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Deal Fanatic
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Sitting Idle for the next two days as I dont have anything else to attend to so I am desperate as I dont know how I am going to spend the rest 2 days.
Been sitting here idle now for a hour staring into the 'Bliss' wallpaper of XP. Since windows is too stale for me now, thinking of experimenting with other OS. Searched the net and found out quite a lot flavors of Linux. I'm a complete newbie to linux so looking for the easiest and powerful flavor. Here are a few of them: 1. Yoper. 2. Mandrake. 3. SuSE. 4. Red Hat. 5. Gentoo. Still unable to decide which one I should go for. Please help & ofcourse suggestions from the linux gurus here, Thanks ! Jerry Hussain |
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#2 (permalink) | ||
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Nov 17th, 2001
Location: Calgary, AB
Posts: 5,897
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Quote:
Yopper -- cool in that it supposedly handles all types of code packages (rpm, etc...) Mandrake just won't die. 9.1 just came out w/ several new features -- cool tools that windows doesn't have. SuSE -- my fav, but not very widely used here in north america -- a little dated too, unless you have the pro version. red hat -- lotsa new users, chosen for many users new to linux. great help and support. .RPM packages couldn't be easier. Gentoo - I have absolutely no clue.
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You didn't really think that I was GONE, did you? |
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#6 (permalink) | ||
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Deal Fanatic
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Location: Calgary, AB
Posts: 5,453
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I'm no Linux l33t but most packages out there are fairly rock solid.
Red Hat the most publically know package Mandrake - a derivitive of Red Hat but made things better SuSE - Zip already explained. I'm playing with Mandrake right now and thanks to Zip I guess I'll be downloading a bunch of updates tonight to bring it up to 9.1. That's if I'm really ambicous (SP)...NOT...well maybe. :? Other alternatives to play with is: OpenBSD - the most secure OS right now FreeBSD - fronted by a Calgary-ian (well at it use to be) Solaris 9 - it's free for home users |
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Nov 17th, 2001
Location: Calgary, AB
Posts: 5,897
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so long as i can add to the congestion of the web, i'm happy. Actualy, i forgot that I had the solaris DVD..hmmm... mebbe i should check it out. Although, I beg to differ about the *BSD flavours. BSD isn't quite linux!!!! *ducks* I would've thought that SELinux would've been most secure?
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You didn't really think that I was GONE, did you? |
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#9 (permalink) | ||
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Deal Fanatic
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Location: Calgary, AB
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It was a 3 ISO disk download and it's loaded with more stuff that I'm willing to play with right now. I actually have it loaded on another drive and used WinNT boot loader to boot to it (Do a google search in how). You have to be careful of LILO it still has the 1024 sector limit (something like that, my brain is getting mushy and can't think of the right terms right now). Therefore if your planning to install on a seperate partition on your 20+GB drive that may cause some probs.
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Deal Addict
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Posts: 2,317
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How well does Linux cope with crappy hardware? The PC I want to use I aquired from a friend and its got a POS PC Chips motherboard in it(and its an AT with the most screwed up connection scheme I have ever seen).
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Deal Fanatic
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Location: Calgary, AB
Posts: 5,453
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ya ya, I know about DOS and it's single disk. :roll: |
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#12 (permalink) | ||
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Nov 17th, 2001
Location: Calgary, AB
Posts: 5,897
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linux loads on damn near anything. its just less convenient to install, but most of the new distros have a bunch of extra crap with them. http://www.toms.net/rb/
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You didn't really think that I was GONE, did you? |
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#14 (permalink) | ||
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Member
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Location: State of Denial (GTA)
Posts: 305
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ISO: (1 CD) http://ftp.leo.org/pub/comp/os/unix/linux/...03-01-20-EN.iso Home Page: http://www.knopper.net/knoppix/index-en.html Penguin Bob.
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"I can guarantee to you, without equivocation, that every fact in my movie is true." - Michael Moore |
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#15 (permalink) | ||
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Deal Addict
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Jul 30th, 2002
Location: Alberta
Posts: 2,350
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Quote:
Gentoo will be hard to install for a newbie, but it's a good learning experience. Redhat is very easy to install and most company out there uses Redhat so might as well get familiar with redhat-specific commands Mandrake/SuSE/Lycoris has simplified install process, all you need to do is click NEXT->NEXT->DONE type of installation. So I guess the main question you want to ask yourself is do you want to learn how linux works and use it or just want to use it? there are many other interesting distros, you can look at www.distrowatch.com or have questions during installation? ask at www.linuxquestions.org |
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