User:Guymer

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Revision as of 09:08, 2 May 2009
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Revision as of 13:35, 4 May 2009
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replace Thunderbird with Kontact
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* [[Amarok]] for listening to music; * [[Amarok]] for listening to music;
* [[Firefox]] for browsing the internet; * [[Firefox]] for browsing the internet;
-* [[Thunderbird]] for email management;+* [[Kontact]] for email, calendar and RSS feed management;
* '''Kate''' for coding; * '''Kate''' for coding;
* '''KAudioCreator''' for ripping CDs to FLAC; * '''KAudioCreator''' for ripping CDs to FLAC;
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# '''Games:''' Most computer games, such as ''Half-Life 2'', use '''DirectX''' and hence it is difficult to get them to run on Linux with the same performance as they have under Windows. # '''Games:''' Most computer games, such as ''Half-Life 2'', use '''DirectX''' and hence it is difficult to get them to run on Linux with the same performance as they have under Windows.
-# '''Digital Photography:''' I am an avid amateur digital photographer and I take all my photos in '''RAW'''. Linux has good support for '''RAW''' files, via tools like ''dcraw'', but I think that ''Adobe Bridge'' and ''Adobe Camera Raw'' is the best workflow combination I have found and so I still use it with Windows XP.+# '''Digital Photography:''' I am an avid amateur digital photographer and I take all my photos in '''RAW'''. Linux has good support for '''RAW''' files, via tools like ''dcraw'', but I think that ''Adobe Bridge'' with ''Adobe Camera Raw'' is the best workflow combination I have found and so I still use it with Windows XP.
-If these two issues ever get solved (i.e., games get coded in '''OpenGL''' and ''Adobe'' releases ''Creative Suite'' for Linux) then I will switch 100% to Linux and never look back. I don't mind paying for good software; I would definitely pay for ''Creative Suite'' to run on '''openSUSE'''.+If these two issues ever get solved (i.e., games get coded in '''OpenGL''' and ''Adobe'' releases ''Creative Suite'' for Linux) then I will switch 100% to Linux and never look back. I don't mind paying for good software; I would definitely pay for ''Creative Suite'' to run on '''openSUSE''' - did you hear that Adobe?
I have written a [http://www.thomasguymer.co.uk/tutorials/opensuse-11-1-guide/ openSUSE 11.1 Tutorial] of my experiences with installing and configuring '''openSUSE''' a few times. You can also download it as a ''pdf''. It shows how I have configured it to suit my preferences, you can read it if you want - it is aimed at beginners. I have written a [http://www.thomasguymer.co.uk/tutorials/opensuse-11-1-guide/ openSUSE 11.1 Tutorial] of my experiences with installing and configuring '''openSUSE''' a few times. You can also download it as a ''pdf''. It shows how I have configured it to suit my preferences, you can read it if you want - it is aimed at beginners.

Revision as of 13:35, 4 May 2009

Hi!

I first got into Linux when one of my friends, dot-slash, had a dual-booting PC which had openSUSE on it. At the time I was studying for my Physics Degree and the use of Linux looked convenient for my programming module. I played around with a Slax Live CD for about half an hour and then decided "puft - just do it" so I downloaded openSUSE 10 and made my laptop dual-booting. It was then that I saw what a useful and efficient system Linux is in general - way more useful than just a programming system. I used a dual-booting machine all the time as I did a lot of PHP coding (with an Apache Server) for my own website and Fortran coding for my course. After graduating from University I continue to use openSUSE as my main Operating System. I use:

  • Amarok for listening to music;
  • Firefox for browsing the internet;
  • Kontact for email, calendar and RSS feed management;
  • Kate for coding;
  • KAudioCreator for ripping CDs to FLAC;
  • The Gimp for graphics creation; and
  • Kaffeine for watching DVDs.

I still use a dual-boot machine because I am not ready to make the full switch to Linux just yet. There are two reasons for this:

  1. Games: Most computer games, such as Half-Life 2, use DirectX and hence it is difficult to get them to run on Linux with the same performance as they have under Windows.
  2. Digital Photography: I am an avid amateur digital photographer and I take all my photos in RAW. Linux has good support for RAW files, via tools like dcraw, but I think that Adobe Bridge with Adobe Camera Raw is the best workflow combination I have found and so I still use it with Windows XP.

If these two issues ever get solved (i.e., games get coded in OpenGL and Adobe releases Creative Suite for Linux) then I will switch 100% to Linux and never look back. I don't mind paying for good software; I would definitely pay for Creative Suite to run on openSUSE - did you hear that Adobe?

I have written a openSUSE 11.1 Tutorial of my experiences with installing and configuring openSUSE a few times. You can also download it as a pdf. It shows how I have configured it to suit my preferences, you can read it if you want - it is aimed at beginners.

I can also be found on Wikipedia too.

Have a lot of fun...