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Re: gEDA-user: which linux?



I tried slackware on the for mentioned laptop. But at the time it lacked the device drivers needed (new intel chipset). That is why it ended up as a fedora machine for about 3 years until its hard drive died. It was infact the family internet computer for most of that time. I refused to support any windows machine on the internet as the last one became so loaded with viruses, spyware, popups and such. The kids begged for internet access, so I let them use the linux based laptop. Now if that isn't a test of stability and security then I don't know what is. ;)

Steve Meier




Samuel A. Falvo II wrote:

On 11/5/05, Syed Faisal Akber <faisal@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:


You just asked a very sensitive question.  Asking which distribution to
use is like asking one's religion.  There are no good or bad answers (most
of the time).  Some distributions have merits over others and vice-versa.

I prefer Slackware.



Agreed. I'm VERY happy with Slackware, at least as of 10.0. I do need to try upgrading though -- I've been meaning to do so for quite some time.

However, I'm actually interested in Linux From Scratch, because I'd
really like to learn the ins and outs of Linux distributions a lot
better.  And, besides that, I'd like my environment to be based more
on AppDirs (those familiar with MacOS X or RoxFiler will know exactly
what I'm talking about), for their convenience.  Since this is a
personal workstation environment, and not a server environment, the
issues of proper partition planning such as whether to put something
in /usr versus /usr/share versus /usr/share/lib versus /usr/local/lib
doesn't pertain to my needs.

It would be interesting to see gEDA as a ROX-Filer AppDir "package."



I suggest that you try the various different versions before sticking to a
particular flavour of Linux. If you can get your hands on VMware
Workstation, you can install Linux in a Virtual Machine while running
windows. Try out each distribution until you find the one you like.



If you don't want to use VMware for whatever reason, there are alternatives. qemu is my personal recommendation. It's completely free too, but it does (as far as I know for Linux, and I assume it applies for Windows too) lack a convenient GUI interface.

--
Samuel A. Falvo II