For the last 4 days now, I have been running Ubuntu 8.10 Beta as my primary (and only) OS. WindowsXP has started to really slow down my machine, so much so, that it is more of a chore to use it, rather then a quick task to do something simple.
One major hurdle that was slowing down my move over, which could also through a spanner in the works and stop the whole move over (but is sorted out), was to stream media to my Xbox 360. I have seen numerous tutorials on how to achieve this, but also a lot of problems, so I was a little hesitant to make the move.
Anyway, I had a spare 120GB hard drive laying around, so I formatted it and installed Ubuntu on to it and set out on my quest to get Linux to do what I do in Windows. I’m now happy to say that this task is complete, mind you there was a few problems involved along the way.
The first problem that I had was that I wasn’t able to play any mp3’s, but as it turns out, this is very common with Linux, and you must install the relevant mp3 codecs for this to work. Sometimes simple, sometimes hard. In my case, it wasn’t fun. I had it working, then it stopped, then I done something, and it’s working again.
The other problem was with my displays. I run a dual screen setup, and this wasn’t an easy task. I managed to install the nVidia drivers, but they didn’t show the relevant screen resolutions for my displays. Up until now, I still have no idea how I’ve got it working (maybe a few reboots), but I’ve got dual 1280×1024 screens running, with compiz for some sexy eye candy and cube effects.
The last problem, that I’ve only just solved now, was that I couldn’t configure Samba (so Linux can talk to Windows). Turns out there is a bug in the current version of the config program, and would result in it crashing everytime I tried to change settings. I found a patch to my problem and had to rebuild the whole Samba config program (which was a cool lesson to learn), and now it’s all fine and dandy. My Windows PC’s can happily print to my printer which shared via Samba.
What I thought was going to be a huge process, but turned out to be very quick, what to enable Linux to stream media to my Xbox 360. I tried Twonky, but didn’t like the fact that it was a 30 trial, and had to pay about US$40 for it. I ended using this tutorial, which uses a modified version of ‘ushare’ to work with the Xbox 360. So far this is working great, but I haven’t tried it out extensivly of my library as yet.
I only have one task left, and that is to get my music from Linux over to my iPhone 3G. I’m thinking of using my Vista notebook and setting up the iTunes library to get it’s music from the Linux PC. Sounds simple in theroy, but who knows what problems I may encounter. Hopefully all goes well.
So, all up, I’ve got Linux running just how I want it to. It’s speedy, compared to WindowsXP, shares my printer to other Windows PC’s, and downloads torrents for me (though not automatically like utorrent for Windows does). The main thing that I’m happy about is that this PC is now really quick to use. Boot up times arn’t much different, but normal use once loaded is much quicker and snappier and is mainly what I was after. Oh, and I have installed WindowsXP in a virtual machine just incase I need Windows for something, but so far, I haven’t. Just more for toying around with at the moment.
Have you made the switch to Linux? Did you stay or go back to Windows and why? How was your experience with Linux?