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Old November 4th 06, 06:42 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Mike Coslo Mike Coslo is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 65
Default Phasing Verticals

John Phillips wrote:
Mike Coslo wrote:

Roy Lewallen wrote:

I'd like to add a question.

Why, instead of trying to get the Windows program developers to spend
countless hours developing programs for the minuscule Linux market,
don't the Linux users spend a little time getting Wine to work
properly? If it seems to simple to port programs to Linux, why is it
so hard to get open-source Wine to work?




I have a computer with Linux installed. Perhaps I is a dummy, but
even just installing programs, or searching for drivers is a nuisance.
I'm always told how such and such flavor of Linux doesn't have that
problem, but I'm on flavor number three, and still waiting for I don't
have enough experience in it to make a firm judgement, but I think we
are supposed to be happy if the operating system and hardware just
works, let alone the software.

Awaiting my one-way trip to Linux hell for what I just wrote....

- 73 de Mike KB3EIA -



Wow........when I posted back about phasing verticals and my questions
were answered by Roy, I mentioned sort of half hardily that I would
have to use Windows to run EZNEC. Looks like my post took on a life of
it's own. I'm what you can call a "Joe sixpack" when it comes to a
computer and I have found the latest distributions of Fedora, SUSE, or
Ubuntu to install and find all my drivers and hardware without a hitch.
The finished install will give you a system that will be able to surf
the Internet, do E-mail, chat with your buddy's on an IM if that is your
bag. comes with a fine office suite, photo imaging software etc.

The only drawback is propriety stuff such as multimedia programs etc.
That stuff is available but it has to be installed later and that's
where the "one-way trip to Linux Hell" begins for the first timer.
although now even that is becoming point and click with the latest
distros out there. I boot 4 different flavors plus Windows on one computer.

For those that want to give Linux a try for the first time my advice is
to install it on a separate computer just for Linux. It behaves nice on
a Windows box, but if you are not somewhat familiar with partitioning
and writing to the MBR for a dual boot and getting it back to a Windows
default if you mess up, keep it on another machine.

There is plenty of help on the Web, just do a Google search for a guide
for which ever distro you have. The best part?...........with a
broadband connection you can download and install Linux in half a day or
less for FREE. check out http://distrowatch.com/ and pick your poison.

This is not quite on topic for antennas, so excuse my rant on Linux. For
me it's great, for you, maybe not. It's not Windows and I hope it never
is. It's a Unix type system like a Mac, with a hell of a lot less worry
about viruses and spyware.


One of my biggest frustrations with Linux is that I use a Mac for most
of my work, so I know just how nice a Unix based system can be. Install
the software and use it. Period. Plug in the peripheral. Bang, there.

Only time I have to drop to command line is occasional server
maintenance, and even that is less and less often with the new Xserve
tools. My biggest complaint is permissions problems that crop up
occasionally. They are easy to solve, but a nuisance.

- 73 de Mike KB3EIA -