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Our group, through a few error corrections, finally got the PC to start up properly, but we had an issue! What good is a computer without a way to use it? We needed an operating system, and we needed it bad. In midst of our mind twirling dilema, a ray of light began to shine. It was the instructor…
“We have a hoard of operating systems on our network, class!”, he said (possibly without the exclaimation. I really don't remember.) with a gleem in his eye.
Ubuntu? WTF is that?!
The class… didn't… exclaim aloud, but may have mentally. We learned that we were able to install our operating system directly off from the network, which made the necessesity of having a physical disc moot. All we needed to do to enable the option for us to boot off from this networked device was enable PXE booting in our BIOS. We, then, were granted the option to choose one of the vast number of operating systems. We had options of all sorts of different formats of the Ubuntu OS, but we went with what was probably the most common (default) of Ubuntu's desktop environment. After getting it fully set up with username / password we arrived at the “desktop” which is eerily reminiscent of an M.A.C. computational atmosphere. :)