On Wed, Mar 06, 2002 at 01:28:02PM -0800, nate wrote: > I personally do not let anyone in my family touch my > computers, its the unspoken law. Don't go near them. > i setup my ultra 1 so people can use it for stuff, but > my firewalls and real servers are off limits.
I have a somewhat similar situation here at my house. This made me think some folks on this group might be interesting in learning how I setup the family computers to allow my parents to ease into Linux. The concept here isn't particularly deep or anything, but it was quite a while before the idea dawned on me. Basically, I had talked up Linux so much to my dad that he was legitimately interested in giving it a try. But I didn't really want to do the work to backup all his Windows data, repartition, install Linux, and get the whole dual-boot thing going. Even then my dad might not use it simply because he'd have to reboot when going between systems. The solution: vnc. I have two computers, my "workstation" and my "server." The server's role is diald, firewall and gateway. So most of the time it just sits working on [EMAIL PROTECTED] Finally a simple idea came to me: I could make an account for my dad on the server machine and have vncserver running on it. I also installed KDE for him, as well as StarOffice and Mozilla. I also have samba going, and shared his home directory to the "network neighborhood." That allowed him to map his Linux account directory on his NT box as a network drive (i.e. seamless sharing of files between his Windows pc and his Linux home directory). Thus far it's worked out really well for him. When we get some more time, I plan to go over some of the intricacies with him, maybe ease him into some sysadmin type stuff. Anyway---I don't want to insult anyone's intelligence---I had the capability of doing this long before I got the idea, so my goal was to help out anyone on whom this hadn't yet dawned :) It's an easy way to let someone slowly wade into Linux without having to do the whole partition and dual-boot rigamarole. -- Matt Garman, [EMAIL PROTECTED] ``I ain't never seen no whiskey, the blues made my sloppy drunk!'' -- Sleepy John Estes, ``Leaving Trunk''