http://www.snopes.com/computer/virus/ups.asp



And immune to useful programs too!CowboyT wrote:We see that sort of "click me for X" junk all the time. Run Linux and you're immune to that malware.
Such as?Jakeiscrazy wrote: And immune to useful programs too!
Now, now, he's got a point. There are several, actually:CCFan wrote:Such as?Jakeiscrazy wrote: And immune to useful programs too!
I ran Linux for about a year and a half. All the substitute programs were always, IMO, annoyingly laid out. This just didn't cross over to Windows like I wanted them to. Soon I found I was just booting up in Windows for the start because I would end up there annoyed at the Linux substitutes.CCFan wrote:Such as?Jakeiscrazy wrote: And immune to useful programs too!
Howdy, Cowboy,CowboyT wrote:That's where recent versions of Ubuntu come in. I haven't found a situation yet where I've had to compile any software or rebuild the kernel. Slackware and Gentoo, yes, but Ubuntu's much more n00b-friendly; just point, click, and have fun. My video editing station is Ubuntu and is just great.
+1CowboyT wrote:That's where recent versions of Ubuntu come in. I haven't found a situation yet where I've had to compile any software or rebuild the kernel. Slackware and Gentoo, yes, but Ubuntu's much more n00b-friendly; just point, click, and have fun. My video editing station is Ubuntu and is just great.
And even if I did have to compile something occasionally, personally I'd rather have even that than the much worse hassle of identity theft.
That is the best computer security tool ever!!!CCFan wrote:I watch what I click...
Nice. I build mine from the ground up. Saves money and lets me build exactly what I want.CowboyT wrote:Got several boxes running the Penguin, some built by me, some store-bought. Hardware support for GNU/Linux, I've found, is actually more comprehensive out of the box than for versions of Microsoft Windows.
The box I use the most often is an AMD Athlon XP 2GHz with 1.5GB DRAM and 160GB disk drive (runs CentOS 5). Then there's the K12LTSP server, which handles all my thin clients (again, CentOS 5 with built-in LTSP). Next used is a hyperthreading 2.8GHz Pentium 4 with 2GB DRAM and 160GB disk (Ubuntu 10.04 LTS). Last up is my Power Mac G4 with a dual CPU upgrade, running Yellow Dog Linux 6 (2GB DRAM, twin 1.3GHz CPU's). This box is somewhat disproportionally faster than the other two, despite the slower clock speed. Therefore, this box will likely become my new video editing station.
Also, I run Slackware, Ubuntu, and CentOS on various Dell laptops ranging from vintage 2003 all the way to 2010.
My firewall is a Sun Ultra 5 running OpenBSD. In my opinion, there's nothing better, not even a PIX (and PIXes are good, so that's saying something). The mail and Web servers are on Sun Ultra 5's currently running Ubuntu Dapper Drake LTS (time to upgrade that soon!).
One of these days, probably after Christmas, I'll splurge and build one of these hot new hexa-core boxes.