Well, I'm pretty sure IBM uses Red Hat, which is not Fedora. I had run
them together in my mind. Not sure what is Fedora's sweet spot.
I have plenty of space right now. If I need more, Windows will go.
-Gary
On Wed, Aug 10, 2022 at 10:05:20PM -0700, Rick Moen wrote:
Quoting saclug(a)garymcglinn.com
(saclug(a)garymcglinn.com):
Gparted worked pretty well. I like to use good
old standard partitions,
so of course Windows uses 4 primaries. I deleted the recovery partition
and resized the main Windows partition and had a decent amount of space.
Why not move _Windows_ into a VM? Or just make an archive copy of the
preload and blow it away, if you have no immediate use for it. Either
way, it seems a waste of good hardware to let Microsoft be the host OS.
It is interesting though that the Linux world is
mostly Debian for the
'home' user and more Fedora for the more enterprise folks.
Dude, no. Enterprise computing doesn't use Fedora. It's way too beta
and with too short a life cycle. In former days, enterprise computing
mostly used CentOS. I'm a little out of the loop, but would guess
they've predominantly moved on to its successor in spirit, Rocky Linux.
_______________________________________________
Lug-nuts mailing list -- lug-nuts(a)bigbrie.com
To unsubscribe send an email to lug-nuts-leave(a)bigbrie.com