It Just Worked

November 29th, 2009

I’m a bit late on any sort of post about Fedora 12 being released. That’s not to say I haven’t been taking advantage of it. On release day I did a clean install of my main desktop. From start to finish, I went from booting into the x86_64 install disk to building and running RHQ in about 70 minutes. That includes dual monitor support with no manual steps on my part and sound support. I even plugged in a tablet input I have and it picked it up without an issue.

That’s it. I ran through the installer, added a few packages I use that aren’t part of the default install, and was back up and running (I intentionally didn’t upgrade just to use it as an opportunity to clean off all the random crap I collect over the lifespan of an OS install). I literally did it during a conference call at work. The installation and initial experience has gotten extremely streamlined.

Over the weekend, I decided it was time to attack my wife’s laptop. She’s been using one of my old laptops for about a year and a half now which was running an older, non-updated version of Ubuntu (probably 8.04). After a quick backup, I popped in the i386 install disk to the same result as on my desktop: it just worked. I typed in the wifi password and she was good to go.

My wife is still a die hard Quicken user. She took extremely well to Linux when I first pushed it on her, but I have yet to mentally prepare myself to argue the accountant in her to move off of Quicken. So as part of this laptop install, I setup a dual boot into Windows (the hardware isn’t beefy enough to run it as a virt guest).

I figured I’d push my luck. I popped in the Quicken CD, pointed wine at the installer, and hoped for the best. 5 minutes later, it was installed. A few minutes after that, it had successfully updated itself from the internet and there was a menu item in Gnome for her to access it.

The worst part? Midway through the installer I called my wife over to show her. Here on her Gnome desktop sat the Quicken Windows installer. I didn’t have to do any sort of odd config file hacking, nor did I have to sacrifice any small furry animals. Her reaction?

“Cool.”

I just kinda stared at her blankly for a minute. It was almost physically painful to see her not appreciate the technological awesomeness that stood before her. I sighed and grabbed my phone intent on texting someone who could appreciate the situation.

Congratulations to the Fedora team on an awesome release. There have been some seriously great improvements in what have historically been uglier areas, such as wifi and dual monitor setups (not to mention the fact that I’ve always been cursed when it came to wine).

One Response to “It Just Worked”


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