I became addicted when it came to Linux. I tried Lubuntu because I hated it so basic, so primitive then tried Ubuntu. Ubuntu was running through Wubi for a moment and I understood well, I realized that running the 64-bit version of Ubuntu kicked my swap file up to 6 GB then used swapspace and dphys, but forgot to download the file I had. I turned on my computer, then it went to a black screen for a few minutes, I’m trying to create swaps on the fly, so I uninstalled Ubuntu and now I’m using Ubuntu from the live CD just for kicks. Finally install on Windows Vista.
But this is something I noticed about Linux. Sight, how great is the memory, and gives me all the works of his head. I’m sure I’ve played with swapping files sometimes, but I’ve never had the flow of allowing Windows to dynamically adjust a swapping file and I’ve never had to drop a swapping file and recreate one or consider whether I wanted to view a partition. , file swap, or disk BRANCH. Actually using Google Chrome and typing this on Windows Vista now without any problems.
But I like that I don’t have to invest in an antivirus with Linux and I feel that Linux is much safer than Windows. Definitely stop Vista attacks when UAC prompts; What happened to me more than once, I was like I didn’t know what Vista was talking about so I blocked the action from happening politely, but I don’t want to be asked about security, I just do it in the background.
I also like the fact that Linux doesn’t require me to have some fancy graphics card with 512 MB of memory just to run fancy animations or slides transition So now another live CD of Ubuntu that I take 2 hours while syncing my SkyDrive to this computer, a full course on Microsoft Obsess Essentials and running Google Music Manager in the background. Yeah, I’m that guy who runs 50 programs at once because the computer lets me. It feels like multitasking.
Not with Ubuntu though. The drop is a practical solution; One panel is a complicated solution. However, when I look through various web forums for information about what is the best Linux, what is the easiest Linux, what is Linux that just works, I keep coming back to Ubuntu. I like Unity, it works better than search on Microsoft Windows. The unit allows me to do web and desktop research at the same time. I don’t mind the Ubuntu Software Center, it’s a nice touch.
If the jury is having problems, it may be that the memory is not suitable enough to pursue it. I only have 1 GB of RAM myself, and Ubuntu is the kind of distribution that works pretty well on 1 GB of RAM but I wouldn’t want to have 4 GB of RAM (especially if you’re running the 64-bit version like I was). Personally, considering the 600 plus Linux distributions that are available Ubuntu just makes sense for most users. They’re not hard to find, at one time you could pick up a copy from Best Buy, and the canonical name developed with the Ubuntu brand that didn’t exist until days later Red Hat and Mandrivia. Clearly, Ubuntu is the Linux communities best bet on mainstream adoption, and Ubuntu Android will go a long way to accomplishing that on smartphones. The question cannot be whether the Council is the best, but whether it is the only distribution. Most newbies will never “get past” Ubuntu, which is exactly the point of Canon’s business model…