I like to take old computers and fix them up... mostly for fun. I obtained a laptop (waves at MM) with reasonable hardware and Windows 10 (unactivated) that I've been playing with and installed a viewer for Second Life on it.
And it failed to run because the video drivers were out of date. No drivers were available for Windows 10. The generic drives work for most applications though.
I found this strange since I've installed Second Life programs on far less beefy systems without an issue. Of course those machines were running Linux....
So I downloaded the latest edition of XUbuntu (my favorite flavor of Linux) and turned the laptop into a dual boot machine. And what do you know? The Second Life viewer installed without a hitch in the Xubuntu side of things. And it installed *faster* too.
Chalk up another win for Linux.
-m
And it failed to run because the video drivers were out of date. No drivers were available for Windows 10. The generic drives work for most applications though.
I found this strange since I've installed Second Life programs on far less beefy systems without an issue. Of course those machines were running Linux....
So I downloaded the latest edition of XUbuntu (my favorite flavor of Linux) and turned the laptop into a dual boot machine. And what do you know? The Second Life viewer installed without a hitch in the Xubuntu side of things. And it installed *faster* too.
Chalk up another win for Linux.
-m
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That said - since I do some multi media work - I'm playing around (again) with Ubuntu Studio. I've tried it before and found it cranky but it seems to be working well.
But hey, more distros mean more choices and choice is good.
-m
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and then there's my daughters rig, which is Windows 10 because it's her gaming machine and game devs still think computers only come in Windows and Macs.
If someone comes up with a linux distro that'll run windows programs natively without wine or a VM I'll be very, very happy.