This is a common feeling that each one of us initially go through especially when we make the switch to a newer and better operating system which also comes at an unbeatable price. But then one of the chief strengths of GNU/Linux is the strong community support that none of the closed source software product companies could hope to provide.
On this note, Simon Gray has written an excellent article titled - "How to install anything in Ubuntu" - which could put a new Ubuntu user at ease and hand hold him/her in the fine art of installing software packages in Ubuntu. The article is replete with screen shots and explains how to install software packaged in a variety of formats including deb,rpm,tgz, bin and exe. He also dwells on searching for packages in Ubuntu as well as enabling extra repositories to get the software package normally not found in the default official repositories. In short, a very nice article worth spending ones time on.
4 comments:
Although I use Red Hat and Centos for production servers. I've really come to appreciate Ubuntu for my own desktop. It's very easy to maintain. Thanks for this article.
Hi, is there a similar article on installing programs for Fedora 5 for Linux beginners?
I tried to instal unbuntu on an old Aptiva E series. Installation is fine, but I don't have the right keyboard and mouse drivers.
How do I install them onto the system now?
@Cartledge
It is possible to use the generic drivers where you don't have the specific drivers for your keyboard and/or mouse. But you may not be able to use the extra buttons on those devices such as multimedia keys (keyboard) or scroll wheel (mouse).
In the past, I have been successful in getting my microsoft intellimouse serial mouse working including the scroll wheel in Linux and I have documented my experiences here.
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