“Wah wah wah us poor serbs” oh will you please shut the hell up? You serb *******s started 4 wars in the balkans, killed 400,000 people (all of them innocent civilians), displaced 4 million people from there homes, started world war one, and you are the most racsit anti-muslim anti-semitic hateful people on the planet. Kosova belongs to the Albanians and any serbs who don’t like that should get the hell out.
RROFTE SHQIPERIA!!
“Wah wah wah us poor serbs” oh will you please shut the hell up? You serb *******s started 4 wars in the balkans, killed 400,000 people (all of them innocent civilians), displaced 4 million people from there homes, started world war one, and you are the most racsit anti-muslim anti-semitic hateful people on the planet. Kosova belongs to the Albanians and any serbs who don’t like that should get the hell out.
RROFTE SHQIPERIA!!
Trojan servers can be anywhere from a few kilobytes to a couple hundreds kilobytes. Mcaffee and Norton AV will both detect if your computer is infected with a trojan.
Trojan servers can be anywhere from a few kilobytes to a couple hundreds kilobytes. Mcaffee and Norton AV will both detect if your computer is infected with a trojan.
South Korea.
I think that Suse cannot be downloaded for free from the net like all other Linux distros. If you want it you have to buy it. This is enough for me to not recommend Suse.
For a Linux newbie I would recommend Mandrake 9, it is the easiest Linux distro that I ever installed, and it automatically detected my sound card, network card, modem and everything else. After installation I didn’t even need to do any configuring.
If you’ve been using Linux for a few months and feel ambitious, then you might want to give Debian a try. Harder to install and use than Mandrake and requires more configuring (the command line).
Basically when choosing a distro, it depends on you. Do you want to just install it, and then never have to configure anything again? If so, use Mandrake or Redhat. If you like getting into the nitty gritty and have a lot of time to spare, then use Debian or Slackware.
I think that Suse cannot be downloaded for free from the net like all other Linux distros. If you want it you have to buy it. This is enough for me to not recommend Suse.
For a Linux newbie I would recommend Mandrake 9, it is the easiest Linux distro that I ever installed, and it automatically detected my sound card, network card, modem and everything else. After installation I didn’t even need to do any configuring.
If you’ve been using Linux for a few months and feel ambitious, then you might want to give Debian a try. Harder to install and use than Mandrake and requires more configuring (the command line).
Basically when choosing a distro, it depends on you. Do you want to just install it, and then never have to configure anything again? If so, use Mandrake or Redhat. If you like getting into the nitty gritty and have a lot of time to spare, then use Debian or Slackware.
Dilbert. It is very similar to my own life.
Dilbert. It is very similar to my own life.
It’s Norway. It has the best standard of living and no people living in poverty. There are countries with higher GDP per capita, but they don’t count because they are too small, like islands with population of only 1000 rich people or something.
It’s Norway. It has the best standard of living and no people living in poverty. There are countries with higher GDP per capita, but they don’t count because they are too small, like islands with population of only 1000 rich people or something.
If I was in Belgrade I’d be weeping too. Behind Enemy Lines was a great film, it really showed the ignorant people the seriousness of what happened in the balkans. The worst movie I saw recently was Matrix Reloaded…
If I was in Belgrade I’d be weeping too. Behind Enemy Lines was a great film, it really showed the ignorant people the seriousness of what happened in the balkans. The worst movie I saw recently was Matrix Reloaded…
What are you talking about? All Linux software DOES run on all Linux distros, because every version of Linux has the same Linux Kernel (at http://www.kernel.org). The kernel is the piece of software which communicates between the program and the hardware.
What are you talking about? All Linux software DOES run on all Linux distros, because every version of Linux has the same Linux Kernel (at http://www.kernel.org). The kernel is the piece of software which communicates between the program and the hardware.