TheMewster (post: 1507296) wrote:This IS my first time installing Linux. Now should I try this again? It wouldn't go to my blank CD, so obviously there must be divine intervention. I need to be careful with this especially because if it is God intervening I must respect that. Then again if I try again it wouldn't work period if it is divine intervention.
Since I have serious doubts about divine intervention in this case, let me see if I can remember how to do this...
1. Get an
.iso file for Ubuntu, if you don't have it already. It's free! Go ahead and skip that part about burning it to a CD/thumb drive. [Unless you want to, in which case you need to get some software that can burn an .iso to a blank CD (MagicDisc works well, plus, it's free). Burn that sucker and use it as a backup, just in case!. This step isn't necessary - you're able to boot your virtual machine directly from the Ubuntu ISO file.]
2. Get
VirtualBox. It's also free.
3. Make a new virtual machine on VirtualBox with enough RAM and hard drive space you think you'd need to mess around with Linux. 512 MB RAM and ~10 GB HD should be more than enough, but keep in mind that by giving it to the virtual machine, your main machine won't be able to use it when the virtual one is on your system! Set your virtual machine to boot from the Ubuntu .iso file. (You did put it where you could find it, didn't you?)
4. Start up the virtual machine. Ubuntu should start installing itself, and IIRC, even updates itself if you've got an Internet connection available. Follow the prompts and set it up the way you want it.
5. WINNA WINNA CHIKKIN DINNA!!!!~!~!~!!!!!~!11 Whenever you want to run Linux in the future, start up VirtualBox, fire up the virtual machine, and off you go!
6. Learn Linux, become a leet haxxor3r, win friends, influence people, drive around town in expensive cars with [s]beautiful women[/s] handsome men at your side!
Now, when this is all over, you won't have a machine dedicated to just Linux, if that's what you really wanted to do. It'll just be a virtual computer so that you can run Linux without having to really mess with your main system too much. Still, it'll be enough that you can learn the OS and find your way around.
TheMewster wrote:What is the BIOS screen?
It's that gobbedlygook that shows up on your screen when you turn on your computer, before your OS starts up]Pendrive Linux got Ubuntu on my 500 gig external hard drive (what you think I'm blowing my money on a flash drive when I already have this?) And anyway God bless and help!!![/QUOTE]
The thing with external hard drives is that they're limited by the connection speed between the drive and the computer. In an internal HD, you've got this big thick cable that's connecting between components, so that's really not a problem but with an external, you're usually going through a USB cable. Because of that, it's probably going to run a bit slower, possibly not enough to run something as demanding as an OS from it. External HDs are great for backing up data, but because of that limit, it's better if you have your programs on your internal drive. I'm not a computer science major or anything, so I don't think I've got everything right, so you should probably fact-check me on all that, but that's what a forum's for, right?
We are loved even though we suck.
Psalms 37:37 (NHEB)
Mark the perfect man, and see the upright, for there is a future for the man of peace.