• New assembled PC

    From kyuzo@kyuzo@tenno.com to alt.os.linux.mageia on Fri Jun 5 15:06:04 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    Hi folks,
    Where could I assemble a good PC Linux (better, Mageia!;)) oriented on
    the web?
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Mike Easter@MikeE@ster.invalid to alt.os.linux.mageia on Fri Jun 5 09:44:31 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    kyuzo wrote:
    Hi folks,
    Where could I assemble a good PC Linux (better, Mageia!;)) oriented on
    the web?

    I don't understand this question.

    To me, 'assemble a PC' means to purchase parts, typically for a desktop computer, such as case, power supply, motherboard, CPU, ram, keyboard,
    mouse, monitor, etc and 'assemble' those parts into a working computer
    without an operating system such as would be installed by an OEM selling
    an assembled desktop computer, typically with Windows, but sometimes
    more expensively with linux.

    Then, you say 'oriented on the web' -- or maybe the construction could
    be reordered to be, 'where on the web could I (find the necessary pieces
    and parts to) assemble a desktop PC.

    Otherwise, I don't yet understand what 'oriented on the web' means.
    --
    Mike Easter
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From William Unruh@unruh@invalid.ca to alt.os.linux.mageia on Sat Jun 6 03:27:24 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    I am afraid I agree with Easter on this. You state you want to
    "assemble" a "PC Linux" or "Mageia". Both are software operating system together with a huge set of programs. They run on computers. You can get
    them for free-- no assembly needed, just installation.

    Or as Easter muses, you are refering to assembling hardare parts into a computer capable of running thos operating system. But almost any PC,
    even if it comes with say Microsoft installed, can have either operating
    system installed.

    As you can see we are confused by your question. If you told us what you
    want, we could be of much greater help.

    On 2026-06-05, Mike Easter <MikeE@ster.invalid> wrote:
    kyuzo wrote:
    Hi folks,
    Where could I assemble a good PC Linux (better, Mageia!;)) oriented on
    the web?

    I don't understand this question.

    To me, 'assemble a PC' means to purchase parts, typically for a desktop computer, such as case, power supply, motherboard, CPU, ram, keyboard, mouse, monitor, etc and 'assemble' those parts into a working computer without an operating system such as would be installed by an OEM selling
    an assembled desktop computer, typically with Windows, but sometimes
    more expensively with linux.

    Then, you say 'oriented on the web' -- or maybe the construction could
    be reordered to be, 'where on the web could I (find the necessary pieces
    and parts to) assemble a desktop PC.

    Otherwise, I don't yet understand what 'oriented on the web' means.

    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Daniel70@daniel47@nomail.afraid.org to alt.os.linux.mageia on Sat Jun 6 20:07:52 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    On 6/06/2026 1:27 pm, William Unruh wrote:
    I am afraid I agree with Easter on this. You state you want to
    "assemble" a "PC Linux" or "Mageia". Both are software operating system together with a huge set of programs. They run on computers. You can get
    them for free-- no assembly needed, just installation.

    Or as Easter muses, you are refering to assembling hardare parts into a computer capable of running thos operating system. But almost any PC,
    even if it comes with say Microsoft installed, can have either operating system installed.

    .... or BOTH OS's installed .... i.e. Dual Boot.

    As you can see we are confused by your question. If you told us what you want, we could be of much greater help.

    On 2026-06-05, Mike Easter <MikeE@ster.invalid> wrote:
    kyuzo wrote:
    Hi folks,
    Where could I assemble a good PC Linux (better, Mageia!;)) oriented on
    the web?

    I don't understand this question.

    To me, 'assemble a PC' means to purchase parts, typically for a desktop
    computer, such as case, power supply, motherboard, CPU, ram, keyboard,
    mouse, monitor, etc and 'assemble' those parts into a working computer
    without an operating system such as would be installed by an OEM selling
    an assembled desktop computer, typically with Windows, but sometimes
    more expensively with linux.

    Then, you say 'oriented on the web' -- or maybe the construction could
    be reordered to be, 'where on the web could I (find the necessary pieces
    and parts to) assemble a desktop PC.

    Otherwise, I don't yet understand what 'oriented on the web' means.

    --
    Daniel70
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From William Unruh@unruh@invalid.ca to alt.os.linux.mageia on Sat Jun 6 15:22:05 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    In that case it would help to say where you are in the world. It wold
    hardly be useful to tell you about places in London when you live in SanFrancisco or Shanghi. Also it might help to say what special things
    you need. The parts for a computer are often far more retail than the
    proce of the preassembled. I agree that 14 years is a really long time
    for a computer to last, so that parts were clearly of good quality. But
    that is not always the case, and has very little to do with the operating system.

    On 2026-06-06, kyuzo <kyuzo@tenno.com> wrote:
    Il 06/06/26 05:27, William Unruh ha scritto:
    As you can see we are confused by your question. If you told us what you
    want, we could be of much greater help.

    You and Mike are right, my fault.
    I've bought my last computer in a webshop, where i could plan the configuration of the hardware choosing in different profiles, and then
    the shop send me the assembled product, without OS.
    This, fourteen years ago.
    In the meanwhile this shop closed its activity and now I'm searching for
    a similar solution.
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Mike Easter@MikeE@ster.invalid to alt.os.linux.mageia on Sat Jun 6 11:33:46 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    Mike Easter wrote:
    Personally I still recommend a refurb Win as the best deal,

    However, that isn't the only way to go, depending on what you intend to
    do w/ the result.

    One of my systems bought several years ago is an RPi 3B, which has only
    1G ram, but it is actually functional w/ a lightweight Raspbian OS.

    If I were going to do/buy 'that'/such today, there is a lot more
    resources available in higher level RPi/s, which are perfectly capable
    of functioning as a conventional desktop computer w/ sufficient ram.

    You should say what country you are in and what you like to do w/ your computer. Personally I'm mostly using my browser and Tb for newsgroups.

    You posted your msg w/ a tz stamp of +0200

    Eastern Europe: Greece, Finland, Ukraine, Romania, and Latvia.
    Middle East: Egypt, Israel, and Palestine.
    Africa: South Africa, Botswana, and Zimbabwe

    I'm not familiar w/ the best way to buy some kind of computer in those countries.
    --
    Mike Easter
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From TJ@TJ@noneofyour.business to alt.os.linux.mageia on Mon Jun 15 21:43:04 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    On 2026-06-06 13:53, Mike Easter wrote:
    kyuzo wrote:
    I've bought my last computer in a webshop, where i could plan the
    configuration of the hardware choosing in different profiles, and then
    the-a shop send me the assembled product, without OS.

    While my first computers were Atari STs preassembled w/ TOS operating system, my first Win95 computer was done by a local 'assembly shop' as
    you describe, except that they not only provided the components 'as specified' by the customer (kinda like ordering a Dell computer online),
    but they also installed the W95 and some requested software such as
    Office added to the price.

    After that I started assembling my own, while still buying the pieces
    and parts locally when on sale from a big warehouse computer operation.
    Then I would have a computer w/o OS, and by the time W98se came along I
    was more into linux than Win.

    As time went on, I found that I could get my best deals by buying
    refurb/s on sale, typically w/ a refurb Win licensed OS installed, so in those days I was mostly dual-booting. Then that evolved into preferring
    to have multiple desktops and NOT dual booting, but instead being able
    to 'flip' between desktops instantly by having KVM (keyboard vid mouse) switch; so I got away from dual booting but still continued to use 'something' in Win even today, even if 'seldom'.

    Personally I still recommend a refurb Win as the best deal, because
    every refurb I've ever bought was in pristine condition, even tho' knowledgeable advisors have told me that the odds of getting a 'dog'
    were high.-a I would never buy something 'risky' that requires complex return shipping arrangements if you are unhappy. Every time I've bought something that required shipping that had risk, it was able to be
    returned to a storefront.

    Depending on what he does with his computer and what he has now, he may
    not need much new hardware. He says his hardware is from 2012.

    My current best laptop is from late 2013, only a year newer, and it runs
    great with Mageia. Another laptop is an HP 6550b, from 2010. That one
    loves Mageia too, but has a bad internal speaker so needs an external
    speaker add-on. My brother's current desktop is a hand-me-down from me,
    and it was also from 2010 - but it works just fine with Mageia.

    One thing those old computers have i common was that I replaced the rust drives that came in them with SSDs, making for a huge boost in
    performance. Two of the machines have 8GB of RAM, one has 16 - plenty if
    all you're looking for is something to surf the web, play some videos,
    and write emails.

    TJ
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Daniel70@daniel47@nomail.afraid.org to alt.os.linux.mageia on Tue Jun 16 21:23:30 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    On 16/06/2026 11:43 am, TJ wrote:

    <Snip>

    Depending on what he does with his computer and what he has now, he may
    not need much new hardware. He says his hardware is from 2012.

    My current best laptop is from late 2013, only a year newer, and it runs great with Mageia. Another laptop is an HP 6550b, from 2010. That one
    loves Mageia too, but has a bad internal speaker so needs an external speaker add-on. My brother's current desktop is a hand-me-down from me,
    and it was also from 2010 - but it works just fine with Mageia.

    Back in the Noughties, I had a HP 6730b Laptop that, in 2009, had Win-7 installed. I then installed MandrakaLinux V10.1 on it about a Week
    before those Developers dumped the name Mandrake (because of a naming
    problem with the comic, Mandrake) and switched to MandrivaLinux .... and
    then, later, to MageiaLinux .... which I used through to V 6.0 or
    something before the Win-7 gave up the ghost about eighteen months ago.
    --
    Daniel70
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Mike Easter@MikeE@ster.invalid to alt.os.linux.mageia on Tue Jun 16 07:26:22 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    TJ wrote:
    Mike Easter wrote:
    kyuzo wrote:
    I've bought my last computer in a webshop, where i could plan the
    configuration of the hardware choosing in different profiles, and
    then the-a shop send me the assembled product, without OS.

    Personally I still recommend a refurb Win as the best deal, because
    every refurb I've ever bought was in pristine condition, even tho'
    knowledgeable advisors have told me that the odds of getting a 'dog'
    were high.

    Depending on what he does with his computer and what he has now, he may
    not need much new hardware. He says his hardware is from 2012.

    My current best laptop is from late 2013, only a year newer, and it runs great with Mageia. Another laptop is an HP 6550b, from 2010. That one
    loves Mageia too, but has a bad internal speaker so needs an external speaker add-on. My brother's current desktop is a hand-me-down from me,
    and it was also from 2010 - but it works just fine with Mageia.

    One thing those old computers have i common was that I replaced the rust drives that came in them with SSDs, making for a huge boost in
    performance. Two of the machines have 8GB of RAM, one has 16 - plenty if
    all you're looking for is something to surf the web, play some videos,
    and write emails.

    This machine I'm 'typing' on is a Win7 refurb bios dated '11, came w/ 4G
    ram and I added 4 more; I have another 'twin' just like it. I've added
    SSDs to both of them and they're going strong and doing fine. One of
    them occasionally boots Win7 but is 99.9% linux, and the other's hdd
    died and is 100% linux lives sometimes persistence off its ssd.
    --
    Mike Easter
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From faeychild@faeychild@nomail.afraid.org to alt.os.linux.mageia on Wed Jun 17 09:45:09 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    On 16/6/26 21:23, Daniel70 wrote:


    Back in the Noughties, I had a HP 6730b Laptop that, in 2009, had Win-7 installed. I then installed MandrakaLinux V10.1 on it about a Week
    before those Developers dumped the name Mandrake (because of a naming problem with the comic, Mandrake) and switched to MandrivaLinux .... and then, later, to MageiaLinux .... which I used through to V 6.0 or
    something before the Win-7 gave up the ghost about eighteen months ago.

    I almost followed your path
    Mine was computer shop custom build, no OS
    I ran OS/2 for many years then Red Hat then Mandrake and so on
    I think I gave up at Windows 98
    --
    faeychild
    Running kde on 6.6.141-desktop-1.mga9 kernel.
    Mageia release 9 (Official) for x86_64
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From faeychild@faeychild@nomail.afraid.org to alt.os.linux.mageia on Wed Jun 17 10:01:33 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    On 16/6/26 11:43, TJ wrote:

    One thing those old computers have i common was that I replaced the rust drives that came in them with SSDs, making for a huge boost in
    performance. Two of the machines have 8GB of RAM, one has 16 - plenty if
    all you're looking for is something to surf the web, play some videos,
    and write emails.

    TJ

    When I had the current box assembled they suggested an SSD
    I was reluctant but went ahead.
    Boot times were mind blowing fast. All those kernel message flashed past
    in record time
    AND THEN I installed Mageia from a USB flash instead of DVD and that
    took moments instead of the usual half an hour
    A brave new world
    --
    faeychild
    Running kde on 6.6.141-desktop-1.mga9 kernel.
    Mageia release 9 (Official) for x86_64
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Daniel70@daniel47@nomail.afraid.org to alt.os.linux.mageia on Wed Jun 17 21:05:04 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    On 17/06/2026 9:45 am, faeychild wrote:
    On 16/6/26 21:23, Daniel70 wrote:

    Back in the Noughties, I had a HP 6730b Laptop that, in 2009, had
    Win-7 installed. I then installed MandrakaLinux V10.1 on it about a
    Week before those Developers dumped the name Mandrake (because of a
    naming problem with the comic, Mandrake) and switched to MandrivaLinux
    .... and then, later, to MageiaLinux .... which I used through to V
    6.0 or something before the Win-7 gave up the ghost about eighteen
    months ago.

    I almost followed your path
    Mine was computer shop custom build, no OS
    I ran OS/2 for many years then Red Hat then Mandrake and so on
    I think I gave up at Windows 98

    Win-95 and -98 where on my 8086'ish Desktop ... which I think came with
    DOS-2 or -3 when I brought it ... in about 1986/7 or so.

    That Desktop is sitting on the floor next to the chair that I'm sitting
    in as I type this. ;-P

    Ah!! Memories. When I took my discharge from the Australian Army (after
    twenty years service), the Removalists damaged the 8086 Motherboard
    (HOW??) so they had to re-furbish it, hence the 80286 motherboard
    upgrade. ;-)
    --
    Daniel70
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From kyuzo@kyuzo@tenno.com to alt.os.linux.mageia on Wed Jun 17 18:10:12 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    Il 16/06/26 03:43, TJ ha scritto:
    Depending on what he does with his computer and what he has now, he may
    not need much new hardware. He says his hardware is from 2012.

    My current best laptop is from late 2013, only a year newer, and it runs great with Mageia. Another laptop is an HP 6550b, from 2010. That one
    loves Mageia too, but has a bad internal speaker so needs an external speaker add-on. My brother's current desktop is a hand-me-down from me,
    and it was also from 2010 - but it works just fine with Mageia.

    One thing those old computers have i common was that I replaced the rust drives that came in them with SSDs, making for a huge boost in
    performance. Two of the machines have 8GB of RAM, one has 16 - plenty if
    all you're looking for is something to surf the web, play some videos,
    and write emails.

    Well, this is the old beast:

    Processor: 8 |u Intel-< Corerao i7-2600K CPU @ 3.40GHz
    Memory:7,7 GiB di RAM
    Graphic:AMD Radeon RX 550 Series 2GB
    HD: ST1000LM035-1RK172
    It is good for games too, if they are no too much resource eaters...
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From TJ@TJ@noneofyour.business to alt.os.linux.mageia on Sat Jun 27 19:22:41 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    On 2026-06-17 12:10, kyuzo wrote:
    Il 16/06/26 03:43, TJ ha scritto:
    Depending on what he does with his computer and what he has now, he
    may not need much new hardware. He says his hardware is from 2012.

    My current best laptop is from late 2013, only a year newer, and it
    runs great with Mageia. Another laptop is an HP 6550b, from 2010. That
    one loves Mageia too, but has a bad internal speaker so needs an
    external speaker add-on. My brother's current desktop is a hand-me-
    down from me, and it was also from 2010 - but it works just fine with
    Mageia.

    One thing those old computers have i common was that I replaced the
    rust drives that came in them with SSDs, making for a huge boost in
    performance. Two of the machines have 8GB of RAM, one has 16 - plenty
    if all you're looking for is something to surf the web, play some
    videos, and write emails.

    Well, this is the old beast:

    Processor: 8 |u Intel-< Corerao i7-2600K CPU @ 3.40GHz
    Memory:7,7 GiB di RAM
    Graphic:AMD Radeon RX 550 Series 2GB
    HD: ST1000LM035-1RK172
    It is good for games too, if they are no too much resource eaters...

    I used an i5-2500 as my production hardware with Mageia 7 and 8. Your processor should have no issues running Mageia 10. I would add an ssd
    and put the system files on that, with data on the present HD, or
    replace the HD with an ssd altogether. It would give a big boost in performance, but it isn't strictly necessary.

    As for your original question, I don't know of any shops like you
    describe currently in operation, but that doesn't mean there aren't any.
    I bought my second PC from a shop like that, around 2000, but when I
    felt the need of an upgrade a few years later I bought a used motherboard/processor on ebay and built it myself, keeping the HD (ssds weren't a thing yet), keyboard, mouse, power supply, case, etc.

    Lots of videos on Youtube can help with that if you choose that direction.

    TJ
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From kyuzo@kyuzo@tenno.com to alt.os.linux.mageia on Sun Jun 28 10:24:09 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    Il 28/06/26 01:22, TJ ha scritto:
    I would add an ssd and put the system files on that
    For the system files only, or for the Steam and GOG directories too
    (where i got my games)?
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From TJ@TJ@noneofyour.business to alt.os.linux.mageia on Sun Jun 28 08:00:14 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    On 2026-06-28 04:24, kyuzo wrote:
    Il 28/06/26 01:22, TJ ha scritto:
    I would add an ssd and put the system files on that
    For the system files only, or for the Steam and GOG directories too
    (where i got my games)?

    I'm not a gamer, so take my advice in this area with that in mind.

    However, considering the increase in performance, which of course is
    important in gaming, perhaps it would be best for you to put everything
    on an ssd, keeping the HD for backup purposes.

    Another route for you might be the used computer market. There are
    literally thousands of used computers on ebay right now with faster
    components than yours, but with hardware not compatible with Windows 11,
    and they would be perfectly capable of running Mageia Linux. And they
    are MUCH less expensive than a new custom built machine would be.

    Of course, there are dangers in that area, like with buying anything
    used, but if you do your due diligence the chances of success are good.

    TJ
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From kyuzo@kyuzo@tenno.com to alt.os.linux.mageia on Sun Jun 28 16:37:51 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    Il 28/06/26 14:00, TJ ha scritto:
    Of course, there are dangers in that area, like with buying anything
    used, but if you do your due diligence the chances of success are good.

    TJ
    Very intersting suggestions!
    Thanks a lot.
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Mike Easter@MikeE@ster.invalid to alt.os.linux.mageia on Sun Jun 28 20:36:26 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    TJ wrote:
    Of course, there are dangers in that area, like with buying anything
    used, but if you do your due diligence the chances of success are good.

    The refurb world is worlds different from the 'user'/used world, but
    there are also hazards there; it is VERY dependent on which refurb
    outfit you are dealing, which is often impossible to predetermine.

    I've bought 3 refurbs in the past; all w/ VERY easy return or exchange
    w/ no problematic RMA/shipping possibilities. 2 were desktops, pristine, shrink-wrapped, smelled like new. 1 was a desktop, also pristine, home shakedown cruise showed elevated cpu temp, returned to the same
    storefront I acquired it and exchanged it for another pristine one, took
    it home and checked it out and it was fine.
    --
    Mike Easter
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Mike Easter@MikeE@ster.invalid to alt.os.linux.mageia on Sun Jun 28 20:38:30 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    Oops.

    Mike Easter wrote:
    1 was a desktop, also pristine,

    I meant, 1 was a laptop, also pristine.
    --
    Mike Easter
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From TJ@TJ@noneofyour.business to alt.os.linux.mageia on Mon Jun 29 08:59:56 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    On 2026-06-28 23:38, Mike Easter wrote:
    Oops.

    Mike Easter wrote:
    1 was a desktop, also pristine,

    I meant, 1 was a laptop, also pristine.


    I bought the laptop I'm using now, an HP Pavilion 15 from 2014, at a
    local garage sale for $20. It wasn't exactly pristine - the battery was
    shot - but the owner plugged in the adapter and booted it into (ugh)
    Windows 8 for me so I could see it operated.

    I took it home, gave it a new battery, boosted the RAM to the 16GB max, replaced the HD with an SSD, pulled the optical drive I almost never use
    any more, replacing that with a caddy holding the original HD.

    Then I wiped all traces of Windows, and installed Mageia 9. But then a
    problem struck. I had purchased a cheaper ssd because I didn't quite
    trust the laptop enough yet to put a more reliable brand into it. You
    guessed it - that ssd failed after a few months. But I had more
    confidence by then, and replaced that with a better drive, restoring
    from backups.

    It's now running Mageia 10, with a second install of Mageia 9 for QA
    testing purposes while support of it continues. I use it daily.

    TJ
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Daniel70@daniel47@nomail.afraid.org to alt.os.linux.mageia on Mon Jun 29 23:12:35 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    On 29/06/2026 10:59 pm, TJ wrote:

    <Snip>

    It's now running Mageia 10, with a second install of Mageia 9 for QA
    testing purposes while support of it continues. I use it daily.

    TJ

    Bugger!! I had meant to get this SSD Desk-top Win-11 to dual boot Mageia
    9 BEFORE Mageia 10 was released!! Bugger!

    Well, no, I guess NOW, TJ, you are a tester for me! ;-P Thank you.
    --
    Daniel70
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Mike Easter@MikeE@ster.invalid to alt.os.linux.mageia on Mon Jun 29 09:23:16 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    TJ wrote:
    It's now running Mageia 10, with a second install of Mageia 9 for QA
    testing purposes while support of it continues. I use it daily.

    Goodjob. I luv frugality; it should be my middle name :-)
    --
    Mike Easter
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From TJ@TJ@noneofyour.business to alt.os.linux.mageia on Tue Jun 30 08:12:30 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    On 2026-06-29 09:12, Daniel70 wrote:
    On 29/06/2026 10:59 pm, TJ wrote:

    <Snip>

    It's now running Mageia 10, with a second install of Mageia 9 for QA
    testing purposes while support of it continues. I use it daily.

    TJ

    Bugger!! I had meant to get this SSD Desk-top Win-11 to dual boot Mageia
    9 BEFORE Mageia 10 was released!! Bugger!

    Well, no, I guess NOW, TJ, you are a tester for me! ;-P Thank you.

    I've been using Mageia 10 as my daily driver for about two months, and
    testing it before that. I dual or multi-boot with other Mageia installs,
    but not Windows. For the few things where I simply must have Windows, I
    have VirtualBox.

    TJ

    TJ
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Daniel70@daniel47@nomail.afraid.org to alt.os.linux.mageia on Tue Jun 30 22:24:30 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia

    On 30/06/2026 10:12 pm, TJ wrote:
    On 2026-06-29 09:12, Daniel70 wrote:
    On 29/06/2026 10:59 pm, TJ wrote:

    <Snip>

    It's now running Mageia 10, with a second install of Mageia 9 for QA
    testing purposes while support of it continues. I use it daily.

    TJ

    Bugger!! I had meant to get this SSD Desk-top Win-11 to dual boot
    Mageia 9 BEFORE Mageia 10 was released!! Bugger!

    Well, no, I guess NOW, TJ, you are a tester for me! ;-P Thank you.

    I've been using Mageia 10 as my daily driver for about two months, and testing it before that. I dual or multi-boot with other Mageia installs,
    but not Windows. For the few things where I simply must have Windows, I
    have VirtualBox.

    TJ

    Owww. O.K., I thought I had been checking the MageiaLinux website
    reasonable often ... and still seeing V 9.0 as the current release.

    Oh., look mageia.org now has Mageia 10 'released' in July 2026 ....
    which is in about 90 minutes!! ;-) (O.K., 30 minutes in New Zealand!!)
    --
    Daniel70
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  • From Vincent Coen@VBCoen@gmail.com to Daniel70 on Tue Jun 30 23:53:49 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux.mageia


    Hello Daniel70!

    30 Jun 26 13:24, Daniel70 wrote to all:

    On 30/06/2026 10:12 pm, TJ wrote:
    On 2026-06-29 09:12, Daniel70 wrote:
    On 29/06/2026 10:59 pm, TJ wrote:

    <Snip>

    It's now running Mageia 10, with a second install of Mageia 9 for
    QA testing purposes while support of it continues. I use it daily.

    TJ

    Bugger!! I had meant to get this SSD Desk-top Win-11 to dual boot
    Mageia 9 BEFORE Mageia 10 was released!! Bugger!

    Well, no, I guess NOW, TJ, you are a tester for me! ;-P Thank you.

    I've been using Mageia 10 as my daily driver for about two months,
    and testing it before that. I dual or multi-boot with other Mageia
    installs, but not Windows. For the few things where I simply must
    have Windows, I have VirtualBox.

    TJ

    Owww. O.K., I thought I had been checking the MageiaLinux website
    reasonable often ... and still seeing V 9.0 as the current release.

    Oh., look mageia.org now has Mageia 10 'released' in July 2026 ....
    which is in about 90 minutes!! ;-) (O.K., 30 minutes in New Zealand!!)

    It is a RC - Release Candidate only - not a Formal release.


    Vincent



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