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Just Beginning
Introduction Is Ubuntu for You?* Which Ubuntu to pick? Installing Ubuntu inside XP Plan Partitions Download and Burn Ubuntu Burn ISO from Mac Install Desktop CD Ubuntu Install Alternate CD Ubuntu* Modest Specs Where's the Terminal? Password in Terminal Install Software Extra Repositories* File Permissions Security in Ubuntu Next Steps Beyond the Basics Playing Around Troubleshooting * Off-site link |
Ubuntu Linux Resources
What is this?
It's a collection of tutorials and random other pages that will help Ubuntu users.
Who are you?
Why make this? Other guides and documentation projects also tend to have too many tutorials—to the point where it's actually difficult to find the tutorial you're looking for. I've tried to include only what I consider questions that are asked frequently enough to warrant a special guide or that do not have documentation in other places.
What other Ubuntu resources are there?
Can I use this for other Linux distributions?
What is Ubuntu?
Even though Ubuntu comes with a lot of productivity software—an office suite, a music player, a Photoshop-like graphics editor, an instant messaging program, an email client, an internet browser, etc.—many people like their proprietary software to "just work" out of the box. That won't happen in Ubuntu. If you want to play commercial DVDs, have MP3 support, or view Flash movies in your internet browser, you'll have to enable proprietary software that Ubuntu does not include by default. There are guides (like this one) for enabling these proprietary codecs. Since the release of Ubuntu 7.04 (also known as Feisty Fawn), Ubuntu has easy codec installation, making the process of enabling these codecs... a little easier. Of course, there are also several other Linux distributions that have proprietary formats built into them: Linux Mint, Mepis, PCLinuxOS, Blag, and Linspire, for example. Regular release cycles generally mean improved software. Regular improvements breed instability, though. Even if you upgrade from Windows 2000 to Windows XP or Mac OS X Panther to Mac OS X Tiger, you may notice some glitches here and there. Likewise, if you upgrade your Ubuntu operating system every six months, you may find the upgrade process a bit wearying, especially if you upgrade on or before the official release day. For those who like a Linux distribution with a lot of stability and infrequent upgrades, Debian may be a better choice than Ubuntu. Ubuntu also has LTS (long-term support) releases that will receive security updates for three years, so you don't have to upgrade every six months if you don't want to. I think a lot of Ubuntu advocates will agree with me when I say you should use the operating system that best suits your needs. Ubuntu may be that, but there are other Linux distributions out there, and you may be better off with a non-Linux operating system (a Windows or Mac operating system, for example). If you think you might want to try a Linux distribution other than Ubuntu but aren't sure where to begin, you can take this online Linux Distribution Quiz.
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