gakk!! i meant running before you can walk! sorry!
of course you should walk before you can run! sorry about that!!
Anyway, yes, mandrake and red hat are two companies who make their own operating systems and sell it. They also make free versions with all the pay software taken out of it. It is usually a GNU system with a linux kernel (this is the setup that most people refer to as "linux" nowadays). there are a lot of other companies who do this too. In addition to selling and giving away systems, they sell licences for different types of support for those systems. These licences are NOT required for these systems (unlike windows) but they help you get support right from the distributors.
re: bootloaders, okay, what you do is you set aside an area (a partition) of your hard drive and allow windows to stay installed on that bit, then you set aside a similar area and put linux on that. The mandrake installer helps you do this with an easy point/click tool and i think most other major distributors do too. It's best if you firsttly leave a few megabytes of free space between the two partitions, so windows doesn't screw your linux partition when you run defrag, and also it's best to have a third or fourth partition for your files, to save you time when windows needs to scandisk (this idea probably needs more explanation but this is not the place) The
bootloader is the thing that your computer reads when you switch the machine on, and gives you a choice of which of the systems you want to boot into. In practice a bootloader can be textual, point and click, have pictures or not, you might get a menu or have to type in the name of the system, and you (depending on the loader) can have as many different systems as you like (FreeBSD, NetBSD, DR-DOS, MSWindows3.11, WindowsNT, GNU/Hurd, GNU/Linux, Solaris 8) all on the same machine, if you have the disk space!
okay, more stuff next time, i need to go and do stuff! i hope this was of help too, willysnout...
ps - oh yes, and re: StarOffice spying on you, i think it's not really a worry, however if you want to completely eliminate this concern, then use OpenOffice.org instead. You can get it and its full info at
http://openoffice.orgit runs on many systems including linux and windows, and it is free. It is based on SttarOffice but it is open source, so if there was any spyware in itt, somebody would spot it quick, take it out and redistribute it. (this has not happened, and will not, since this reason is enough of a deterrant to make it not ever be tried, if you get my meaning).
[ August 07, 2002: Message edited by: Calum ]