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Showing posts with label Q4OS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Q4OS. Show all posts

Thursday, 29 December 2016

Introduction

This is going to be my last post for 2016 and as many of you know I have been using Q4OS during the past month to see how well it would work over the course of time.

During the month I also reviewed Zorin OS and I was very impressed with the new look and the more complete experience that Zorin provided when compared with previous versions.

Last week I embarked on trying to use Microsoft Office with Q4OS with minimal success. I could use the online versions easily enough but PlayOnLinux and WINE let me down when I tried to install the full version to my computer.

I was planning this week to talk about software development which is the final issue with working on Linux as I am a .NET developer and whilst there has been some move to enabling .NET within Linux it is far from a complete solution.

However I managed to actually get Microsoft Office installed within Q4OS and it works, well, it sort of works. Well it works now, it didn't but now it does. I am not sure why and what fixed it.

So what does this have to do with Zorin? I tried Microsoft Office with Zorin and it works, and it really works without any of that bizarre not working and then working nonsense

This post therefore is going to be a mish-mash and cover a few things. First of all I will show you what I did to install Office. I will then let you know about the issues I have faced with Q4OS, what happened with Zorin, a little bit about software development and then a summary. 

How To Install Microsoft Office For Debian/Ubuntu

The steps I followed to install Microsoft Office are as follows:

  1. Sign into Office 365 (you need an account and it costs a monthly subscription fee)
  2. Click the install button which downloads an executable file to your computer called "setup.x86.en-US_o365HomePremRetail.exe"
  3. Visit https://www.codeweavers.com/products/crossover-linux
  4. Download the free trial (although to continue using Office you will need to pay for the software at some point). The full version costs £38.
  5. The download is a debian file (.DEB). Double clicking on the file installs Crossover.
Crossover Linux is much like PlayOnLinux. It is a commercial venture rather than being open source. I did however get surprising results in that it worked with Microsoft Office.


When you first run Crossover you get a screen much like the one above. There is a button at the bottom called "Install Windows Software".


You can search for Office 2013 in the search bar and the option to install it will appear. Click on the "Continue" button to move forward.


You will be given the option to choose an installer file.



If you are using the trial version you will be given the option to buy, register or try Crossover.


You will be asked to accept the license agreement for installing MSXML.


Enter your name and click next to install the MSXML parser.


After you click install, the Office installer will start to download and the full suite of applications will be installed.




After a while the software will have been installed and you can launch Word, Excel and Outlook via the Crossover application. You can also find all the tools under the Q4OS menu.

What Worked And What Didn't

Microsoft Word worked perfectly under Q4OS although I haven't tried every feature (really, who does?).


Microsoft Excel didn't initially work so well. When I clicked on new document it said that it was out of memory.

The only way to start a new spreadsheet was to open an existing file and save it under a new name and delete the contents. Obviously this wasn't ideal.

Microsoft Outlook worked ok but running against a GMail account required me to reduce the security to allow Outlook to work with it. Hardly ideal.

I had no issues with Microsoft Powerpoint nor did I have any issues with Microsoft Access.

The other issue I had was the activation wizard kept popping up asking me to activate Office 365 even though I was signed in. The activation wizard didn't want to activate Office and from the message that was displayed it appeared to be complaining that the system wasn't really Windows 7 as Crossover had set up WINE to show it to be.

Ironically the time limit ran out for activating Microsoft Office and now it works perfectly well with Q4OS and Excel now works. It seem the activation wizard was taking up lots of memory.

Within Zorin I tried the same installation via Crossover and everything worked straight away. Excel had no memory issues. The activation wizard did however pop up although not all the time.

The truth therefore is that you can get Microsoft Office 2013 working within Linux and Crossover has proved itself to be a fairly decent tool.

Software Development

As part of my full time role I develop software in .NET and I am a dab hand with Microsoft SQL Server.

These just aren't available within Linux although there has been some movement on this front in recent months.

This isn't going to affect the average computer user which is who this site is dedicated to. If you are interested in software development then Python is well catered for and you can create cross platform applications using Python and QT.

You can also use a tool called Plunker which lets you easily develop applications using AngularJS and React. These are the current future (although the future of software development seems to change on a daily basis).

Personally whilst I am a .NET developer and I am qualified as a SQL Server developer and DBA I started off as a C developer and then moved on to C++ before moving to .NET and beyond. Switching to Java and Python shouldn't really be a big deal and one I intend to embark on in 2017. I am also competent with Oracle and PL/SQL as well as MySQL so is a 100% move to Linux possible? 2017 could be that year.

Summary

The whole point of the past month has been to prove that Q4OS can be used as an operating system for the Everyday Linux User. 

I believe that it is a perfectly decent distribution and I have no qualms in recommending it to you as a complete replacement for Windows. 

It is worth noting though that I used Zorin OS during this month as well and now here is the tricky bit. I think Zorin comes out slightly on top. 

There is no doubt that based on performance Q4OS uses less resources and for older computers will probably be better than Zorin. Q4OS is also probably better for people who are used to older versions of Windows such as XP because everything is even named the same. The XPQ4 theme will even make everything feel the same.

Zorin however is more intuitive. Downloads go to the downloads folder and it handles the insertion of USB drives a little bit more effectively. Q4OS isn't particularly clever when you remove and insert a drive. 

Q4OS sometimes leaves the previously mounted folders populated which means if you format a drive and copy new files to it the folder shown in Q4OS contains what used to be on the drive and not the new content. Zorin updates itself correctly every time.

It might be worth trying out both and making your own judgement. I am personally happy using either of them.

What Is Next?

In January I will be removing both Q4OS and Zorin from this machine and embarking on something new. 

I have Fedora 25 and Enlightenment available to me and I intend to review the latest openSUSE.

I will also review more Linux applications.

Thanks for reading the blog this year and I will you all a happy new year.

Q4OS vs Zorin OS - The Final Word (and Excel, Outlook, Access etc)

Introduction

This is going to be my last post for 2016 and as many of you know I have been using Q4OS during the past month to see how well it would work over the course of time.

During the month I also reviewed Zorin OS and I was very impressed with the new look and the more complete experience that Zorin provided when compared with previous versions.

Last week I embarked on trying to use Microsoft Office with Q4OS with minimal success. I could use the online versions easily enough but PlayOnLinux and WINE let me down when I tried to install the full version to my computer.

I was planning this week to talk about software development which is the final issue with working on Linux as I am a .NET developer and whilst there has been some move to enabling .NET within Linux it is far from a complete solution.

However I managed to actually get Microsoft Office installed within Q4OS and it works, well, it sort of works. Well it works now, it didn't but now it does. I am not sure why and what fixed it.

So what does this have to do with Zorin? I tried Microsoft Office with Zorin and it works, and it really works without any of that bizarre not working and then working nonsense

This post therefore is going to be a mish-mash and cover a few things. First of all I will show you what I did to install Office. I will then let you know about the issues I have faced with Q4OS, what happened with Zorin, a little bit about software development and then a summary. 

How To Install Microsoft Office For Debian/Ubuntu

The steps I followed to install Microsoft Office are as follows:

  1. Sign into Office 365 (you need an account and it costs a monthly subscription fee)
  2. Click the install button which downloads an executable file to your computer called "setup.x86.en-US_o365HomePremRetail.exe"
  3. Visit https://www.codeweavers.com/products/crossover-linux
  4. Download the free trial (although to continue using Office you will need to pay for the software at some point). The full version costs £38.
  5. The download is a debian file (.DEB). Double clicking on the file installs Crossover.
Crossover Linux is much like PlayOnLinux. It is a commercial venture rather than being open source. I did however get surprising results in that it worked with Microsoft Office.


When you first run Crossover you get a screen much like the one above. There is a button at the bottom called "Install Windows Software".


You can search for Office 2013 in the search bar and the option to install it will appear. Click on the "Continue" button to move forward.


You will be given the option to choose an installer file.



If you are using the trial version you will be given the option to buy, register or try Crossover.


You will be asked to accept the license agreement for installing MSXML.


Enter your name and click next to install the MSXML parser.


After you click install, the Office installer will start to download and the full suite of applications will be installed.




After a while the software will have been installed and you can launch Word, Excel and Outlook via the Crossover application. You can also find all the tools under the Q4OS menu.

What Worked And What Didn't

Microsoft Word worked perfectly under Q4OS although I haven't tried every feature (really, who does?).


Microsoft Excel didn't initially work so well. When I clicked on new document it said that it was out of memory.

The only way to start a new spreadsheet was to open an existing file and save it under a new name and delete the contents. Obviously this wasn't ideal.

Microsoft Outlook worked ok but running against a GMail account required me to reduce the security to allow Outlook to work with it. Hardly ideal.

I had no issues with Microsoft Powerpoint nor did I have any issues with Microsoft Access.

The other issue I had was the activation wizard kept popping up asking me to activate Office 365 even though I was signed in. The activation wizard didn't want to activate Office and from the message that was displayed it appeared to be complaining that the system wasn't really Windows 7 as Crossover had set up WINE to show it to be.

Ironically the time limit ran out for activating Microsoft Office and now it works perfectly well with Q4OS and Excel now works. It seem the activation wizard was taking up lots of memory.

Within Zorin I tried the same installation via Crossover and everything worked straight away. Excel had no memory issues. The activation wizard did however pop up although not all the time.

The truth therefore is that you can get Microsoft Office 2013 working within Linux and Crossover has proved itself to be a fairly decent tool.

Software Development

As part of my full time role I develop software in .NET and I am a dab hand with Microsoft SQL Server.

These just aren't available within Linux although there has been some movement on this front in recent months.

This isn't going to affect the average computer user which is who this site is dedicated to. If you are interested in software development then Python is well catered for and you can create cross platform applications using Python and QT.

You can also use a tool called Plunker which lets you easily develop applications using AngularJS and React. These are the current future (although the future of software development seems to change on a daily basis).

Personally whilst I am a .NET developer and I am qualified as a SQL Server developer and DBA I started off as a C developer and then moved on to C++ before moving to .NET and beyond. Switching to Java and Python shouldn't really be a big deal and one I intend to embark on in 2017. I am also competent with Oracle and PL/SQL as well as MySQL so is a 100% move to Linux possible? 2017 could be that year.

Summary

The whole point of the past month has been to prove that Q4OS can be used as an operating system for the Everyday Linux User. 

I believe that it is a perfectly decent distribution and I have no qualms in recommending it to you as a complete replacement for Windows. 

It is worth noting though that I used Zorin OS during this month as well and now here is the tricky bit. I think Zorin comes out slightly on top. 

There is no doubt that based on performance Q4OS uses less resources and for older computers will probably be better than Zorin. Q4OS is also probably better for people who are used to older versions of Windows such as XP because everything is even named the same. The XPQ4 theme will even make everything feel the same.

Zorin however is more intuitive. Downloads go to the downloads folder and it handles the insertion of USB drives a little bit more effectively. Q4OS isn't particularly clever when you remove and insert a drive. 

Q4OS sometimes leaves the previously mounted folders populated which means if you format a drive and copy new files to it the folder shown in Q4OS contains what used to be on the drive and not the new content. Zorin updates itself correctly every time.

It might be worth trying out both and making your own judgement. I am personally happy using either of them.

What Is Next?

In January I will be removing both Q4OS and Zorin from this machine and embarking on something new. 

I have Fedora 25 and Enlightenment available to me and I intend to review the latest openSUSE.

I will also review more Linux applications.

Thanks for reading the blog this year and I will you all a happy new year.

Posted at 22:20 |  by Gary Newell

Friday, 16 December 2016

Introduction


As the regular readers of this blog will be aware I have embarked on a mission to try out Q4OS as my sole operating system for a month to see how well it stands the test of time.



I wrote my initial review of Q4OS on the 25th November and at the time the experience was so positive I wanted to give it a longer run to see if I could find any major hangups compared to more popular and well known distributions such as Ubuntu, Mint and Zorin.

Thus far I have managed to install Q4OS, set up the hardware (see part 2) and theme Q4OS to make it look retro. (see part 3).

Obviously as time goes on you start using the operating system for day to day tasks and it is only when performing these tasks that you will find real issues.

This week I have been focusing on one of two things that has stopped me from completely ditching Windows from all of my computers.

Office Software

As a freelance software developer I often have to send my CV to employment agencies.

I am more than happy most of the time using LibreOffice. It works for writing letters, articles and I used it to write my eBook a few years ago.

I also use LibreOffice Calc for performing financial tasks such as accounts and forecasting.

LibreOffice Impress has been used to help my kids with their homework especially when they need to create presentations for school projects.

On a day to day level LibreOffice does everything you could ask it to.

So what is the problem? Why not write your CV using LibreOffice and save it as a Word document? The answer is simple, formatting.

A CV is a very important document. You spend ages writing it, formatting it and making sure the layout is perfect for when it lands on the recruiter's desk. I have found that when I create a CV using LibreOffice and save it to Word format that the paging is quite often not synchronised correctly and certain items will have been pushed onto the next page which throws everything out of kilter.

For this reason and one other reason I have always kept a computer with Windows handy whether it is the sole operating system or dual booting with Linux. 99% of the time I live in a Linux only world but the 1% matters.

Microsoft Office And Linux

I subscribe to Office 365. It costs about £8 a month. For this money I can download and install the latest version of Microsoft Office to up to 5 computers and I have done so on a Windows 10 computer.

I wanted to see however whether Microsoft Office would run on Linux and particularly WINE / PlayOnLinux.


I tried various ways to install Office 2013 via PlayOnLinux including using the Online Installer and downloading the full installer.

Unfortunately it appears that WINE is not ready for Office 2013. I received a number of different errors such as error in POL_WINE, Wine seems to have crashed, cannot find WINWORD.EXE etc.

Whilst writing this article I found a thread on Reddit where somebody says they have managed to install Office 2013 within Linux but then there are many mentions of crashes and poor performance.


The truth is that some things just aren't meant to run in Linux. Everything required to get Microsoft Office working natively in Linux at this moment in time is a hack. Some people may get it to install, some people may even get it to run but the truth is you will be constantly suffering from inconsistency.

So is that it? Is the experiment over? No.

Office 365 Online

Microsoft Office 365 is designed so that you can use it on the move which means there are browser versions of most of the office tools including Outlook, Word, Excel and Powerpoint.

If you read my review of Q4OS you would know that it comes with the Chrome browser and Office 365 works well within the Chrome browser.


I am not going to lie to you. The online versions of Word and Excel do not have all the features you will get in the fully installed versions.

Wait a minute though, the reason I need Word is to make sure my CV looks good when I send it out. Therefore it doesn't need to be fully featured. I just need it for formatting.


The version of Excel is fine for viewing spreadsheets and performing many of the more common tasks. Formulas work and you can connect to external data sources. 

The main feature that is missing for me is VBA and the ability to create and run macros. 


The online version of Outlook is fine for sending and receiving emails and you can create appointments and meetings.


To be honest I don't really use a Microsoft account for sending emails. I am perfectly happy with Google.

Summary

The point of this series is to work out whether I can truly ditch Windows and use Q4OS as my sole operating system.

All of the office features I need are available in LibreOffice so for the most part I don't need Microsoft Office at all.

The only thing I need Microsoft Office, or should I say Microsoft Word for is to make sure the formatting of my CV is correct and I can use the online version of Microsoft Word for that.

The mission of living life without Windows is still very much on the go. Q4OS is extremely stable. As well as working out the Office stuff I have also used it to watch Breaking Bad on Netflix and for researching and writing the articles at Lifewire.com.

There is only one more snag. I am a software developer and I develop Windows software. I will show you how I am overcoming that snag next week.

Q4OS - Part 4 - Life Without Windows

Introduction


As the regular readers of this blog will be aware I have embarked on a mission to try out Q4OS as my sole operating system for a month to see how well it stands the test of time.



I wrote my initial review of Q4OS on the 25th November and at the time the experience was so positive I wanted to give it a longer run to see if I could find any major hangups compared to more popular and well known distributions such as Ubuntu, Mint and Zorin.

Thus far I have managed to install Q4OS, set up the hardware (see part 2) and theme Q4OS to make it look retro. (see part 3).

Obviously as time goes on you start using the operating system for day to day tasks and it is only when performing these tasks that you will find real issues.

This week I have been focusing on one of two things that has stopped me from completely ditching Windows from all of my computers.

Office Software

As a freelance software developer I often have to send my CV to employment agencies.

I am more than happy most of the time using LibreOffice. It works for writing letters, articles and I used it to write my eBook a few years ago.

I also use LibreOffice Calc for performing financial tasks such as accounts and forecasting.

LibreOffice Impress has been used to help my kids with their homework especially when they need to create presentations for school projects.

On a day to day level LibreOffice does everything you could ask it to.

So what is the problem? Why not write your CV using LibreOffice and save it as a Word document? The answer is simple, formatting.

A CV is a very important document. You spend ages writing it, formatting it and making sure the layout is perfect for when it lands on the recruiter's desk. I have found that when I create a CV using LibreOffice and save it to Word format that the paging is quite often not synchronised correctly and certain items will have been pushed onto the next page which throws everything out of kilter.

For this reason and one other reason I have always kept a computer with Windows handy whether it is the sole operating system or dual booting with Linux. 99% of the time I live in a Linux only world but the 1% matters.

Microsoft Office And Linux

I subscribe to Office 365. It costs about £8 a month. For this money I can download and install the latest version of Microsoft Office to up to 5 computers and I have done so on a Windows 10 computer.

I wanted to see however whether Microsoft Office would run on Linux and particularly WINE / PlayOnLinux.


I tried various ways to install Office 2013 via PlayOnLinux including using the Online Installer and downloading the full installer.

Unfortunately it appears that WINE is not ready for Office 2013. I received a number of different errors such as error in POL_WINE, Wine seems to have crashed, cannot find WINWORD.EXE etc.

Whilst writing this article I found a thread on Reddit where somebody says they have managed to install Office 2013 within Linux but then there are many mentions of crashes and poor performance.


The truth is that some things just aren't meant to run in Linux. Everything required to get Microsoft Office working natively in Linux at this moment in time is a hack. Some people may get it to install, some people may even get it to run but the truth is you will be constantly suffering from inconsistency.

So is that it? Is the experiment over? No.

Office 365 Online

Microsoft Office 365 is designed so that you can use it on the move which means there are browser versions of most of the office tools including Outlook, Word, Excel and Powerpoint.

If you read my review of Q4OS you would know that it comes with the Chrome browser and Office 365 works well within the Chrome browser.


I am not going to lie to you. The online versions of Word and Excel do not have all the features you will get in the fully installed versions.

Wait a minute though, the reason I need Word is to make sure my CV looks good when I send it out. Therefore it doesn't need to be fully featured. I just need it for formatting.


The version of Excel is fine for viewing spreadsheets and performing many of the more common tasks. Formulas work and you can connect to external data sources. 

The main feature that is missing for me is VBA and the ability to create and run macros. 


The online version of Outlook is fine for sending and receiving emails and you can create appointments and meetings.


To be honest I don't really use a Microsoft account for sending emails. I am perfectly happy with Google.

Summary

The point of this series is to work out whether I can truly ditch Windows and use Q4OS as my sole operating system.

All of the office features I need are available in LibreOffice so for the most part I don't need Microsoft Office at all.

The only thing I need Microsoft Office, or should I say Microsoft Word for is to make sure the formatting of my CV is correct and I can use the online version of Microsoft Word for that.

The mission of living life without Windows is still very much on the go. Q4OS is extremely stable. As well as working out the Office stuff I have also used it to watch Breaking Bad on Netflix and for researching and writing the articles at Lifewire.com.

There is only one more snag. I am a software developer and I develop Windows software. I will show you how I am overcoming that snag next week.

Posted at 10:49 |  by Gary Newell

Wednesday, 30 November 2016

Introduction

When I wrote a review about Q4OS last year I was emailed about a package called XPQ4 which makes it possible to make Q4OS look like other versions of Windows such as Windows XP.

I therefore set about reviewing XPQ4 and the results were very good indeed.

Shortly after I had posted my review of the latest version of Q4OS I received another email asking me to take another look of XPQ4 because there had been a number of updates.

If you wish to use a Linux operating system but you want it to look like Windows then XPQ4 is definitely what you are looking for.

How To Get XPQ4

You can get XPQ4 from http://xpq4.sourceforge.net/


















There are 2 versions of XPQ4 available:
  • Full
  • Free
The full version uses proprietary images and icons etc whereas the free version does not. Neither will cost you any money.

The webpage has installation instructions but basically all you have to do is this:

  • Click on the download link for the version you wish to install
  • Double click on the downloaded file

  • When the welcome screen appears click "Next"

  • When the license agreement appears make sure the "I Agree" checkbox is ticked and click "Install".

The User Interface























An icon for XPQ4 will appear on the desktop and when clicked the above screen will be displayed.

You can choose between 6 themes:

  • Windows 2000
  • Windows XP classic
  • Windows XP luna
  • Windows 7
  • Windows 8
  • Windows 10

The Themes

The screenshots basically speak for themselves:
Windows 2000 Theme - XPQ4
Windows 7 Theme - XPQ4
Windows 8 Theme - XPQ4
Windows 10 Theme - XPQ4
Windows XP Luna Theme - XPQ4e

The Windows XP Luna theme is astounding. I reckon this could fool many people into thinking they are using Windows XP.

Some Linux purists would ask what the point is but I've never claimed to be a purist and I think the work performed by the XPQ4 team is brilliant.

The Windows XP, 2000 and Windows 7 themes are very close to the real thing. 

Windows 8 doesn't really look like Windows 8 although an attempt has been made to make it authentic by pulling the menu in from the right and having a search bar in the top right corner. To be honest though how many people really want to use a system like Windows 8. It was horrific.

The Windows 10 theme looks good and although the menu doesn't really look like a Windows 10 menu the theme does make Q4OS look modern.

For pure style the XP Luna theme is my favourite. 

Summary

Many Linux distributions over the years have tried to look like Windows including Lindows, to a certain extent Linux Mint and of course Zorin OS.

Q4OS with the XPQ4 theme is definitely the one that has achieved the best results.

Zorin OS looks to be moving in a slightly different direction now and I have just installed version 12 as a dual boot to Q4OS so a review will be coming shortly.

I could have made my experience with XPQ4 better by installing the ttf-mscorefonts-installer package from Synaptic.





















Make Q4OS Look Like Windows With XPQ4

Introduction

When I wrote a review about Q4OS last year I was emailed about a package called XPQ4 which makes it possible to make Q4OS look like other versions of Windows such as Windows XP.

I therefore set about reviewing XPQ4 and the results were very good indeed.

Shortly after I had posted my review of the latest version of Q4OS I received another email asking me to take another look of XPQ4 because there had been a number of updates.

If you wish to use a Linux operating system but you want it to look like Windows then XPQ4 is definitely what you are looking for.

How To Get XPQ4

You can get XPQ4 from http://xpq4.sourceforge.net/


















There are 2 versions of XPQ4 available:
  • Full
  • Free
The full version uses proprietary images and icons etc whereas the free version does not. Neither will cost you any money.

The webpage has installation instructions but basically all you have to do is this:

  • Click on the download link for the version you wish to install
  • Double click on the downloaded file

  • When the welcome screen appears click "Next"

  • When the license agreement appears make sure the "I Agree" checkbox is ticked and click "Install".

The User Interface























An icon for XPQ4 will appear on the desktop and when clicked the above screen will be displayed.

You can choose between 6 themes:

  • Windows 2000
  • Windows XP classic
  • Windows XP luna
  • Windows 7
  • Windows 8
  • Windows 10

The Themes

The screenshots basically speak for themselves:
Windows 2000 Theme - XPQ4
Windows 7 Theme - XPQ4
Windows 8 Theme - XPQ4
Windows 10 Theme - XPQ4
Windows XP Luna Theme - XPQ4e

The Windows XP Luna theme is astounding. I reckon this could fool many people into thinking they are using Windows XP.

Some Linux purists would ask what the point is but I've never claimed to be a purist and I think the work performed by the XPQ4 team is brilliant.

The Windows XP, 2000 and Windows 7 themes are very close to the real thing. 

Windows 8 doesn't really look like Windows 8 although an attempt has been made to make it authentic by pulling the menu in from the right and having a search bar in the top right corner. To be honest though how many people really want to use a system like Windows 8. It was horrific.

The Windows 10 theme looks good and although the menu doesn't really look like a Windows 10 menu the theme does make Q4OS look modern.

For pure style the XP Luna theme is my favourite. 

Summary

Many Linux distributions over the years have tried to look like Windows including Lindows, to a certain extent Linux Mint and of course Zorin OS.

Q4OS with the XPQ4 theme is definitely the one that has achieved the best results.

Zorin OS looks to be moving in a slightly different direction now and I have just installed version 12 as a dual boot to Q4OS so a review will be coming shortly.

I could have made my experience with XPQ4 better by installing the ttf-mscorefonts-installer package from Synaptic.





















Posted at 20:29 |  by Gary Newell

Introduction

In my review of Q4OS 1.8.1 I mentioned that I would be using the system over the course of the month to see how well it works over a period of time.

I am happy to say that I am well in to week 2 and I am yet to have any major challenges.

This update is looking at the hardware support within Q4OS and it also looks at Steam.

Printing

Over the weekend I decided to connect this laptop which is running Q4OS to my Epson Workforce inkjet printer.


















You can get to the main printer set up page in various ways. 

One way is to bring up the menu and navigate to the "Control Panel". From the "Control Panel" you will see an option called "Peripherals" and then you will see an option called "TDE Print".

You will at this stage see the screen shown in the image above.

Another way to get to this screen is to type "print" into the search bar within the menu and click on the "Print System" icon when it appears.

To add a new printer click on "Add Printer".


















As you can see the "Discovered Network Printers" section highlights 2 printers both of which are the same name as my printer. 

I left the default printer checked and clicked "Continue".


















The third screen lets you choose whether to share the printer and you can enter a location and give the printer a name and description.


















The penultimate step is to choose the model of the printer.


















Finally you have to set the media type, grayscale and media size.

Your printer is now set up.

I followed this process and printed a few test pages and it works well.

You can use the TDE Print tool to manage printers and see the queue. You can also find a printer job viewer by typing "print" into the search bar within the menu and choosing "Print Job (kJobViewer)".

USB, Hard Drives And NAS Drives

I tested Q4OS with my WD MyCloud device and I was able to see the device and access the files on the drive.

I can also access files and folders on USB drives and portable hard drives.

My phone was also found straight away and I could access the files using a file manager and Shotwell photo manager.


Steam

I used Synaptic to install Steam:


After the installation I was able to run Steam and the usual update started to download.


There were no errors and I was able to login to Steam.


NVidia Drivers

A comment was left within my previous review regarding the availability of NVidia drivers.

You can use the Q4OS software centre to install many popular applications and the NVidia drivers are listed as one of the items you may wish to download and install.


Summary

So now I have all the software I need installed, all hardware setup and running and I am using Q4OS on a daily basis.

As an operating system I am finding the performance is extremely good and everything is extremely stable.

An Everyday Linux User Review Of Q4OS - Part 2

Introduction

In my review of Q4OS 1.8.1 I mentioned that I would be using the system over the course of the month to see how well it works over a period of time.

I am happy to say that I am well in to week 2 and I am yet to have any major challenges.

This update is looking at the hardware support within Q4OS and it also looks at Steam.

Printing

Over the weekend I decided to connect this laptop which is running Q4OS to my Epson Workforce inkjet printer.


















You can get to the main printer set up page in various ways. 

One way is to bring up the menu and navigate to the "Control Panel". From the "Control Panel" you will see an option called "Peripherals" and then you will see an option called "TDE Print".

You will at this stage see the screen shown in the image above.

Another way to get to this screen is to type "print" into the search bar within the menu and click on the "Print System" icon when it appears.

To add a new printer click on "Add Printer".


















As you can see the "Discovered Network Printers" section highlights 2 printers both of which are the same name as my printer. 

I left the default printer checked and clicked "Continue".


















The third screen lets you choose whether to share the printer and you can enter a location and give the printer a name and description.


















The penultimate step is to choose the model of the printer.


















Finally you have to set the media type, grayscale and media size.

Your printer is now set up.

I followed this process and printed a few test pages and it works well.

You can use the TDE Print tool to manage printers and see the queue. You can also find a printer job viewer by typing "print" into the search bar within the menu and choosing "Print Job (kJobViewer)".

USB, Hard Drives And NAS Drives

I tested Q4OS with my WD MyCloud device and I was able to see the device and access the files on the drive.

I can also access files and folders on USB drives and portable hard drives.

My phone was also found straight away and I could access the files using a file manager and Shotwell photo manager.


Steam

I used Synaptic to install Steam:


After the installation I was able to run Steam and the usual update started to download.


There were no errors and I was able to login to Steam.


NVidia Drivers

A comment was left within my previous review regarding the availability of NVidia drivers.

You can use the Q4OS software centre to install many popular applications and the NVidia drivers are listed as one of the items you may wish to download and install.


Summary

So now I have all the software I need installed, all hardware setup and running and I am using Q4OS on a daily basis.

As an operating system I am finding the performance is extremely good and everything is extremely stable.

Posted at 19:48 |  by Gary Newell

Friday, 25 November 2016

Introduction

I reviewed Q4OS for the first time last September and the review was largely positive.

In that review I had mixed feelings however because it looked like Windows from circa 2000 but was incredibly responsive and worked really well.

Well a year has gone past and it is time to take another look. This time I have tried it on a slightly more powerful computer and for the next month I am going to use it as my only operating system to see if it really will work as not only a Windows replacement but also a Ubuntu or Mint replacement as well.

How To Get Q4OS

Visit the Q4OS webpage to find more information about it before committing to installing it on your system.




When you are happy that this is the type of operating system you are interested in click on the download page.


















There are a number of options available including an installation image, live image and even a Raspberry PI image.

For each option you can choose between 32-bit and 64-bit.

The first thing you will notice is the size of the ISO images involved. The largest image is just over half a gigabyte.

How To Create A Q4OS USB

To create a bootable Q4OS drive I found the best tool to use was Rufus which can be downloaded from https://rufus.akeo.ie/.


Start by inserting a USB drive. Make sure it has nothing on there that you want to keep because it will be formatted.

Make sure the device dropdown points to the drive letter of your USB drive.

For the partition scheme you will want to choose MBR for a computer that runs a standard BIOS or GPT for a computer with UEFI.

Give the volume a name and make sure quick format is checked, create a bootable drive using ISO image is checked and create extended label and icon files is checked.

Next to the ISO image dropdown there is a folder icon which when clicked lets you choose the Q4OS ISO image.

When you have chosen the correct ISO image click on "Start".

The USB drive will now be created and you should be able to boot into Q4OS.


How To Install Q4OS


















The live version of Q4OS works pretty well. The keyboard is set to US English but this can be fixed although it is better to wait until the full installation.

You can connect to the internet by clicking on the network icon in the bottom right corner and from there you can use the live image to really test it out.

The changes however are not persisted so if you reboot you will lose any changes made.

On the desktop you will see an icon called "Install Q4OS".


The first screen lets you choose the installation language.


You then choose your location on the map to set your time.


The next step is to choose your keyboard layout.























You now need to create a user. Enter your full name and a username and then enter a password (and repeat it).

You can choose whether the computer logs in automatically (not recommended) and you can set the hostname which is how your computer will appear on a network.

If you so choose you can also add an image for the account.























Now comes the tricky bit. Partitioning the drive. 

If you are simply replacing Windows or any other operating system then all you need to do is click the "Create Partitions" button. 

Note: The "Create Partitions" button is unforgiving. If you click it and answer yes to the warning you will lose anything that is currently on the drive.

If you want to dual boot with Windows (or another operating system) click on the free space (You can get free space from Windows by shrinking the drive). Then choose edit partitions. You can create partitions from the free space. You definitely need a root partition (/) and you can optionally create home and swap partitions from that free space.


I chose to replace Windows with Q4OS and so clicked the create partitions button and accepted the warning.
























Almost there now. Check the "install grub" option and choose where to install it to.























Finally click "apply" and Q4OS will start to install to your computer. When it has finished reboot the machine and remove the USB drive.

It is much easier to install Q4OS to replace Windows than dual boot. Note that Q4OS has a similar look and feel to Windows and therefore dual booting doesn't particularly seem a sensible option in this case.

First Impressions


















The initial desktop is fairly plain looking and it has to be said old school.

The welcome screen is an important resource and you should work your way through the buttons on the welcome screen before closing it.

The desktop is very much like Windows with desktop icons, a panel, menu, quick launch icons and a system tray.

Connecting To The Internet


















The network tool for connecting to the internet isn't the best I've seen. It is ok but not particularly intuitive.

Click on the network icon in the system tray and choose "connect to a new network".


A list of networks will appear. Double click on a network or choose "Connect and save".


You can now enter the security key and connect and save.

I found this a bit hit and miss. Even though I chose connect and save quite often it just saves. You then have to click the network icon again and choose the network from the saved connections at the top of the little window.

Once you have connected once I recommend installing network manager which works much better. I will show how to do this later on.

Desktop Profiler
















The welcome screen has a number of options on it and one is the "Desktop Profiler".

The Q4OS ISO image was fairly small which means you obviously don't get much in the way of software when you first install it.

The desktop profiler lets you choose to install a fully featured desktop which includes Chrome, LibreOffice and VLC or a basic desktop which has some common utilities and tools.

I chose the full desktop and it began downloading about half a gigabyte worth of data and installed Chrome, LibreOffice and a few more tools. I recommend this option for the average person as it saves looking for it later on.

Depending on your internet connection this can take some time. 

Proprietary Codecs


Also on the welcome screen is the option for installing "Multimedia Codecs". The average person will want to install these as they make it possible to play MP3 audio for instance.

When you click on the button a wizard appears. Click "Next" to get past the welcome message.


Click "Install" to install the codecs. It can take a short while for this to complete.

The Menu System


From the welcome screen you can also choose to change the style of the menu.

As you can see from the screen above there are three options available:

  • KickOff
  • Bourbon
  • Classic
The KickOff menu looks like this:


















The Bourbon menu looks like this:


















Finally the classic menu looks like this:


















Installing Applications

Another option on the welcome screen is the option for installing applications.


























The interface lets you install common and useful applications. 

If you haven't chosen the fully featured option from the desktop profiler you can still install applications such as Chrome and LibreOffice quite easily by clicking on them in the list.

The list includes a number of decent options including Chrome and Firefox, Synaptic, Network Manager, Thunderbird, Dropbox and Skype.

You will notice on the top of the screen there are three buttons:
  • Install application
  • Package manager
  • Desktop profiler
The desktop profiler as mentioned earlier lets you install a complete or basic set of packages and the install application button installs the highlighted application on the screen.

The package manager icon tries to open Synaptic. You therefore need to install Synaptic before you can use this option.

Once you have gone for the fully featured desktop and through the list of commonly used applications I could only find two applications that were missing.

For some reason there is no audio player included and of course Steam doesn't show up.


















After you have installed Synaptic you can easily find an audio player. I personally recommend Clementine which has a really nice interface for playing music.




Steam is also available via Synaptic although I haven't tried to install it yet. As Q4OS is going to be around on my machine for a while I have left Steam and the setting up of the NAS drive and printer until the weekend.

Desktop Look Changer 





One of the applications you can install from the installation screen is the Q4OS look switcher.

There are three options available by default:
  • Q4OS Classic
  • Q4OS Default
  • Spring
The classic option makes your computer run like an old Windows 2000 machine. The default is much like Windows XP and the Spring desktop is the one most people will go for as it provides modern menus and a more up to date look and feel.



The good news is that the performance remains the same whichever you choose. 

Customise The Desktop


















Getting rid of the dull blue background will be of keen interest to most people and you can change the wallpaper simply by right clicking on the desktop and choosing "Configure Desktop".

There are a number of different wallpapers available and you can instantly make your desktop look more interesting.

From the welcome wizard you can also choose to turn on desktop effects and the panel can be adjusted to appear at the top of the screen or on one of the edges. The size of the panel and icons can also be adjusted.

The quick launch bar can be customised to include your favourite applications. 


















To add an application right click and choose "add application". You can then navigate to the location of the application you wish to add to the launcher.
























You can also configure the launcher to allow drag and drop which makes it much easier to add icons to it and you can choose to show the "Show Desktop" icon.

Summary

Q4OS is fairly straight forward to get to grips with and it runs like a dream. 

When I tried it last year it was on a much older machine and really worked well. On this machine it performs magnificently.

The Windows look and feel might not be to everybody's taste especially the use of "My Documents" and "My Pictures" etc but you can easily rename them.

The desktop environment is Trinity and it lacks certain features such as window snapping. 

I haven't tried Q4OS out with my NAS drive or printer and other hardware yet but I did last time around and it had no issues so I suspect it will be the same this time. I will update you in the next blog post about this. I will also update you as to whether Steam works or not. 

As with last time around I can't really fault Q4OS on anything. Well I suppoes there are a couple of things that could be improved such as dual booting and the network manager should be installed by default as the one that comes with Q4OS is a bit inconsistent.

After just a couple of hours effort I had Q4OS installed with every application I need including PyCharm. I am now able to listen to music, watch films, surf the web, write software, edit documents, read and send mail, use DropBox, use Skype and play games. 

Q4OS also comes with WINE which is useful for running Windows software. 

An Everyday Linux User Review Of Q4OS 1.8

Introduction

I reviewed Q4OS for the first time last September and the review was largely positive.

In that review I had mixed feelings however because it looked like Windows from circa 2000 but was incredibly responsive and worked really well.

Well a year has gone past and it is time to take another look. This time I have tried it on a slightly more powerful computer and for the next month I am going to use it as my only operating system to see if it really will work as not only a Windows replacement but also a Ubuntu or Mint replacement as well.

How To Get Q4OS

Visit the Q4OS webpage to find more information about it before committing to installing it on your system.




When you are happy that this is the type of operating system you are interested in click on the download page.


















There are a number of options available including an installation image, live image and even a Raspberry PI image.

For each option you can choose between 32-bit and 64-bit.

The first thing you will notice is the size of the ISO images involved. The largest image is just over half a gigabyte.

How To Create A Q4OS USB

To create a bootable Q4OS drive I found the best tool to use was Rufus which can be downloaded from https://rufus.akeo.ie/.


Start by inserting a USB drive. Make sure it has nothing on there that you want to keep because it will be formatted.

Make sure the device dropdown points to the drive letter of your USB drive.

For the partition scheme you will want to choose MBR for a computer that runs a standard BIOS or GPT for a computer with UEFI.

Give the volume a name and make sure quick format is checked, create a bootable drive using ISO image is checked and create extended label and icon files is checked.

Next to the ISO image dropdown there is a folder icon which when clicked lets you choose the Q4OS ISO image.

When you have chosen the correct ISO image click on "Start".

The USB drive will now be created and you should be able to boot into Q4OS.


How To Install Q4OS


















The live version of Q4OS works pretty well. The keyboard is set to US English but this can be fixed although it is better to wait until the full installation.

You can connect to the internet by clicking on the network icon in the bottom right corner and from there you can use the live image to really test it out.

The changes however are not persisted so if you reboot you will lose any changes made.

On the desktop you will see an icon called "Install Q4OS".


The first screen lets you choose the installation language.


You then choose your location on the map to set your time.


The next step is to choose your keyboard layout.























You now need to create a user. Enter your full name and a username and then enter a password (and repeat it).

You can choose whether the computer logs in automatically (not recommended) and you can set the hostname which is how your computer will appear on a network.

If you so choose you can also add an image for the account.























Now comes the tricky bit. Partitioning the drive. 

If you are simply replacing Windows or any other operating system then all you need to do is click the "Create Partitions" button. 

Note: The "Create Partitions" button is unforgiving. If you click it and answer yes to the warning you will lose anything that is currently on the drive.

If you want to dual boot with Windows (or another operating system) click on the free space (You can get free space from Windows by shrinking the drive). Then choose edit partitions. You can create partitions from the free space. You definitely need a root partition (/) and you can optionally create home and swap partitions from that free space.


I chose to replace Windows with Q4OS and so clicked the create partitions button and accepted the warning.
























Almost there now. Check the "install grub" option and choose where to install it to.























Finally click "apply" and Q4OS will start to install to your computer. When it has finished reboot the machine and remove the USB drive.

It is much easier to install Q4OS to replace Windows than dual boot. Note that Q4OS has a similar look and feel to Windows and therefore dual booting doesn't particularly seem a sensible option in this case.

First Impressions


















The initial desktop is fairly plain looking and it has to be said old school.

The welcome screen is an important resource and you should work your way through the buttons on the welcome screen before closing it.

The desktop is very much like Windows with desktop icons, a panel, menu, quick launch icons and a system tray.

Connecting To The Internet


















The network tool for connecting to the internet isn't the best I've seen. It is ok but not particularly intuitive.

Click on the network icon in the system tray and choose "connect to a new network".


A list of networks will appear. Double click on a network or choose "Connect and save".


You can now enter the security key and connect and save.

I found this a bit hit and miss. Even though I chose connect and save quite often it just saves. You then have to click the network icon again and choose the network from the saved connections at the top of the little window.

Once you have connected once I recommend installing network manager which works much better. I will show how to do this later on.

Desktop Profiler
















The welcome screen has a number of options on it and one is the "Desktop Profiler".

The Q4OS ISO image was fairly small which means you obviously don't get much in the way of software when you first install it.

The desktop profiler lets you choose to install a fully featured desktop which includes Chrome, LibreOffice and VLC or a basic desktop which has some common utilities and tools.

I chose the full desktop and it began downloading about half a gigabyte worth of data and installed Chrome, LibreOffice and a few more tools. I recommend this option for the average person as it saves looking for it later on.

Depending on your internet connection this can take some time. 

Proprietary Codecs


Also on the welcome screen is the option for installing "Multimedia Codecs". The average person will want to install these as they make it possible to play MP3 audio for instance.

When you click on the button a wizard appears. Click "Next" to get past the welcome message.


Click "Install" to install the codecs. It can take a short while for this to complete.

The Menu System


From the welcome screen you can also choose to change the style of the menu.

As you can see from the screen above there are three options available:

  • KickOff
  • Bourbon
  • Classic
The KickOff menu looks like this:


















The Bourbon menu looks like this:


















Finally the classic menu looks like this:


















Installing Applications

Another option on the welcome screen is the option for installing applications.


























The interface lets you install common and useful applications. 

If you haven't chosen the fully featured option from the desktop profiler you can still install applications such as Chrome and LibreOffice quite easily by clicking on them in the list.

The list includes a number of decent options including Chrome and Firefox, Synaptic, Network Manager, Thunderbird, Dropbox and Skype.

You will notice on the top of the screen there are three buttons:
  • Install application
  • Package manager
  • Desktop profiler
The desktop profiler as mentioned earlier lets you install a complete or basic set of packages and the install application button installs the highlighted application on the screen.

The package manager icon tries to open Synaptic. You therefore need to install Synaptic before you can use this option.

Once you have gone for the fully featured desktop and through the list of commonly used applications I could only find two applications that were missing.

For some reason there is no audio player included and of course Steam doesn't show up.


















After you have installed Synaptic you can easily find an audio player. I personally recommend Clementine which has a really nice interface for playing music.




Steam is also available via Synaptic although I haven't tried to install it yet. As Q4OS is going to be around on my machine for a while I have left Steam and the setting up of the NAS drive and printer until the weekend.

Desktop Look Changer 





One of the applications you can install from the installation screen is the Q4OS look switcher.

There are three options available by default:
  • Q4OS Classic
  • Q4OS Default
  • Spring
The classic option makes your computer run like an old Windows 2000 machine. The default is much like Windows XP and the Spring desktop is the one most people will go for as it provides modern menus and a more up to date look and feel.



The good news is that the performance remains the same whichever you choose. 

Customise The Desktop


















Getting rid of the dull blue background will be of keen interest to most people and you can change the wallpaper simply by right clicking on the desktop and choosing "Configure Desktop".

There are a number of different wallpapers available and you can instantly make your desktop look more interesting.

From the welcome wizard you can also choose to turn on desktop effects and the panel can be adjusted to appear at the top of the screen or on one of the edges. The size of the panel and icons can also be adjusted.

The quick launch bar can be customised to include your favourite applications. 


















To add an application right click and choose "add application". You can then navigate to the location of the application you wish to add to the launcher.
























You can also configure the launcher to allow drag and drop which makes it much easier to add icons to it and you can choose to show the "Show Desktop" icon.

Summary

Q4OS is fairly straight forward to get to grips with and it runs like a dream. 

When I tried it last year it was on a much older machine and really worked well. On this machine it performs magnificently.

The Windows look and feel might not be to everybody's taste especially the use of "My Documents" and "My Pictures" etc but you can easily rename them.

The desktop environment is Trinity and it lacks certain features such as window snapping. 

I haven't tried Q4OS out with my NAS drive or printer and other hardware yet but I did last time around and it had no issues so I suspect it will be the same this time. I will update you in the next blog post about this. I will also update you as to whether Steam works or not. 

As with last time around I can't really fault Q4OS on anything. Well I suppoes there are a couple of things that could be improved such as dual booting and the network manager should be installed by default as the one that comes with Q4OS is a bit inconsistent.

After just a couple of hours effort I had Q4OS installed with every application I need including PyCharm. I am now able to listen to music, watch films, surf the web, write software, edit documents, read and send mail, use DropBox, use Skype and play games. 

Q4OS also comes with WINE which is useful for running Windows software. 

Posted at 18:41 |  by Gary Newell


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