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  • #16
    I think the best advice is too as many flavours as possible. Things to remember are that most instructions presume you have a fair knowledge of Linux and tend to miss steps out.
    RPM's are supposed to make things easier however theres nothing better than trying to find a program that you've just installed because the it's put completly in a different place that the instructions say and hasn't put a shortcut on desktop as the installer said it would do. Near impossible if you don't know what the program is called.
    Chief Lemon Buyer no more Linux sucks but not as much
    Weather nut and sad git.

    My Weather Page

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    • #17
      Originally posted by Gurm
      I think the best version of Linux is the "not installed" version.

      Keeps conflicts down to a minimum, and allows for maximum productivity. No time spent trying to find a freeware app that works like photoshop - just run Photoshop!

      - Gurm


      Grum, have you gotten lost and ended up on the wrong forum? You have, ok just go out the door and down the corrador, and to the right you should find the other forums right in front of you (Like the Soap box, matrox hardware and TCB)
      80% of people think I should be in a Mental Institute

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      • #18
        i find slackware the best distro for me, but no, its not for beginners, this is my opinion of the main distributions:

        debian: very popular, some people like apt-get system , can be very convenient (not me though), but they have a tendancy to split one program into several packages, which is another thing i personally don't like

        mandrake: this is just total overbloat, and slower than most distros, but it is an easy-to-use distro, and looks pretty you may want to try this if you don't want to learn everything

        turbolinux: this is probably the only rpm-based distro i liked, i tried it a year ago and used for a week, fairly easy to use... nice n clean, good stuff..

        redhat: NO! NO! NO! ... they use a development gcc as official compiler (which has problems) in their release, redhat team has a bunch of idiots, this is not an opinion, it is a fact! another thing i dont like is using their standard installation utility does not allow installation w/o a swap partition (no consideration for people with 512mb ram or people wanting to configure swap manually, eg use a swap file)

        suse: only one i haven't tried yet

        slackware: more for advanced users, but nice and small, and if you know your linux stuff, it can even be easier than the others

        my opinion, if you have time try them all (except redhat) like i did, then see what you like, we all have different needs and wants
        <font size="1">Gigabyte GA-6VXC7-4X MoBo
        VIA Apollo Pro 133a (694x/686A) chipset (4x agp, UDMA 66)
        Celeron II 733 CPU (coppermine 128)
        128meg (2x64) 133mhz SDRam
        Matrox Milleniumm G200 AGP 16 mb
        Creative Sound Blaster Live! 5.1 Digital model 0100 (MP3+, Gamer)
        Quantum LM 30 gig HD 7200 RPM UDMA 66
        Realtek 8029A NIC Card
        Optiquest V775 17" Monitor
        Actima 36X CD-Rom
        Advansys 510 SCSI Card (ISA, but good enuf for my burner)
        Yamaha 6416 CD-RW
        Windows 2000 (primary)
        Slackware Linux 9.0(secondary/emergency)</font>

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        • #19
          Actually I've never had a problem with RedHats complier

          using 7.1 - of course most of the utilities have been upgraded
          Dan
          Juu nin to iro


          English doesn't borrow from other languages. It follows them down dark alleys, knocks them over, and goes through their pockets for loose grammar.

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          • #20
            you may not know what's wrong with it, for example, in slackware 7.1 , and probably most other distros at one point in time, used egcs 1.1.2 ... it was a release, but had a floating point bug, programs compiled, but may not run as desired, eg, if you encoded ogg files using ogg tools/library that were compiled using egcs 1.1.2, quality was drastically reduced, especially at low bitrates (i could notice it) ...

            the difference is redhat knew it could potentially have problems since it wasn't a release.. yet they chose to put it in rh 7.1, and problems *were* found with it ... so now i will never use it again, i don't have anything against people who use it though, i just highly recommend staying away from it
            <font size="1">Gigabyte GA-6VXC7-4X MoBo
            VIA Apollo Pro 133a (694x/686A) chipset (4x agp, UDMA 66)
            Celeron II 733 CPU (coppermine 128)
            128meg (2x64) 133mhz SDRam
            Matrox Milleniumm G200 AGP 16 mb
            Creative Sound Blaster Live! 5.1 Digital model 0100 (MP3+, Gamer)
            Quantum LM 30 gig HD 7200 RPM UDMA 66
            Realtek 8029A NIC Card
            Optiquest V775 17" Monitor
            Actima 36X CD-Rom
            Advansys 510 SCSI Card (ISA, but good enuf for my burner)
            Yamaha 6416 CD-RW
            Windows 2000 (primary)
            Slackware Linux 9.0(secondary/emergency)</font>

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            • #21
              yes Mandrake is bloated, but you don't have install everything.

              I have been using linux since 1.3 (slackware) and have plenty of text installs, and console hacking, kenel compiling, but after a while I just got sick of it, I WANT GUI for everything..I guess I am just lazy...
              Thats the good thing about it for beginners, you have everything(almost) you need on the 3 cd set.
              And if you get your linux skills up, you can go silly and recompile everthing kernel/KDE/GCC etc...I use it as base(FAT) to make tweak system...

              1.I have a thin install on my gateway/firewall box

              2.I have a fat bloated system(but tweaked) for my use, hell I want my bells whistles and electric backscratcher.

              3.And a tweaked lean & mean number cruncher for my brothers atomic scattering numkber cruncher..

              all done frm the same set of CD's (and a few downloads)

              you can do all this on other distros, but I find mandrake to be lazy mans/beginners dream. Mind you the latest SUSE sounds tempting,(if a little lean for my taste)

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              • #22
                hehe...this what scares off linux newbies..everyone has there own prefered favorite...viva la difference

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                • #23
                  Originally posted by The PIT
                  Another thing is not to configure the graphical startup as default otherwise it's pain in the ass trying to re-configure X windows when you change to another graphic card.
                  Or you could just use a display manager like gdm that actually _notices_ when X keeps crashing, and realises it's futile.
                  Tilable Desktop Backgrounds, perfect for DualHead: http://bg.rifetech.com/

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                  • #24
                    I think a newbie will be scared away by now.
                    Another thing is not to configure the graphical startup as default otherwise it's pain in the ass trying to re-configure X windows when you change to another graphic card.
                    There is another problem with mandrake, ever tried going into the interactive startup. It flies past so bloody quick you can't get into it.
                    Chief Lemon Buyer no more Linux sucks but not as much
                    Weather nut and sad git.

                    My Weather Page

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                    • #25
                      Hi everyone!!
                      Wow, that was a good response! Your suggestions tilted me in Mandrake's and Suse's favour!! I went to their respective sites, and was really impressed by Suse! BUT, eventually, I had to get Red Hat 7.2 as that was the only distro that was easily available!! Argh! Having no choice sucks!!!! But the installation process was smooth, and I'm dual booting with Win XP. Btw, I have a question: How do I enable a boot menu so I can choose the OS? I didn't install the Linux boot loader on the MBR coz it said that for dual booting with Win NT based systems, one should install the boot loader on the first sector of the Linux boot partition! So I am currently booting into Linux with a boot floppy!
                      Gurm: Actually, I've installed Linux coz I'm learning Unix (Shell programming, 'C' Programming in Unix etc) and so, I needed something to practice all that on! My primary OS is still Win XP. But fiddling with something new is exciting!!!!

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                      • #26
                        Originally posted by GehRehmee


                        Or you could just use a display manager like gdm that actually _notices_ when X keeps crashing, and realises it's futile.
                        This leads me to another question when Linux decides that X Windows is pooped how the hell do you reconfigure it. I presume the commands hopefully are the same across the distros.
                        Chief Lemon Buyer no more Linux sucks but not as much
                        Weather nut and sad git.

                        My Weather Page

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Originally posted by Ovi
                          Hi everyone!!
                          Wow, that was a good response! Your suggestions tilted me in Mandrake's and Suse's favour!! I went to their respective sites, and was really impressed by Suse! BUT, eventually, I had to get Red Hat 7.2 as that was the only distro that was easily available!! Argh! Having no choice sucks!!!! But the installation process was smooth, and I'm dual booting with Win XP. Btw, I have a question: How do I enable a boot menu so I can choose the OS? I didn't install the Linux boot loader on the MBR coz it said that for dual booting with Win NT based systems, one should install the boot loader on the first sector of the Linux boot partition! So I am currently booting into Linux with a boot floppy!
                          Gurm: Actually, I've installed Linux coz I'm learning Unix (Shell programming, 'C' Programming in Unix etc) and so, I needed something to practice all that on! My primary OS is still Win XP. But fiddling with something new is exciting!!!!
                          It should have given you the option during the installation process I know Mandrake does. You may still be able to do it from with redhat I can't say as I haven't got it. If you seach on the internet theres a few ways of doing it manually I've done it in the past but I can't remember how. You can also use the boot manager of partition magic to do the trick as well.

                          Thess may help.

                          Chief Lemon Buyer no more Linux sucks but not as much
                          Weather nut and sad git.

                          My Weather Page

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                          • #28
                            Originally posted by rugger


                            Actually, I am a rusted-on slackware user.

                            I just don't think it is for the beginner who doesn't want to learn lots.
                            Oops, sorry rugger, didn't notice you You are right, of course, because Slackware aims to be a real Unix system. Real and original Unices are hardly for novices... But my point is that one should first learn the basics of Linux by using Redhat based distro, then move on to Slackware or something even better (if there is one ).
                            Hey, maybe you and I could... you know... [SLAP] Agh!

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                            • #29
                              I prefer Slackware

                              Try Mandrake if you are a newbe

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                              • #30
                                woohoo, 4 of us use slackware
                                well, you know the saying:
                                once you go slack, you never go back

                                btw, slackware 8.1 will require a bootdisk and
                                5 rootdisks to install, it seems they can't
                                compress the root images any more, because
                                it will span over several disks

                                i don't understand why they can't use the old
                                install system, nice n easy, 2 disks (well i just
                                install slack using loadlin from DOS anyways)

                                i hope they do something about it and shrink it
                                down to 1 rootdisk disk again
                                <font size="1">Gigabyte GA-6VXC7-4X MoBo
                                VIA Apollo Pro 133a (694x/686A) chipset (4x agp, UDMA 66)
                                Celeron II 733 CPU (coppermine 128)
                                128meg (2x64) 133mhz SDRam
                                Matrox Milleniumm G200 AGP 16 mb
                                Creative Sound Blaster Live! 5.1 Digital model 0100 (MP3+, Gamer)
                                Quantum LM 30 gig HD 7200 RPM UDMA 66
                                Realtek 8029A NIC Card
                                Optiquest V775 17" Monitor
                                Actima 36X CD-Rom
                                Advansys 510 SCSI Card (ISA, but good enuf for my burner)
                                Yamaha 6416 CD-RW
                                Windows 2000 (primary)
                                Slackware Linux 9.0(secondary/emergency)</font>

                                Comment

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