Penguin Enrolls in U.S. Schools
Cox, Michael
michael.cox at honeywell.com
Mon Aug 20 16:24:44 CDT 2001
Sure, KDE will have problems, but the less bloated windows managers still
work fine. Besides, where can you buy a licensed copy of win 3.1 nowadays?
--
.-. Michael Cox
/v Linux user 199542
// \ http://counter.li.org
/( ) riffraff at linuxgeekz.org
^^-^^ - Support Open Source -
Arms in the hands of individual citizens may be used at individual
discretion...in private self-defense. -- John Adams
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jonathan Hutchins [mailto:hutchins at opus1.com]
> Sent: Monday, August 20, 2001 10:55 AM
> To: kclug at kclug.org
> Subject: Re: Penguin Enrolls in U.S. Schools
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Cox, Michael" <michael.cox at honeywell.com>
>
> > Wired: Penguin Enrolls in U.S. Schools
> > http://www.wired.com/news/school/0,1383,45862,00.html
>
> "In addition, Linux runs on 486s and Pentium 75s -- fairly
> ancient machines
> by today's standards -- which are incapable of running the
> latest Windows
> environments."
>
> This kind of statement bugs me. You're not going to get the
> latest KDE to
> run on these either - at least not at a usable speed. You
> could get more
> primitive Xwindows environments to run, but you could also run OS/2 or
> Windows 3.1. You could run a console based system, but you
> could also run
> DOS - there's a lot of good software for DOS.
>
> Has anybody tried running "win4lin" on an 486 grade machine?
>
> Otherwise a very good, supportive article. I'll be using
> some of the links
> and working to learn a linux-for-schools type desktop for
> some kids I know.
>
>
>
>
>
> majordomo at kclug.org
>
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