Friday, April 22, 2011

64 bit pain...

Hmm,

It's very difficult in the early days of 64 bit architecture to install non windows OS. Last week I got amd phenom X2 8 gigs of ram & 1 TB of hdd for around 17k. Was feeling nice to have installed fedora 14 live on it. Later on realised that the mblaze modem doesnt work on it ( i mean the dependencies were missing). So it took me 3 days to download Fedora 14 dvd which is 3.5 gigs of installation data. I am a big fan of the fedora flavour, ( it was very kind with me, most of my efforts were fruitful )

I sincerely tried different ways to install windows 7 64 bit on it, but some people are destined to fight when it's just a cakewalk for most of the others. So it threw a weird error, and that installation could not proceed. I wasted half a day on the installation only to see this error again & again.

Burnt the downloaded iso to a dvd & tried to upgrade the live OS. But it was a nightmare to upgrade it to a full f14 (laughlin). It did nothing at all. At least I couldnt see any difference. So i tried manual upgrade using the rpm -ivh command. Which obviously didnt help. So tried to reinstall it from scratch only to find the dvd had rendered unreadable thanks to frequent re-writing. Then got another dvd n burnt the iso on it. Installed laughlin using it. To add to my disappointment there wasnt much of a difference in the live cd & the dead (just kidding) the full dvd.

But i could install the mblaze wirelss modem on it & got the fun started.

It took almost 10 days to get the system up & running. The funniest part of it is, the computing difference is not at all noticeable between 64 bit & 32 bit. (Probably because i have been using fedora & not windows products.) Of course 24 hours of experience on a 64 bit machine is too little to be compared with 10 years on 32 bit machines.

The biggest challenge would be to install oracle product on a non microsoft platform & that to 64 bit. Because except for oracle database, nothing else really works well or is smooth to install.

right now i'm downloading the XE database to install soa suite on this machine.

Which needs a lot of memory & disc space.

Anyway I write these blogs so that when i revisit 'em It should remind me of what i was doing. I know no one reads them till the very end anyway........

Friday, March 11, 2011

Recently Installed fedora 14 on virtual box

It's been quite long since i'm using fedora 8 , Basically Redhat Enterprize Linux based linux (RHEL as they say). Since march 2008 to march 2011. Hmm 3 years & no new ventures?? huh. So was planning to play with some of the latest linux flavours(I still use british english so dont mind the u in the flavour) the laughlin (Fedora 14 Code name) saw a few screenshots, but wasnt sure of installing it, cause fedora 8 never gave me any pain in last 3 years. Pains of virus removal, pains of genuine software crap, pains of upgrading browser that crashes every now n then, pains of installing mobile browser software, pains of installing hell lot of video codecs, n the biggest pain of seeing holes in your pocket to understand that this software does not support your version of doors & ventilations. Recently i was planning to install google video tool (real thorn in flesh to install n i finally gave up as it was not worth the time & effort, cause skype 2.0 does it in a lot lot better way :) ) which said the STL library i was using with fedora 8 is outdated. So i though so it be google video is an entertainment software n need not be installed at all.

Then came firefox 4 RC (release candidate as they call it) & i downloaded the sourecode n compiled n maked (make is a command to generate a make file) it installed it n phew it crashed saying the same thing the STL lib is outdated.

Tears rolled down my chicks, no no no not from eyes, they were from my forehead i forgot to put on the ceiling fan.

So wat next?

Downloaded laughlin live. Burnt it to disc, & there I was with the live CD of laughlin.

Booted the machine from disc got a good feel of F14.

Then decided to install it on the hdd.

Again was very very bery skeptical to install directly on the hdd so got it installed on the sun virtual box. Which is sun's implementation of Virtual Machine player.
Boy! it was cool, it took only 2.1 GB of hdd n 512 mb ram.

So was I able to connect to the internet seamlessly.