Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Adventures in Drive Imaging: Part 2 - Making a Need for the Image

Well, now that I've got a new drive image, what's the point if the computer is working well?

I could install viruses.. virii... uhm... malware, but I'd rather not, so I won't.

Instead, I'm going to install Linux! Ubuntu 7.04 desktop to be exact. I'm running it on my laptop at home and I really like it. I've been running Ubuntu for a few years now, and it is great for lazy people like me who want to ease into a new area. Now that I'm used to the interface I'm getting more comfortable with the command line. It is like Linux with training wheels, but like any good kids bike, not only is it free if you can run fast, but you can also take the training wheels off when you are comfortable with it.


I popped in the Desktop CD, checked its integrity, and it seems like a pretty stand-up CD so I went into the live CD environment. Everything booted fine, I've got a good 1280x1024 display by default (unlike Windows' 1024x768 default on the same machine) so I went ahead and double-clicked the installer.

I think there were like 6 choices to make, such as what language I speak, and what language keyboard I use, and what time zone I'm in, then it asked me about the drive to install it on. I selected the option that wipes the entire drive and installs Ubuntu on it (since that is the simplest)

It seems to be stuck on the "downloading package list" part, which makes since, since it is plugged into the corporate network which won't let it on the internet until I assign it a static IP.... oops... clicking "skip".

Now it is finishing up the install, which should take another 30 seconds or so. (Pretty quick on this AMD Athlon 64 X2 machine)

I am now restarting into a nice reliable non-networked Ubuntu machine, giving it an IP address, then restarting for grins. Oooh! 78 updates!

The crazy part, after installing them all and restarting, there shouldn't be any more updates after that... they roll them up quite intelligently rather than having me update, reboot, update, reboot, rinse, lather, repeat. Like other operating systems I know. (emphasis on plural... Windows isn't the only non-free popular operating system that has done this to me...)

Anyway, long-story short, I installed Linux. It took about 30 minutes because I wasn't paying attention to the fact that it was trying to download stuff when I had it blocked at the router from seeing the internet. Oops...

Join us tomorrow for the conclusion - Reluctantly Restoring, where we will attempt to go from Linux to Vista in less than an hour.

(It is impressive considering it will have all of the exact preferences, user accounts, passwords, etc. that I set it up with previously. If this all works, we'll be installing XP and making an image of that, since I'm not ready for Vista yet.)

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