Author Topic: Help out a new Linux user? (Redhat 9)  (Read 581 times)

IEisEVIL

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 1
  • Kudos: 0
Help out a new Linux user? (Redhat 9)
« on: 25 October 2003, 04:37 »
I am not a "newbie" when it comes to computers, but I am new to Linux! I setup a dual boot configuration on my machine (XP Pro/Redhat 9) and I was wondering if I could get some help on a few things:

*How do I add MP3 support to Redhat 9, and can Linux play WMA files?

*I have a FAT32 partition with my music on it, how would I go about mounting it so that I can listen to my music?

*I'd like to install the Real Player plugin, Java 1.4.2 plugin and the Flash/Shockwave plugin for Mozilla 1.5, how would I go about doing this?

*I have an ATI Radeon 9200 (New card) and Redhat 9 does not have drivers for this, so I have to use these horrible standard drivers, is there a better driver I can use for my card so I'm not stuck in 800x600?

Thanks in advance   !

The Anti-Microsoft

  • Member
  • **
  • Posts: 64
  • Kudos: 0
    • http://slashdot.org
Help out a new Linux user? (Redhat 9)
« Reply #1 on: 25 October 2003, 05:08 »
MP3 support in Red Hat 9 ...
http://havardk.xmms.org/dist/xmms-1.2.7-rh8-rh9-rpm/

 
quote:
The short summary

 You only need to install this rpm to be able to play mp3's in Red Hat 8 / 9:
 xmms-mpg123-1.2.7-21.i386.rpm

Windows_SuX_@$$

  • Member
  • **
  • Posts: 233
  • Kudos: 0
Help out a new Linux user? (Redhat 9)
« Reply #2 on: 25 October 2003, 05:27 »
LOL What did you use to meake that pic in the sig? MS Word? hahahahah
Signatures can appear at the bottom of your posts. This option may be disabled by the message board administrators at any time, however. You may use UBB Code in your signature, but not HTML. UBBCode Images are permitted.

Enmity

  • Member
  • **
  • Posts: 116
  • Kudos: 0
Help out a new Linux user? (Redhat 9)
« Reply #3 on: 25 October 2003, 05:57 »
A wild guess: GIMP?
Plugin: http://plugindoc.mozdev.org/faqs/
Mounting FAT32: mount -vfat /dev/hdaX /mnt/hdaX


I'm a Linux noob too so don't trust me too much on this.
TCPA
DMCA
RIAA
LONGHORN

Mix'them together... What do you get?

A BIG FUCKING PILE OF STEAMING SHIT!!!


The Anti-Microsoft

  • Member
  • **
  • Posts: 64
  • Kudos: 0
    • http://slashdot.org
Help out a new Linux user? (Redhat 9)
« Reply #4 on: 25 October 2003, 06:57 »
quote:
Originally posted by e7ement:
LOL What did you use to meake that pic in the sig? MS Word? hahahahah


No,  http://www.iqauto.com/cgi-bin/3dgen.pl .

I didn't feel like using the GIMP.

The "Values" I Entered

Text to be rendered:  The Anti-Microsoft
Depth of text:  .5
Font:  Dolphin Bold
Font texture:  Solarized
Background texture:  Orb
Stlye:  Arc
Size of rendering:  320x240
Image format:  .jpg
If style is an arc, specift angle of arc:  15
Camera offset--Vertical:  -10
Camera offset--Horizontal:  0
Background distance:  None
Shadows:  No
RGB Color--Red:  255
RGB Color--Green:  255
RGB Color--Blue:  255
Special effects--YWeave:  0
Special effects--Shaken:  0

Then I copy and pasted it into the KDE paint program, trimmed it to be more like a banner, and saved it as a ".jpg" file.

[ October 24, 2003: Message edited by: The Anti-Microsoft ]


TheQuirk

  • VIP
  • Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 2,154
  • Kudos: 315
Help out a new Linux user? (Redhat 9)
« Reply #5 on: 25 October 2003, 11:46 »
http://faq.belg88.com/index.php?op=view&t=6

Why does no one read the darn FAQ anymore?

xyle_one

  • VIP
  • Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 2,213
  • Kudos: 135
Help out a new Linux user? (Redhat 9)
« Reply #6 on: 26 October 2003, 05:11 »
quote:
Originally posted by TheQuirk:
http://faq.belg88.com/index.php?op=view&t=6

Why does no one read the darn FAQ anymore?


noone knows about it. there should be a link with the rest of the navigation.

Siplus

  • Member
  • **
  • Posts: 522
  • Kudos: 43
    • http://www.siplus.org
Help out a new Linux user? (Redhat 9)
« Reply #7 on: 26 October 2003, 21:36 »
quote:
Originally posted by Enmity:
A wild guess: GIMP?
Plugin: http://plugindoc.mozdev.org/faqs/
Mounting FAT32: mount -vfat /dev/hdaX /mnt/hdaX


I'm a Linux noob too so don't trust me too much on this.



to mount a fat32 drive, it isn't nessisary to say it's vfat

the easiest thing to do is to make a /c directory, or at least that is what i always to:
mkdir /c
then, to mount your 'windows c' drive, lets say it is hda1, in linux, type:
mount /dev/hda1 /c


http://www.siplus.org

"Your computer is already fucked up by having Windows
on it, you can only unfuck it up by installing Linux."
-- void main (old school MES member)


Desktop: Athlon 2600/ 768mb DDR266
--Running: Ubuntu 5.10, FC4, Win2k
 (Also, Unbuntu 6-06:5, 5.04; Fedora Core 5, WinXP, but none of these are used much)
12" Powerbook: 1.5 Ghz G4 PowerPC / 1.25 GB DDR333
--Running: Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger

TheQuirk

  • VIP
  • Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 2,154
  • Kudos: 315
Help out a new Linux user? (Redhat 9)
« Reply #8 on: 26 October 2003, 21:10 »
quote:
Originally posted by Ecsyle:

noone knows about it. there should be a link with the rest of the navigation.



It's in the god damn forum DESCRIPTION! Calum, Tux, Panos, the others and I didn't spend hours on that darn thing for nothing!

BouncingAyatollah

  • Member
  • **
  • Posts: 58
  • Kudos: 0
    • http://www.bouncingayatollah.co.uk
Help out a new Linux user? (Redhat 9)
« Reply #9 on: 26 October 2003, 21:52 »
If you want to always have your FAT32 partition available put an entry in your /etc/fstab file (you need to be root to edit this, so either log in as root or "su -" in a console first).

You make a folder somewhere (usually under /mnt) which is where the filesystem will be mounted, and then can specify other options to mount to tell it who can access it, whether it is auto-mounted and so on.

e.g. to allow all users to mount your first HD partition on mountpoint /mnt/c you would have

/dev/hda1   /mnt/c   vfat   defaults,umask=000    0 0

(all on 1 line if it isn't)

in your fstab. If you like you can add an icon for the partition to your desktop, under KDE a small green triangle indicates whether the partition is mounted or not, you can right-click it to do so, after which point it will be available to other programs when you navigate to /mnt/c.

Although it's for Gentoo there is quite a good decription of it here (from Step 2 on, your kernel is already compiled for RedHat):

http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=29285
The cheese would have to be subatomic size before quantum cheese effects would take over -- and then it wouldn't be identifiable as cheese any longer.

BouncingAyatollah

  • Member
  • **
  • Posts: 58
  • Kudos: 0
    • http://www.bouncingayatollah.co.uk
Help out a new Linux user? (Redhat 9)
« Reply #10 on: 26 October 2003, 21:55 »
Another small note, the execute bit for directories in linux determines whether you can enter into a directory or not, this may not be obvious at first.
The cheese would have to be subatomic size before quantum cheese effects would take over -- and then it wouldn't be identifiable as cheese any longer.