Hi everyone. After much delay, I finally installed Linux on my Win98 box. Since then, I've login'ed, ls'ed, and su'ed more times than I care to think about. I've started to install software, but I have a few questions about where things need to go... First question: When I install software in Win98, the GUI is stupid. So, to help it out, it updates the registry--such that if I later delete files without using the add/remove programs thing in "Settings", my computer might throw a fit. Is there any similar registry for Linux? Am I okay to simply rm -rf (or whatever recursive delete with subfolders is) the folder I mistakenly installed to if I want to reinstall? Second question: Back in the old MS-DOS days, anytime you put some utility on your computer, you had to alter your PATH= line in autoexec.bat to get the computer to look in alternate directories for files. Linux has something similar. However, I'm wondering if there is a slick way of organizing structure in Linux. Something like a soft reference in /bin to some directory wherein you put all other soft references (maybe /opt/paths) such that anything you put in there will be checked when a program is requested to run. On that note, is there a common place to install applicatons so all users can use them? I hestitate to install stuff in /home/bhumburg because it seems to me that only I will be able to use applications. Basically, could someone step me through how I should organize my file hierarchy. Finally, I'm trying to setup a Java development environment. I've d/l'ed the files from blackdown.org, but they are vague in how to setup the soft references such that "java" is available anywhere. Do I reference /jdk/bin or what? I think that's enough to start with. Anyone have any suggestions for online auctions where I could get a good non-Winmodem modem that's decently fast but also cheap? Thanks! BCH