My Linux Adventure: Category Archive (Page 5)

A 2004 (literal) web log about getting Linux to work on my PC hardware

Wednesday, June 16, 2004
  Power on Order / Vacation Pending

The power supply has been ordered, but I'm going out of town between the 19th and the 26th, so it probably won't make it here before I leave. This adventure will have to resume at that point.

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Tuesday, June 15, 2004
  Satisfying a Lust for Power

Searching for power supplies was very interesting. I determined that I needed at least a 300W supply, and considered upgrading case and all. Some of the bigger stores, such as Best Buy, Office Depot, and OfficeMax, revealed nothing under $30 (just for the power supply). I checked some other sites, such as Tiger Direct and TCWO, and found one for $17 on Tiger Direct. I thought that was pretty good, and was planning on ordering it, when a friend (the person I bought the computer from) found one on PC Direct Source for $10. I'll probably order it tomorrow.

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Monday, June 14, 2004
  When Hardware Attacks

I fired up the computer today while I was at home for lunch. I booted it into Windows so my younger son could play a game. When I came home from work, I noticed that the computer was off. Seems that it just completely shut down while he was in the middle of the game. After some hardware troubleshooting, I narrowed the problem down to the power supply. Time to go power-supply hunting…

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Saturday, June 12, 2004
  DVD Frustrations Abound

Today was my first induction into the stereotypical Linux “dependency hell” (a term meaning that every package you try to install has dependencies on yet another package you don't yet have). In my case, I decided to look into VLC from VideoLAN. The download provided contained about 85% of what was needed. I downloaded several packages from different places (two of note were Fresh RPMs and RPM Find, and got all unresolved dependencies down to 1 - “libxinerama.so.2”.

Upon further Googling, I found that this library is part of XFree86. This is where the “fun” began. XFree86 has gone not-free, so they don't have anything for you to download. No worries yet - a new organization called x.org has taken over development of the free version, so I'll go there and download it. Well, x.org is new, and they don't have any software available for download either - just documents about what they're going to do. Through my searching, I found that xinerama is an X add-on that supports multiple monitors. Although I only have one, this program just has to have it. After fruitlessly searching for hours, I gave up on VLC.

Okay, let's try MPlayer - it sounds like it could be fun. Got it installed, and got nowhere - seems /dev/dvd doesn't exist on my system. So, I create /dev/dvd/, unmount the DVD/CD-ROM drive, re-mount it under /dev/dvd/, and give it a shot. Now I get a message telling me there's no installed handler. -sigh- Next I tried xine - the site recommended that I download the source and compile it myself. That was interesting - at this point, I got so frustrated that I called it a night.

Not that today was all negative - I was able to send an e-mail, using addresses imported from Netscape on my other machine, to every member of my Sunday School class. In fact, I was so impressed with how easy Ximian Evolution is that I changed the setting on the mail account to delete the e-mail once it's pulled down. I haven't yet found a way to import my mail from Netscape, but that's a low priority. I also signed up for the WBEL Users mailing list, so I could keep up with what's going on with WBEL.

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Friday, June 11, 2004
  E-mail and Internet Success

Inspired by my previous day's success, I fired up the computer and began looking at Ximian Evolution (now distributed by Novell) for my e-mail. I used Netscape 7.1 for my e-mail and newsgroup access, so I figured that Mozilla's web and e-mail clients were similar. Evolution looked more like Outlook, so I decided to give it a shot. To begin with, I set it up to leave a copy of the e-mail on the server, in case things didn't work. It worked very well - it's got a nice interface. I also downloaded copies of all the pages on my web site, and modified the Sunday School prayer list using GEdit. I also did some other exploring around other features of the operating system and desktop environment.

I was also able to play an Ogg Vorbis audio clip using XMMS, a WinAmp clone included with WBEL. Tomorrow, I'll be trying to send an e-mail to everyone in the Sunday School class, and get DVD video working.

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Thursday, June 10, 2004
  The Adventure Begins

Prior to today, I had been doing some research. I had some previous Red Hat 8.0 CDs lying around from a previous failed attempt (which failed due to hardware issues, not Linux), and I had planned to use them. I had been reading a Red Hat newsgroup, and found that they were no longer giving away their stable, business-class flavor of Linux; instead, they had forked the project and started the Fedora Project. Folks were suggesting that people who wanted the stability, et. al. of Red Hat should take a look at White Box Enterprise Linux (WBEL).

The decision to acquire a new computer for me began this adventure. Before leaving to pick it up, I started the download of the three CD images for WBEL. Once I got home, I cannibalized some parts off it to repair an old machine I had here, and got that machine set up on WXP Pro for my kids. Then, I began the install. It went flawlessly - it recognized every piece of hardware I had. I then scooted it around so I could plug it into our router, configured the network (a breeze), and it worked. I'm looking forward to more playing tomorrow!

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