I'm using Linux on 2 own laptops and have installations running on 3 others.
One is a 7 year old siemens-nixdorf laptop used by a retired person for internet e-mail and a bit of card games. He loves it for the speed and ease of use. Especially the order of the programs in the very simple groups such as "Internet" "Multimedia" etc.
One is a 5 year old Toshiba. It came to me with a very ugly virus, trojan, worm infection. Unable to get rid of it under windows Vista. Unable to retrieve the users data from the HDD. Made it boot a small Linux from USB stick, saved all data of the user and then set it up with the recovery partition installing Windows Vista and a dual boot into Debian 6. Now it can run both. Should anything happen again to the Windows - there is Linux.
The other night I sat up a Dell Latitude 505 for use as an internet, chat, e-mail laptop and to manipulate and work on pictures. I'll see what the Linux novice tells me in some time. A hardcore gamer on Windows it will be very interesting to see if this user will be happy with linux.
And actually I'm writing on a 8 year old Dell Inspiron 6000 laptop. It's original Windows XP started to get the wireless error very common on these machines. It would no longer connect or drop the connection. The usual pointless comments - you have to upgrade to Win7 was actually the reason for me to get rid of windows altogether. Flattened the laptop to use the full HDD. Setup time 25 minutes. Only snitch - because I install from a single CD image - I had to add the wireless firmware in a second step.
More on installations on laptops the next time.
One is a 7 year old siemens-nixdorf laptop used by a retired person for internet e-mail and a bit of card games. He loves it for the speed and ease of use. Especially the order of the programs in the very simple groups such as "Internet" "Multimedia" etc.
One is a 5 year old Toshiba. It came to me with a very ugly virus, trojan, worm infection. Unable to get rid of it under windows Vista. Unable to retrieve the users data from the HDD. Made it boot a small Linux from USB stick, saved all data of the user and then set it up with the recovery partition installing Windows Vista and a dual boot into Debian 6. Now it can run both. Should anything happen again to the Windows - there is Linux.
The other night I sat up a Dell Latitude 505 for use as an internet, chat, e-mail laptop and to manipulate and work on pictures. I'll see what the Linux novice tells me in some time. A hardcore gamer on Windows it will be very interesting to see if this user will be happy with linux.
And actually I'm writing on a 8 year old Dell Inspiron 6000 laptop. It's original Windows XP started to get the wireless error very common on these machines. It would no longer connect or drop the connection. The usual pointless comments - you have to upgrade to Win7 was actually the reason for me to get rid of windows altogether. Flattened the laptop to use the full HDD. Setup time 25 minutes. Only snitch - because I install from a single CD image - I had to add the wireless firmware in a second step.
More on installations on laptops the next time.