I have yet seen a Suse that didn't run X, including a 4 year old box with a
video chipset on the motherboard with no manuals.  Not to say there is not
some odd-ball that suse won't run X on.  That said Mandrake and Suse are
your best bets to get started.  As said in my earlier posts, Suse does come
with a rich set of printer manuals.  The manuals are organized well, making
it easy to get started.
-----Original Message-----
From: Greg Schmidt [mailto:slugmail@gschmidt.net]
Sent: Monday, April 22, 2002 12:40 AM
To: slug@nks.net
Subject: Re: [SLUG] CD-RW Drives and LINUX
>From the distros I've tried Mandrake seems the most likely to run X
straight out of the gate without having to edit XF86config from a command
line console, or run some other X config utility.  For many folks coming
straight from Windows to Linux not having a functional GUI when the
install is done stops them cold.
The hardware compatability HOW-TO, chapter 17, CD-Writers:
http://www.ellisbros.com/LDP/HOWTO/Hardware-HOWTO/cdr.html
Last revision was Oct 2001, so it is a few months dated, but as others
have said here, most of that kind of stuff works fine these days.
On Sun, 21 Apr 2002, David R. Meyer wrote:
> Good Sunday Afternoon,
>
> I have two questions.  What does everyone think the easiest overall form
of
> LINUX is for home users not familiar with LINUX?  I have heard Mandrake
> seems to be fairly popular and would be easy to use for someone who is a
> novice.
>
> Along the same lines as that, does anyone know of CD-RW drives that are
> compatable with LINUX?  I've got a home user who I am building a system
for
> and she is determined to have a CD-RW drive.  I just can't find one that
> seems to be supported by LINUX. Am I just not looking in the right places?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Dave
>
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