- Joined
- Nov 17, 2006
- Messages
- 126 (0.02/day)
- Location
- Dayton, Ohio area
Processor | Core i7-950 Bloomfield |
---|---|
Motherboard | Asus P6X58D-E |
Cooling | Venomous X |
Memory | 6GB G-Skill Ripjaws |
Video Card(s) | EVGA nVidia GTX480 |
Storage | OCZ RevoDrive PCI SSD, 2 WD-1002FAEX in BTRFS RAID |
Display(s) | NEC Multisync 2490WUXi |
Case | Corsair Graphite 600T |
Audio Device(s) | Realtek ALC889 8-channel HDA |
Power Supply | Corsair HX-850 |
Software | aptosid Linux, Win 7 on VMWare Player 4 |
Someone recommended elive a week or so ago, and I was intrigued, so I tried it. You get it here: http://www.elivecd.org/
Since I bothered to put in 5 or 6 hours playing with it, I thought this would be a decent place to share the results. Here's the good, the bad, and the other. Please bear in mind that everything I know about unix and linux would fit in a thimble and leave room for Lake Superior ....
Good -- The live CD runs great on my system, configured my Nvidia Ge7900GS perfectly at 1280x1024 and 1600x1200, configured my audio, and was playing streaming radio before I ever touched the keyboard. When I decided to install it, I used GParted (from a live GParted CD) to partition and format a spare hard drive, and then elive installed from CD slick as could be, with zero problems. The E17 enlightenment desktop is very nice -- both the default elive theme and the "night look" themes were great. Unfortunately, the audio did not configure itself as well on the real install as it did from the live CD, and I had some fiddling to do to get streaming radio to work again. But, the Synaptic package manager was functioning fine, I got the OpenOffice.Org stuff all set up, and the utilities were great. It even put up a Solitaire game (called "Elitaire") for me to play while the installer was running.
Bad -- This is more "looks bad" than "really bad", I suppose, but they have it arranged on the download site so you can either pay money to get a reasonable download speed/bandwidth for the ISO image download, or else get the free download from a "slow" server, which translates to between 36 and 40 hours at 4.9 kbps. So I let it run for 2 days to get the free version, but I wasn't impressed by that little arrangement. OK, now for real issues -- "cat /proc/cpuinfo" revealed that it only saw one of my CPU cores. "uname -r" indicated that it is running the 2.6.15 debian kernel -- I think you have to get to 2.6.16 or .17 to get dual core support. Kubuntu Edgy (2.6.17) has it for sure. Another bad -- when I installed "hotplug" to get USB pluggable devices supported, it somehow decided something critical had to be removed, and the next reboot didn't.
Other -- the guy in Belgium who writes elive apparently has a bad case of "we hate Bush" going on. I really don't care what his politics are, but the Firefox browser comes pre-configured with a number of "27 reasons America should surrender" sites, that I really wasn't looking for. Oh well, I guess that's what the "delete" button was made for ...
Conclusion -- They say elive will make older hardware perform better than it ever did. I can believe it -- it's really very fast. Unfortunately, the converse is also true -- it's not ready for new hardware such as mine.
Now you know.
Since I bothered to put in 5 or 6 hours playing with it, I thought this would be a decent place to share the results. Here's the good, the bad, and the other. Please bear in mind that everything I know about unix and linux would fit in a thimble and leave room for Lake Superior ....
Good -- The live CD runs great on my system, configured my Nvidia Ge7900GS perfectly at 1280x1024 and 1600x1200, configured my audio, and was playing streaming radio before I ever touched the keyboard. When I decided to install it, I used GParted (from a live GParted CD) to partition and format a spare hard drive, and then elive installed from CD slick as could be, with zero problems. The E17 enlightenment desktop is very nice -- both the default elive theme and the "night look" themes were great. Unfortunately, the audio did not configure itself as well on the real install as it did from the live CD, and I had some fiddling to do to get streaming radio to work again. But, the Synaptic package manager was functioning fine, I got the OpenOffice.Org stuff all set up, and the utilities were great. It even put up a Solitaire game (called "Elitaire") for me to play while the installer was running.
Bad -- This is more "looks bad" than "really bad", I suppose, but they have it arranged on the download site so you can either pay money to get a reasonable download speed/bandwidth for the ISO image download, or else get the free download from a "slow" server, which translates to between 36 and 40 hours at 4.9 kbps. So I let it run for 2 days to get the free version, but I wasn't impressed by that little arrangement. OK, now for real issues -- "cat /proc/cpuinfo" revealed that it only saw one of my CPU cores. "uname -r" indicated that it is running the 2.6.15 debian kernel -- I think you have to get to 2.6.16 or .17 to get dual core support. Kubuntu Edgy (2.6.17) has it for sure. Another bad -- when I installed "hotplug" to get USB pluggable devices supported, it somehow decided something critical had to be removed, and the next reboot didn't.
Other -- the guy in Belgium who writes elive apparently has a bad case of "we hate Bush" going on. I really don't care what his politics are, but the Firefox browser comes pre-configured with a number of "27 reasons America should surrender" sites, that I really wasn't looking for. Oh well, I guess that's what the "delete" button was made for ...
Conclusion -- They say elive will make older hardware perform better than it ever did. I can believe it -- it's really very fast. Unfortunately, the converse is also true -- it's not ready for new hardware such as mine.
Now you know.
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