| NexY | Apr 28 2008, 9:07 pm | Post #1 |
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I was thinking of getting ubuntu 8.04. Just a couple of questions. What's the difference between the desktop and server versions? Does the desktop not come with any server files o.O? Also, I wanna be able to switch back from windows and ubuntu, will I be able to do that D:?!
Thanks |
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| Money | Apr 28 2008, 9:40 pm | Post #2 |
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i has title
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Not alot, you shouldn't have very much trouble using the desktop version as a server or the server version as a desktop. The preinstalled packages are different, but installing / removing them is as easy as apt-get install / apt-get remove. It really depends on what you need, the server package is pretty bare. You can just do apt-get install / apt-get remove, so installing packages isn't a problem. Desktop does not come with any server files, so just sudo apt-get install apache, etc. Most packages are named logically, "apache", "mysql", but you can always apt-cache search. If you are installing with both Windows and Ubuntu, you are using the wubi installer? ![]() Not EXACTLY sure on how this works, guessing that you have to reboot to switch ? Thanks[/quote] |
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| NexY | Apr 28 2008, 9:46 pm | Post #3 |
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I have no installer on me right now. Just looking for answers D:. I'll look into the wubi installer and I'm still pretty new to Linux, what is this "apt-" you speak of.
Also, If I was to order a free cd from the website, does that mean I can boot it up from the cd? Which way would be easier, downloading on hard drive or booting from cd. Thanks again! |
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| Money | Apr 28 2008, 10:13 pm | Post #4 |
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i has title
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apt-get / apt-cache / apt-remove aptitude app that comes with Ubuntu (debian-based) If you are using the wubi installer, I don't think that this would matter, you can install from the files on your hard drive. (or wubi will download it itself) |
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Apr 28 2008, 10:15 pm | Post #5 |
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You don't have to worry about apt-get, its a terminal command but you can use the package manager instead (its easier).
You can order the free CD, sure, but it takes a while for them to make and ship it. Its much easier if you download an ISO and then burn to a CD. And yes, you would have to reboot to switch. |
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| NexY | Apr 28 2008, 10:18 pm | Post #6 |
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Aye my burner doesn't work T_T, so I guess I'll use wubi installer. Anything else I might need to know
?!
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| Money | Apr 28 2008, 10:20 pm | Post #7 |
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i has title
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The one relevant difference (as far as I know) between using a partition and using the wubi installer is that if you have a power failure you have a larger chance of having your Ubuntu virtual drive corrupted using wubi (your Windows will be fine). |
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| NexY | Apr 28 2008, 10:24 pm | Post #8 |
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That's fine as long as window's remains good. I'm just doing this to learn Linux. o.o
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| Money | Apr 28 2008, 10:41 pm | Post #9 |
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i has title
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Yeah, if you are just starting Linux, Ubuntu is a good choice and Wubi is a good choice. |
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Apr 28 2008, 10:41 pm | Post #10 |
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Ubuntus a really easy distirubution to start with. Personally I don't like mucking too much with my operating system so thats why I like it.
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| NexY | Apr 28 2008, 10:43 pm | Post #11 |
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Thanks For all your help. Should 10gb allocated be good enough?
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| Money | Apr 28 2008, 10:45 pm | Post #12 |
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i has title
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Yes, that's plenty. You can always resize it later, Wubi is probably easy to use. |
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| cheeze | Apr 28 2008, 10:50 pm | Post #14 |
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yoshi, stop converting people who can't handle linux to linux.
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| Oo.Twitch.oO | Apr 28 2008, 11:28 pm | Post #17 |
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Person Of All Kinds
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Question,what is there on Linux that someone cannot handle?If there is anything please tell me.
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Apr 29 2008, 3:46 am | Post #18 |
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Ubuntu's the easiest one. Go use a distro like gentoo and then come back and ask me that.
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| Syphon[MM] | Apr 29 2008, 3:59 am | Post #20 |
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yoshi, stop converting people who can't handle linux to linux. Some people can't understand the concept of googling things, or a text terminal. |
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