiences with FreeBSD's ports system as well as Gentoo's package mangager (which is similar to the ports system).

Debian is fine so long as you stick to the horribly out-of-date stable branch.  I made the mistake of attempting to use the unstable apt source and...wow.  It was a terrible experience.

5498
Random Chat / Re: The Official S.net "The Lame Replies Thread" Thread
« on: September 25, 2007, 06:47:27 PM »
I'm running lunix nao. :>  Horray for elinks!

I haven't installed Ubuntu in quite a while so I'm not sure how helpful I'll be (as a general rule, each distro installs in a dramatically different fashion).  I'm pretty sure they made everything graphical though.  Pop in the CD, boot off of it, and it should bring you to a live GNOME environment with an installer icon on the desktop.  It should be pretty simple to get going -- just tell it where to install itself.

If you don't have a free partition things could get a little hairy.  I don't know if Ubuntu includes an NTFS/FAT resizer.  If you're going to replace Windows, no problem.  If not, you're going to have to find one.

The GRUB boot loader will allow you to selectively boot from Linux or Windows.  Most distros set it up for you and Ubuntu is no exception.  The only thing you may want to change is what boots by default (it'll probably boot Ubuntu by default after a few seconds), but you should be able to easily configure that after the system is installed.

I wouldn't recommend using Beryl just yet because when I used it recently I had stability problems (when using both ATI and nVidia chipsets...especially the former).  It looks pretty but I don't think it's worth reducing your system's stability.

5499
/ Re: be an idiot
« on: September 25, 2007, 05:57:15 PM »
I STEP ON STAGE, BREAK A LEG AND A LIGAMENT
ONLY BLAME YOURSELF IF THIS COMES ACROSS IGNORANT

5500
Random Chat / Re: My mom's computer sucks, help me fix it.
« on: September 25, 2007, 05:51:30 PM »
When I call msie6 unstable I'm talking about the fun time I had last installing XP. The first thing to crash was internet explorer. While I was installing updates.

Yeah, I've never had that happen before. :/  Are you sure there wasn't a problem with the hardware?

Out of interest, what was wrong with your monitor? I deal with a lot of completely obscure and bizarre hardware including monitors and I've never had X just quit over it. Are you sure it wasn't a video card issue?

Like having an ATI card and trying to use the binary drivers. ;_;

Also linux guys: does Ubuntu have Beryl support? Because nothing gives me a hardon for linux like Beryl.

I'd imagine -- I've heard of a lot of Ubuntu users that used it.

Last time I tried it, Beryl and X.org compositing is viciously unstable.  I've tried it on several systems and it's pretty much guaranteed to hard-lock at least once every couple of days.

5501
Random Chat / Re: The Official S.net "The Lame Replies Thread" Thread
« on: September 25, 2007, 04:11:42 AM »
Heh, yeah, my battery is just as good as yours.  If I were to pull the power cord out of it right now it would shut off instantly.

And, wow, not a bad deal.  Given that it was dropped it's good that the screen still works.

Wireless NIC support in Linux is still kind of meh in my experience.  I wish some things were explained better, like how you had to download the firmware for the ipw2200 driver (took me some time to work out...blah).  There's also a lot of cards that don't have freely available firmware but for those you can generally use the Windows drivers via a wrapper.  It's moving along, at any rate.

And heh, I was thinking about going for an A+ certification but I never got around to it. :x

5502
Random Chat / Re: My mom's computer sucks, help me fix it.
« on: September 25, 2007, 04:04:48 AM »
EDIT: hey nerds, tell me what this does  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cobalt_Qube, because I have one.

IT'S CUTE.

It's described as a "server appliance," which I believe is sort of like a server without the hassle and drudge-work -- you tell it what you want it to run, do some quick configuration work, and it does it.

The 'linux is very hard to use, or so i hear' argument is becoming increasingly irrelevant. There are also several window managers and desktop-environment tweaks to get things looking and working exactly like windows.

The real issue that Linux still has is that no matter how much window dressing you throw on it you'll still run into problems when people try to install things that aren't in their distro.  For someone like you or me, doing "./configure && make && sudo make install" is simple, but not for everyone.  Debian and its derivatives still have their share of dependency hell issues, especially when dealing with third-party repositories and the like.  You should have seen the absolute hell I went through when I made the mistake of adding an unstable apt source on my laptop when I tried putting Debian back on it a few days ago (before quickly rushing back to the sanity of Gentoo...should have known better than to try to go bleeding edge on Debian, of all distros).

Linux works great when you get it working, the issues that many would-be Linux users typically involve doing things that their distro doesn't directly support.  When you get to that point, things tend to just go into a downwards spiral because there's very little in the *nix world that's consistent across even the same base product.

One of the biggest advantages of Windows is that you can just sit down in front of a system and be able to easily use it.  While there have been some changes since Windows 95 came out, all of the versions from Windows 95 to XP all handle basically the same.  With *nix, you might use KDE while your friend uses GNOME while his friend uses Enlightenment while his girlfriend uses Xfce while her mum uses WindowMaker while her Solaris-using husband clings to his old-school CDE desktop and his dog has Fluxbox installed in his food dish.  While KDE and GNOME share a lot of similarities (I find that going from one to the other is about as significant of a change as going from Windows to Mac OS -- different, but similar), many of the other environments use wildly different design principals from the next and, taking that idea one step further, many of them are so customizable that, despite the fact that you might be going from one Fluxbox-powered setup to the next, it's going to look, feel, and behave a lot differently.

It's both good and bad -- good because you can have your computer do what you want it to do, bad because there is no consistency and, in many cases, far too many options for your average Joe to wrap their head around.

msie6 runs superbly in wine

So does Office 2003...heh.

and doesn't drag everything else around it into a pit of crash when you try to do something nasty like WGA.

Honestly, I don't recall ever having IE crash in recent history.  It has a long way to go before it's standards compliant, but it isn't all that crash-happy in my experience (and, seeing as I've had to do online classes that require the use of IE, I'd say I have a fair amount of experience with it).

As far as I can tell, most email clients (though I use web-based ones usually) are generally modelled after outlook. In under an hour you could probably pick up the basics.

It's not always that simple.  One of Outlook's chief advantages is that it interoperates with the other Office applications.  It's also a bit more than just an e-mail client -- it's sort of like a desktop version of Palm OS, with contacts lists, a lovely appointment calendar, to-do lists, et cetera.  About the only single-application solution that I can think of that could possibly be a true substitute for it is Evolution (I believe KDE has the same functionality, but if I remember correctly it isn't a tight, integrated interface -- they're all separate applications).

5503
Random Chat / Re: I got into an argument online...
« on: September 25, 2007, 03:43:49 AM »
Hahaha, god I love that picture.

(also why does bbcode not have to follow html? <img> doesn't use </img>, yet [img] insists on using [/img]. Why can't we use [img=URL] ? oh well. )

I do recall an obscure variation of BBcode that used [img=URL]...I don't remember which software did it like that, though.

5504
Random Chat / Re: The Official S.net "The Lame Replies Thread" Thread
« on: September 25, 2007, 01:36:01 AM »
Oh yeah.  They don't handle being discharged very well, especially when they start to age.  I guess it's good when you first get one to discharge it one or two times and fully recharge it but after that it's a bad idea.

I hear getting old batteries rebuilt is a better (and cheaper) alternative to buying a new one so I'm going to look into that.  Laptop batteries definitely aren't cheap -- a first-party replacement for mine is about $120, I think. :<

5505
Random Chat / Re: My mom's computer sucks, help me fix it.
« on: September 25, 2007, 01:33:26 AM »
Heh, that's not a bad gig.

So, uh, think he could hook me up with a free SPARC workstation? ;)

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