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Qrntz

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Posts posted by Qrntz


  1. I used to prefer Gnome because it was less kiddy looking than KDE. I liked the professional looks of it, tough lately I've switched to KDE and I just can't imaging anymore why I liked Gnome. KDE looks just way better and more up to date than Gnome, which is a bit old-fashioned imho. Now, of course, this is only based on looks.
    Functionallity wise, both desktop environments are okay, no real reason why not to choose one.
    Speed wise I guess Gnome is a bit better because it lacks the 'unneeded' extra fancy stuff (tough it just can't win from XCFE or Blackbox, which are bloody ugly but extremely lightweight).

    I cannot agree at all with XFCE being ugly. It is just a matter of customization.
    Blackbox isn't the way to go if you want to look fancy. LXDE is better in the lightweight category.
    As for me, I use KDE. IMO KDE offers more flexibility by letting you customize your system further than GNOME. I also find Qt to be a lot more comfortable than GTK+. Though we'll see when GNOMEv3 steps in.

  2. Just get the required video card for the board. Do a google search for your board that other people have customized. Make not of the video cards they use. Maybe you can get some ideas. Especially some insight on the PCI-Express, the motheboard implementation, and the power requirements.
    I use a program called Everest Ultimate Edition which was formally AIDA32, and now is renamed to aida64 extreme. This software has helped me identify my motherboards and components for quite a few years.

    This is especially true when I have to narrow down similar graphic cards and performance capabilities. :P


    Levimage

    Nuh. If only buying it was the real solution. The thing is, tough times at the moment - I don't have any money at all.
    The motherboard is a specialized, server one, not desktop so that's why there isn't too much talk about it.
    I've though found a way to make a riser the DIY way, but it needs 2 PCI-E desoldered slots (the motherboard-side one and the graphics card side one) which I don't have.
    I figure out, I should really spend that time I could've spend finding the needed parts and soldering on some work to get money and finally buy a normal graphics card.
    Thanks for your input, anyway. I presume this is resolved.

  3. We have free mobile internet in Belgium

    You just made me wanting to live in Belgium. :PFor us, mobile internet is very expensive and slow. However I use a tricky method - via MidpSSH I connect to my shellbox and then surf the web via a text-mode browser.
    That takes very little bandwidth, so I'm pretty satisfied.

  4. It will work, tough it's not guaranteed. The amount of slow down depends on the card you'll use in the 8x slot, tough I doubt that even the fastest cards are using the 16x bandwidth completely (just for the record, some 16x slots are only provided with the amount of lanes for an 8x slot, especially older motherboards with a jumper for enabling crossfire).

    I wouldn't spend money on an extender, if your card is a bit bigger then you might have problems fitting it in the case.

     

    //edit: about not using the extender, you'll have to mess up your motherboard's warranty with a soldering iron :P

    http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/249291-30-card

    Also worth mentioning is that less lanes = less power, so you'll probably need a GPU with and extra power connector.

    As far as I know, power is provided via a few first lanes. Feel free to correct me if I am not right.

    I know about the warranty, but the warranty ended like 3 years ago. Though I still don't want to intentionally damage my board.

    Thanks for the input.


  5. I am particularly interested if anyone here uses Ruby for game programming, and if you do I'd very much like to know what's the framework/library you prefer. :PI tend to stick to just Ruby/SDL, but that is pretty lowlevel and I'm looking forward to learning new technologies.


  6. Well, Google tries to be an all-around monopolist and I generally don't like such companies. I don't mind Google itself though. I'd be happy to have an Android phone but I don't have the money.I also value Google for their strive to support Open Source. Look - the Google servers are running Linux, Android is built around the Linux kernel itself and they also keep the Google Projects directory - a useful place to show off your work.


  7. All games on linux is free, which makes the user feel free to try them out.

    Don't.Don't think all the games are free - they are not.
    Don't think Linux only has something so easy like Minesweeper, Tetris and Solitaire.
    As the article is pretty outdated, it's still something to see.

    Nothing stereotype about it. It's better to create games for PC and consoles than giving away for free on linux. Atleast it pays bills.

    Useless. Linux users != software pirates. Nothing holds a company to release the equally-same shareware product natively on Linux. The example I commonly demonstrate is UT2004 and it's linux port. It did not become less shareware or more free. It didn't summon clones. People paid for it.Porting a game to Linux does not make you magically lose a half of your revenue!
    I won't even mention Linux distros for booting on game consoles, which have not only the support of the console's native game format, but offer much greater possibilities.
    I am not trying to sound harsh, I just cannot stand when people don't want to learn something new at the sake of following the same old steretypes.

  8. Problem with terminal way of thinking is that it's waste of time if you're going to teach noobs. Many things can be accomplished with simple clicks and are easy to remember with GUI.

    Well, you're not always right. In some cases, the terminal can be your only savior, as it allows you to access a broader range of features not always available via the GUI. CLI apps are also usually faster, as they don't need to support the user interface and as a result use less resources.

    But using dark background CLI people often forget things, and those who forget phone numbers and name of people around them should seriously consider GUI or desktop manager instead of CLI.

    You sound like you dislike the idea of using the computer via the command-line only, of course you are right. But who uses the shell exclusively now?By calling myself a terminal man, I didn't mean that the only purpose of my computer is to run the text-mode shell! I, for one, use KDE4 as my desktop environment.
    Servers are a different thing - they don't need a GUI. If a system administrator is geeky enough to figure how to setup a working server using CLI, it's great. It's actually a normal and common thing. Once the server is working normally, you won't ever by any chance need a GUI. Unless you mean Windows servers, which I fully detest.
    + if you want to install the webserver remotely, you can just start sshd and install it via some other computer you feel more comfortable at.

    Hahhaa never heard of that before, but it is totally true!! :P
    Have you made a distro yet?

    Well, not yet, but I'm on the way. :o
    Currently I don't have much time to maintain my own distro. But if that counts, I'm using my Gentoo Linux with a manually-compiled kernel.

    okay...... how about this:a Custom distro based on a standard distro?
    then you can use the support for the standard distro, for the custom.

    e.g. made custom distro based on ubuntu. then you can use ubuntu support, which will most probably work for the custom distro as well!!!

    if this can be done, it should be ideal :P

    That is how Linux Mint started, for example. At first was based on Ubuntu, now I believe it uses Debian as a base.
    So, the repositories are completely compatible and stuff.

    Everything under that platform is going for free and that makes no room for paid developers. Same goes for any small business aiming for software on that platform. No wonder top brands are not going to put their product on linux. Linux actually made people freebie sucker and killed business. So this is the reason i prefer not to waste my time on individual distros and same goes for any particular dsitros. All the distros are on my VMWare machine and i rarely look at them as there is not a single productive app on linux for me (like photoshop, visual studio, etc).

    That is a common reason for avoiding Linux. The 'everything is free' sentence is wrong though. There is shareware under Linux, take for example a port of Unreal Tournament 2004 to Linux. It's still shareware, but it runs natively with no problems.The availability of such serious applications on Linux is more a matter of the developer not wishing to do any extra porting. Most of those apps are proprietary, by the way, which is the main cause of absence of any ports. You want Photoshop on Linux? Give us the sources! A native version will be available in a short span.
    Visual Studio is an especially bad example as it is a product of Microsoft, do you expect them to ever support their closest rivals?
    Linux does not kill business. It just makes the developers show their laziness/unwilingness/hostility. It's not like the Linux community denies the fact of using shareware apps, take for example the numerous online petitions to show the developers their product is actually greatly awaited and anticipated in a native Linux variant.
    You want the money? We pay the money. Now give us a native product so the money could be well-deserved!
    P.S.: And don't ever tell me of the complexity of Linux, I'm 13 years old.

  9. I'm a terminal man as well and using Linux for six years now.By the way, I recall someone telling me a nice thought about that - "In the beginning of his Linux way, the Linux newbie wonders why there are so many distros. At the end of his Linux way, the Linux expert creates his own distro."I've just translated it, am not sure I did that without mistakes so correct me if any.

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