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Gemini says:

“My other source of hesitation is the choice of Ubuntu. While I have no problems with it, I don’t think it’s effective for computer novices, who are the recipients of this kind of PC.”

Ubuntu is PERFECT for computer newbies, it has all they need to do with it (text editor etc), is completely free and has a full graphical user interface, just like windows

Nic Moon says:

Yea Ubuntu is great, I actually prefer it over windows. It has a great interface that me a complete Linux novice can understand, and there’s almost no learning curve for an occasional windows user. It’s actually easier than windows.

Thinker says:

Ubuntu is so great, that nobody uses it. Linux fanboys spam internet about it’s superiority :|

And the question is, what can you do with your 100$ PC? And what about display?

gm says:

By recycling an old computer your not leaving it to tossed in the landfill and your not purchasing something that had used up more petroleum (all that plastic) and the energy needed to produce it.

Reduce, reuse, recycle!

(And Ubuntu, or any type of linux, is great for newbies!)

Lots of wins here.

Fernando says:

I have an old Pentium IV I just revived with Ubuntu, my mom uses it and has no problem with it even tho she can’t even turn off my Vista computer

Diablo1123 says:

I agree that Ubuntu is nice, works well with older hardware, easy to install and update.

Dotan Cohen says:

While I agree with the first two steps (start with a throwaway PC and install Ubuntu), I recommend swapping out the motherboard, CPU, and memory to modern hardware. Used cases with working DVD drives, power supplies, and hard disks are a great place to save money. But a dual core processor and 1GB RAM is pretty much necessary today. Most old motherboards will not support them.

Also, I find Ubuntu easier to use for computer novices than Windows XP (I don’t know about Vista, it is too expensive to toy with). The only people who I have seen have problems with Ubuntu are Windows Power Users. These are the users who know Windows inside and out, and of course they are most comfortable in that system. For everyone else, Ubuntu is more logical, requires less maintenance, and performs better.

Joe says:

Regarding OS, try PClinuxOS and compare it with Ubuntu. Much more user friendly, if we talk about basic instalation and network connection for new users. (they call it radically simple, with a reason) Just a tip.

Hardware is another story, as someone stated here theese days you need min. 1 gigs of ram and dual CPU.

John says:

I would hardly call Ubuntu good for beginners. Like many Linux distributions, the possibility that will work off the shelf is minimal, unless the computer itself was designed with Linux in mind.

For example, I’ve used Ubuntu with a laptop from Dell and Gateway. It absolutely would not recognize the Dell wireless card no matter what I did. For the Gateway, I had to download a program that would allow you to use the Windows driver in Linux. I knew what I was doing and it still took quite a bit of time (there was an amount of trial and error to get the right driver up.) I could only imagine how long it would take for a newbie to figure that one out.

I personally have no idea why it’s good for newbies. Getting things to work properly is a chore that requires heavy knowledge of the terminal. XP, on the other hand, works like a charm and is easy to use.

I’m not saying Linux is bad, just that it’s not for new people. It’s for a “computer enthusiast”, so to speak. And even then, if they want to play games, they dual boot XP. :P

Dotan Cohen says:

@John:
I am using Ubuntu on a Dell Inspiron that I bought before there were even rumors of Dell selling Linux PCs. While I agree that laptops are sometimes problematic, desktops are easier to install Ubuntu on than Windows. With Windows, one has to go hunting for drivers for the motherboard, the CDROM, and even the mouse and monitor. Sure, they all work without the drivers, but not as well as they could. Ubuntu come with all that built in.

Brad says:

I just recently installed ubuntu on my laptop, dual booting between it and vista. It was the first time Ive ever used Linux in any form. Im an IT professional, i do development work but my former positions have included infratructure support and DBA. The dealbreaker for me: how the hell do you install programs in ubuntu? Messed with it for an hour, couldnt figure it out, uninstalled it, moving on. My grandpa wouldve done worse with it (his limited experience is with xp.) Granted I havent figured out how to install programs on a mac yet either :).
And building a pc for less than 100? Thats a little different than finding a pc at a garage sale…

Nic Moon says:

@Dotan Cohen:
Dell does sell Pcs with Ubuntu, namely the Dell Mini 9.

@Brad:
You odviously didn’t try very hard at all…Click on the Ubuntu “start” button-> Add/Remove Programs->Make sure it’s set to All Supported or All Applications-> Do a search or go through Categories to find the applications you want-> Enter root (main user) password when you want to install them. They will automatically be updated through this interface as well. If you can complain about anything in a Linux distro it is delinquent drivers. Installing them from source is a bit more difficult, but I would obviously not recommend that for a beginner.

Dotan Cohen says:

@Brad:
How on earth do you install programs in Windows?!? In Ubuntu you just open the menu item Add/Remove Programs. 99% of the software you could want is right there.

For that matter, you could have asked on the official Ubuntu mailing list. Where is the official mailing list for Windows?

Ben Beard says:

Well I install Ubuntu (and PCLInuxOS, and Knoppix (live) and especially Puppy Linux) on all kinds of stuff - and when I started doing it I was a beginner, obviously!
Compared with an XP install it is often a lot easier imho. Depends on the hardware - and some flawless U/Xubuntu installations just work on ancient machines that cannot carry (even) XP. Surprised me.

Equally some Microsoft users have been trapped by Vista because the shiny new hardware lacks XP drivers, so they end up stuck with Vista.

@Fernando - greetings! Ubuntu rocks on P4, no error, we use Xubuntu on P3 laptops (3 of them) and it makes a sound system for a 6-year-old kid, with amazing _free_ kid software (try Gcompris) that is the envy of his teachers.

Allowing a child of that age to surf using Win is hard work for the maintainer. Someone has to update the anti-virus, anti-spam, anti-malware, check that Windows Update is not trying to insert its latest nastiest ‘upgrade’ to Media Player or IE, or worse. And so on and on.
Ubuntu just works, in our experience. Good Anti-Spam and Anti-Virus too. UNIX structure is a good basis for defence, and Linux with IPtables/SPI is the firewall of choice in so many ‘hardware firewall’ router boxes. Comes embedded to not frighten the likes of….
@ Thinker - Hi there! must be confusing to see all these Linux advocates disturbing your preconceived ideas. It is a phenomenon called ‘Popularity’. You will get used to it one day.

Did you notice that MS have so little respect for their source of funds that they blatantly name their (unsuccessful) attempt on the PC Security market ‘One-Care’ after their clients? Say it slow, or say it fast, it is not a polite word when spelled with a ‘W’. Tut tut. Naughty Microsoft.

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