Dear KCLUG, I have just joined your mailing list hoping to get in touch with linux users in the KC area who enjoy educating newcomers to this OS. As a grad. student preparing to teach high school English, I look on my pc- technician background and aspirations to gain greater technical mastery of the technology and uses of the internet as maybe, hopefully, somehow lucrative in light of the low pay I anticipate in my main career. In addition, I love the power of the internet to subvert the corporate dominance of other realms of public discourse, such as newspapers and television, and would like to feel a part of this "information revolution" in a bigger way then by lining the pockets of Amazon.com. Anyways, now to my first Linux misadventure: I have just failed to install linux on my 40 MB Pentium 75, and found the Red Hat 5.2 (apollo) distribution I tried to setup quite baffling--after partitioning a 2.5 gig hard disk in a way that FDISK cannot undo because it can't see or erase the logical drives Linux created, Red Hat crashed amid a series of errors the likes of which this Microsoft enslaved end-user has never seen before. At least I have faith that errors mean something decipherable, unlike the General Invalid Page Exeption Error Fault mumbo jumbo that I frequently encounter, but never try to understand, in Windows. Anyways, I would love to enlist the handholding of any of you users who would be happy to help me get started. I would like to get Linux on my IBM 350, 40 MB, 2.5 gig, Pentium 75, and then go on to bigger, web serving eligible iron pretty soon. I am considering buying a circa 1996, 128 MB, 250 (?) Mhz Alpha workstation with a SCSI bus and 4 GB to continue my Linux (mis)endeavors, but I hate to buy the thing until I feel confident that 1.) I can make it work, 2.) It is as good of a Unix system for the money (a few hundred) as I suspect it is. My ultmate Linux/Unix aspirations are as follows: to be able to implement a least one of the various content-rich, non profit or tastefully profitable, web-based online communities (none of which are computer related) that I have imagined creating in a manner that is affordable and sustainable. OK, now that I have told you about myself, I look forward to hearing about you all. I am curious just what kind of computing Linux folk here do. Good Day! Mike McVey Kansas City