Lately I have been contemplating a move to Linux OS.
Installation and desktop GUIs are a necessity. I know what I am doing, but only to a certain extent.
I have a dell laptop, with intel p4 and nvidia FX5200go.
I want to:
type and print **** (openoffice)
browse (firefox)
edit images (GIMP)
watch dvd movies as well as .avi .mpeg .mov .wmv files (?)
listen to .mp3 files, as well as rip audio files from CDs (?)
burn CDs (?)
I am worried about driver and hardware compatibility, especially with my CD-write drive, my touchpad, my (integrated) wireless card, being able to adjust my screen brightness and view battery life, etc. Are these things typically difficult to deal with?
Some brief Wikipaedia research points me to Ubuntu or similar, although some other Red Hat derivative looked interesting (I fail to remember the name offhand, it was not Fedora though as that seems too advanced).
Any recommendations / cryptic prophecies? I am aware that Toshi fried a DVI video connection somehow, eep! Because I have a laptop with (I assume) proprietary goodies, should I just stay away from linux?
Thanks for your thoughts.
Installation and desktop GUIs are a necessity. I know what I am doing, but only to a certain extent.
I have a dell laptop, with intel p4 and nvidia FX5200go.
I want to:
type and print **** (openoffice)
browse (firefox)
edit images (GIMP)
watch dvd movies as well as .avi .mpeg .mov .wmv files (?)
listen to .mp3 files, as well as rip audio files from CDs (?)
burn CDs (?)
I am worried about driver and hardware compatibility, especially with my CD-write drive, my touchpad, my (integrated) wireless card, being able to adjust my screen brightness and view battery life, etc. Are these things typically difficult to deal with?
Some brief Wikipaedia research points me to Ubuntu or similar, although some other Red Hat derivative looked interesting (I fail to remember the name offhand, it was not Fedora though as that seems too advanced).
Any recommendations / cryptic prophecies? I am aware that Toshi fried a DVI video connection somehow, eep! Because I have a laptop with (I assume) proprietary goodies, should I just stay away from linux?
Thanks for your thoughts.