I've wanted to try Linux for the longest time. Now I really have. I downloaded an Ubuntu live CD last night, and am making this post right now from my home computer running it.
(e:Janelle) is more fond of windows than I am, so we will not install it on the home computer, but I do anticipate that I will install it on my laptop sometime soon (I have one windows game that doesn't work on the home computer--I've got to wear that out a little, first)
Everything works great, everything looks great. It's fast and its easy and there is all kinds of stuff for free.
My only beef is that the internet looks different. I think it's the fonts.
I don't know if you can see the difference in this screen shot:
hmm. can't upload the screenshot. nevermind.
That's the other thing you can't tell from the live disk--how the plug-ins and other necessary downloads work. I am still growing in my confidence though.
Drew's Journal
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04/10/2009 08:34 #48339
Paul inspired meCategory: computers
04/07/2009 13:39 #48319
I guess my church isn't the crassest . .Category: religion
james - 04/07/09 17:13
oh my, that is....
oh my, that is....
04/05/2009 21:58 #48302
Haven't posted a sermon in a while . . .Category: religion
. . . but I did something different for Palm Sunday. Here it is:
At first, we like God.
Because we think God is going to save us.
At first, we like God.
Because we are sure that God is on our side.
At first, we like God.
Because God can act now, quickly, and decisively.
So we shout, "Hosanna." "Save us."
And God does.
And we celebrate.
But notice--
His War Horse is not a Horse.
He's on a pack animal. And a borrowed one, at that.
Now look, he goes to the Temple.
We wave our branches higher.
He's going to save us our religion.
He's going to save our country.
He's going to take back the land for God.
We've wanted God to come. Now God is here. Victory will be ours.
"Save us," we shout. "Hosanna" "Blessed is David's Kingdom."
David built God's temple.
You are going to tear it down?
David defeated God's enemies.
You are going to feed them?
David took the land for God.
Your Kingdom is not of this world?
David took God's throne.
You are taking the cursed cross?
At first we liked you.
But you aren't going to save us.
A grain of wheat must die?
The first must become last?
We must take up a cross?
No!
You are not like David.
You are not like God.
You are the anti-King.
You are the anti-God.
You cannot save us.
You will destroy us.
You must be stopped.
"Save us?"
We were so foolish.
We have no King but Caesar.
"Crucify him."
"Save Us," cries the crowd.
"Take up your cross," replies Jesus.
It sounds silly,
But to people-in-salvation,
the cross is the power of God.
At first, we like God.
Because we think God is going to save us.
At first, we like God.
Because we are sure that God is on our side.
At first, we like God.
Because God can act now, quickly, and decisively.
So we shout, "Hosanna." "Save us."
And God does.
And we celebrate.
But notice--
His War Horse is not a Horse.
He's on a pack animal. And a borrowed one, at that.
Now look, he goes to the Temple.
We wave our branches higher.
He's going to save us our religion.
He's going to save our country.
He's going to take back the land for God.
We've wanted God to come. Now God is here. Victory will be ours.
"Save us," we shout. "Hosanna" "Blessed is David's Kingdom."
David built God's temple.
You are going to tear it down?
David defeated God's enemies.
You are going to feed them?
David took the land for God.
Your Kingdom is not of this world?
David took God's throne.
You are taking the cursed cross?
At first we liked you.
But you aren't going to save us.
A grain of wheat must die?
The first must become last?
We must take up a cross?
No!
You are not like David.
You are not like God.
You are the anti-King.
You are the anti-God.
You cannot save us.
You will destroy us.
You must be stopped.
"Save us?"
We were so foolish.
We have no King but Caesar.
"Crucify him."
"Save Us," cries the crowd.
"Take up your cross," replies Jesus.
It sounds silly,
But to people-in-salvation,
the cross is the power of God.
03/30/2009 16:24 #48241
Lafayette Church, beginning April 12Category: religion
Some shameless promotion of upcoming events:
Jesus, revealed!
* On SUNDAY MORNINGS we see Jesus in the stories of his post-Resurrection appearances, and consider where he might be showing up today. (10-11:15am)
* On SUNDAY EVENINGS we will see Jesus through contemplative prayer and sacrament. (8-8:45pm)
* On TUESDAY EVENINGS we will see how Jesus was revealed in scripture and the early church, as we watch and discuss the PBS Documentary "From Jesus to Christ." (7-8:30pm)
* On THURSDAY EVENINGS we will see Jesus as we serve others, rehabbing houses with West Side Ministries. (5-9pm, but late arrivals/early exits are ok.)
* On FRIDAY, APRIL 17 we will host a free screening of "Lord, Save Us from your Followers," a humorous documentary that shows how Jesus is and isn't revealed by the church.
EVERY EVENT is open and accessible for people of ANY or NO FAITH. There will always be snacks, there will always be an optional time of discussion, and you will be treated with respect.
Lafayette Ave. Presbyterian Church
On the corner of Lafayette and Elmwood
elmwoodjesus.org
886-6635
Beginning Easter Sunday (April 12) and continuing until May 7.
Jesus, revealed!
* On SUNDAY MORNINGS we see Jesus in the stories of his post-Resurrection appearances, and consider where he might be showing up today. (10-11:15am)
* On SUNDAY EVENINGS we will see Jesus through contemplative prayer and sacrament. (8-8:45pm)
* On TUESDAY EVENINGS we will see how Jesus was revealed in scripture and the early church, as we watch and discuss the PBS Documentary "From Jesus to Christ." (7-8:30pm)
* On THURSDAY EVENINGS we will see Jesus as we serve others, rehabbing houses with West Side Ministries. (5-9pm, but late arrivals/early exits are ok.)
* On FRIDAY, APRIL 17 we will host a free screening of "Lord, Save Us from your Followers," a humorous documentary that shows how Jesus is and isn't revealed by the church.
EVERY EVENT is open and accessible for people of ANY or NO FAITH. There will always be snacks, there will always be an optional time of discussion, and you will be treated with respect.
Lafayette Ave. Presbyterian Church
On the corner of Lafayette and Elmwood
elmwoodjesus.org
886-6635
Beginning Easter Sunday (April 12) and continuing until May 7.
03/27/2009 19:58 #48217
Web StuffCategory: web
(e:drew) - some distros such as Mandriva (formerly Mandrake) :::link::: and PCLinuxOS (originally based on Mandrake) :::link::: can automatically import Windows fonts from existing Windows partitions in a dual boot scenerio. They also can import Windows fonts manually from any partition. Of course, the legality of this depends on what rights the EULA or license that the fonts were distributed with.
I would suspect that there are other distros with similar something similar to drakfont.
There are also a number of cli (command line interface) methods of importing fonts depending on the desktop manager (kde, gnome, etc) and the distro used.
I also have used linux pretty much every day since 2001 and I have to say, if you are using the main flavors (fedora, ubuntu, suse) they have gotten significantly easier to use. I mean I am sure a lot of it is because I have learned more about it but the last couple installs have required almost no significant tweaks to get the major stuff going (sound, video, wireless, fonts, web). A big change from when I first started.
Welcome to Linux. I've been happily running Linux (various distros) since about 2001 almost exclusively. I hope that you have lots of fun with linux and that the learning curve isn't too steep and frustrating for you.
In fact, last month I switched from OpenOffice to MS 2007. I couldn't handle the format disasters and general disarray between work and home any longer. Plus I hate the fact the OpenOffice still doesn't have soft shadows.
WAY TO GO! *Applause* I want to switch as well... (But I am way too wimpy).
This is so exciting. Ya the file uploads work fine with the flash player.
I have too much crap that is Windows based on my main pc (as much as Vista just flat out blows) but I have an 80 gb box just sitting, a shell of its formal xp self.
Might be worth an experiment, once I finish cleaning the files off.
If you also want the operating system's display to use more windows-like fonts (not just the contents of web pages), you can additionally take other steps: :::link:::
Drew, after you install (if you're using Ubuntu?) it pops up a question and asks if you want to also install non-free software like Flash, etc. That's free as in open source, so the not-free software is free of cost.
File uploads should work after that.
As for as web page rendering in Linux, that's due to a different set of fonts. They are mostly similar to the Windows/Mac font set but aren't quite as nice.
Open a terminal/command line window and type: "sudo apt-get install msttcorefonts"
You'll need to enter your password. After that web pages will look more 'normal'.