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Is there an optimal configuration you do reccomend for a flawless install? My other PowerMacs are:
- MDD 2003 (dual 1.25 GHz) with nVidia GeForce 4600Ti
- PowerBook G4@1.67 GHz with Radeon 9700
- eMac 1.25 GHz with Radeon 9200
 
The PowerBook G4 with Radeon will work flawlessly I think. The eMac you need to do a trick with EDID (I know someone who did it) and the MDD I do not know. The nVidia card could give problems.
 
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I never went through an installation of an eMac before, I don't have such a machine. If people don't report, I can't help.
 
Last time I tried the 32-bits version it worked fine. The 64-bits version I don´t know now, yesterday it stalled. There are no special things to mention.
 
Just checked it out and found out that Rage 128 is supported. Look, I have MintPPC running on my old beloved G3 Pismo :) Please note that you cannot install plain Debian on these machines as Debian removed the drivers for these old machines :(
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If you guys ever want to install MintPPC on say a G3 Wallstreet, let me know. I will then also build the Mach64 ATi driver.
 

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I sort of want to triple-boot OS 9, OS X, and Mint on my iBook just to try it...

I'll see how it goes with dual booting my PowerBook and then if that goes smoothly I might try it :3
 
The eMac is supported now?
I have a post in my forum about how to install Debian sid on the Emac. You can apply this knowledge for installing MintPPC. Let me know if it works.

 
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Something that always makes me sad is how much hate Linux Mint gets from Linux elitists. At least the mainstream x86 version. Most of the hate tends to come from Arch people. Some honestly think they should drop the distro and concentrate 100% on Cinnamon.

To me Mint is the Ubuntu that respects privacy, and many other Linux fundamentals that Canonical struggles with. The Debian edition is actually their backup plan if something to do with Canonical goes south.
 
Something that always makes me sad is how much hate Linux Mint gets from Linux elitists.
Here's my two cents - I hate this elitist attitude. It's unnecessary and not helping anybody. If they feel they need to hate something because it caters to a different type of user that's their problem. Best to shrug it off.
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To me Mint is the Ubuntu that respects privacy, and many other Linux fundamentals that Canonical struggles with.
It hasn't managed to say goodbye to systemd tho. (Sorry :p)
 
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I personally have no issue with systemd. Nor does the creator of Linux. My Linux of choice ATM is Debian MATE, so I do use it. I'm not in the for or against camp, because it's not something that warrants my concern in the first place.
 
I'm running Manjaro with Cinnamon on my 5.1 as my work machine and Mint 19.3 in my MacPro 2.1 and it's really nice.

I've had no issues with systemd either.
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Here's my two cents - I hate this elitist attitude. It's unnecessary and not helping anybody. If they feel they need to hate something because it caters to a different type of user that's their problem. Best to shrug it off.
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It hasn't managed to say goodbye to systemd tho. (Sorry :p)

Have you spoken to the Arch community yet, if you are looking for elitist attitude? ;)
 
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Have you spoken to the Arch community yet, if you are looking for elitist attitude? ;)
I'm enjoying this community a lot more :)
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I'm not in the for or against camp, because it's not something that warrants my concern in the first place.
Same here, it was meant as a joke. There's much more important things to worry about.
 
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@z970mp

When something is more complex and vast, it's going to require more steps. It's really just a more capable init system, and also makes config files less of a pain. I just see it like this... if it's good enough for a very reputable distro like Debian, and also good enough for Torvalds, then it's good enough for me.

I think a big part of the debate has been due to basic human tribalism. It's just an init system, and it was seen as a necessary change for the greater good.
 
@timidpimpin I don't wish to start another discussion here, but I humbly disagree. When something is more complex, it naturally introduces more potential failure points and vulnerabilities (just ask me, or @looking4awayout, or the folks at OpenBSD). And similarly, when something is more vast, it tends to eat more disk space, processor cycles, and memory (precisely evidenced here). And as far as my experience tells me for most practical usages (having used the tools and utilities of both), systemd does few things for the user that init was not already capable of by itself, never mind the amount of desktop users that ever actually took advantage of either on a consistent basis.

Personally, I think an even bigger part of the debate is because of differing perspective and different user priorities, maybe tying back to what any given individual thinks a computer should be and do. And the way I see it, what systemd set out to do was not a bad direction, but the way that it was implemented was an undesirable one over init for reasons previously stated.

That is correct that systemd is indeed just an init system. However, Windows is just an operating system, and most of the world saw it necessary to pivot it as the de-facto standard. - But that doesn't change the fact how that collective choice had problems, to say the least.

Anyway, perhaps what I'm trying to say here is to decide for yourself what a "good" or "bad" change or situation is, irregardless of what others think.
 
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