Okay, so I just got the urge to meddle with alternative OS's again, preferably somethign *nix. Now, the problem is, I've got two days, at most, need to dual-boot with windows XP home, and my PC needs to work, garantueed, after those two days.
The system in question:
AMD64 3000+
1 GB DDR
Radeon 9800 Pro
80GB HD, heavily partitioned, for OS's and data.
40GB HD for data.
DVDCDRW drive.
Sound and ethernet on board of the mobo, a K8V ASUS. (VIA K8T800 chipset)
The OS should make all of the above components work, read/write FAT, read NTFS, play MP3, browse the web, and have some basic games (solitaire) and office stuff out of the box. Windows networking is needed too. I can handle command line interfaces, and given a proper manual, prefer a CLI option. I can read MAN pages, but prefer either one-line or point-and-click install systems.
I have 5 GB for the new OS available, that includes the swap drive.
Pros for anything new are:
- Easy support for printing.
- A working DC++ client
- Very easy running of windows apps. (Select the exe and double click sounds like my level of complexity)
- Easy-to-install FTP, HTTP, PHP and MySQL servers.
- Good firewall system (As in making all the servers local-only.)
- Easy remote management for the media player.
- CD burning
- DVD playing
Cons:
- DVD as install media
- Download of more then 3 GB or so.
- Slow download
- Requiring networking to install. (My network controller can have driver issues.)
- Requiring to be the first partition on the drive. (Or on the first 4GB for that matter)
- Having a reasonable chance of borking my system. I need the computer to work at all times, with Windows running ok at the very least.
Since there must be plenty of fanboys on this forum, I was hoping for links to stuff that is recommended, or, preferably, a short explanation on why it is recommended.
Any free (as in free beer) OS that'll run on the above components is good, but something *nix is preferred. I heard good things about BSD, any tips on where to start? Linux is nice, but I tried Mandrake, which didn't make me too happy, Red Hat, which I hated, Fedora, which got !!!!ed up after updating once, and Gentoo, which never even installed due to networkcard drivers not being present.
Oh yeah, I tried Knoppix, which I still praise every time I have OS issues and need the data on the drive.