Cool - so on the back-end then, which your going to have to be pretty good at to make up for the design side, what do you do?
.net/ruby/php/mod_perl? Know about developing against different CMS's? Do you have experience with setting up Apache/IIS etc? It pays better when you specialise - so how...
You could try and write some more ambitious websites - maybe some webapps? To be honest even my misses can make a pretty website these days - so make sure you are telling employers why they NEED YOU SPECIFICALLY.
In my experience the people who are the best at something are rarely unemployed...
If I were you I would bin your install and either do the whole thing with yum - or none of it and compile it all. Also you should look into some nagios admin guis (like centreon) - great time savers.
It seems quite nice, its clean and simple (but quite heavy!) - and it integrates nicely with MS Visual Web-Developer Express - which is probably all most people need.
I can see its advantages if your just starting out in web-design, but don't be under the illusion that you "need" it. Yeah...
I have to agree with the comments about uni only covering the essentials - far to many graduates rock up at our place and get the shock of their lives.
As above - dump your win7 font folder onto your Linux box and away you go.
Also - get into >display settings>fonts and try enabling sub-pixel/smoothing hinting (depending on your display setup).
Also you got your monitor running at its native res?
If I were you I'd go for it. But always try and remember how you can add value and make your services more appealing to others (don't just make something because its "cool").
Get yourself onto salesforce.com and build some example apps, build a rich Adobe Air/Silverlight/flash client for your...
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