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| Thanks all for the replies, I have a amd64 bit with 1GB ram and I have a copy of vmware 5. I will try the given web sites and start with live cd/dvds just to get a feeling of how it is going to work. I want this machine to have a good distribution of linux that includes all the necessary softwares for burning dvds, office applications and of course all the c/c++, java, etc compilers and tools and easy to install. iforone wrote: > hash wrote: > > hello, > > i am planning to install linux, but not sure what is available and > > which linux > > that is freely available is good. I would like to be able to do > > programming > > in linux as well as install vmware on it. > > any suggestion will be appreciated. > > thanks, > > -hashim > > Concerning VMWare - just *search* all recent NG (NewsGroup) postings of > any/all *nix NGs, like this one.....using keyword(s) "vmware". Many of > your questions/fears/concerns (and more) are already answered...and > some in great detail. Visit VMWare's site, they have fairly > comprehensive FAQ and help sections. > > Programming ? > Most GNU/Linux distributions have very many programming apps/tools/docs > (some distros contain them already as default in their distro, but you > can ALWAYS add them to almost any distro). I'm a dunce when it comes to > programming and I'm relatively new to linux myself, but just searching > the /usr/share/docs on my Debian HDD installation -- typical ones I > see are Python, Perl, C/C+, Bash scripting, POSIX compliance, etc. > (please forgive my 'terminology' mistakes). There's a plethera of > choices (compilers, IDEs, etc)....in GNU/Linux it's all about *choice* > :-) |
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