12-12-2003, 09:15 AM | #2 (permalink) |
beauty in the breakdown
Location: Chapel Hill, NC
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I think of Mandrake as more polished (appearance wise), but personally, I prefer RedHat. Were I installing one for someone who had never used Linux, I would install Mandrake--for me, RedHat.
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"Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws." --Plato |
12-12-2003, 09:44 AM | #3 (permalink) |
Huggles, sir?
Location: Seattle
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Redhat, easily. The Mandrake default install (a couple of years ago at least) opened all sorts of ports that there was no need for, and is generally less secure than other distros.
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seretogis - sieg heil perfect little dream the kind that hurts the most, forgot how it feels well almost no one to blame always the same, open my eyes wake up in flames |
12-12-2003, 11:12 AM | #5 (permalink) |
Pure Chewing Satisfaction
Location: can i use bbcode [i]here[/i]?
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I really have had the best/easiest time with Suse.
I'm no expert, far from it, but RedHat 9 seemed to take a step in the Windows direction... They started to use proprietary methods that made certain software and other things unusable. Maybe this isn't a problem anymore, but it was last time I checked it out. Oh, that, and isn't RedHat (personal edition or whatever) no longer supported? There's the Fedora project now... I forget exactly what that means tho. Now, Suse I had a ball with. Installation went 100% without a hitch, haven't had significant problems compiling and installing software, Yast seems to be a competant utility for updating your system... So yea, that's what I recommend. p.s. like I said, I'm no expert, probably bordering on beginner, actually. i'd like to hear if any of my impressions are false.
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12-12-2003, 12:09 PM | #6 (permalink) |
Insane
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No expert here either. I'm mostly on unix/irix, but for my home pc I've had Slackware and RedHat. Some geek friends of mine reccomended Debian, but then I had already installed the new RedHat 9. Some old libraries there, and afaik they've disabled the update feature for free installs. But once I installed apt, upgrading was a piece of cake.
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12-12-2003, 01:04 PM | #7 (permalink) | |
Junkie
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Quote:
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12-12-2003, 03:00 PM | #8 (permalink) |
hip mama
Location: redmond, washington
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i started off with mandrake, but since then i've come along way and now use freeBSD. Its alot easier to install stuff, manage and move around in all together. You can install any GUI on it, and atm i've been using gnome, but on another account my boyfriend uses fluxbox. I'd use fluxbox to, but the resolution is so high (1600x1200) and i have trouble seeing everything :P
www.freeBSD.org freeBSD is unix, not linux, but once you use one, there doesn't seem to be much of a difference.
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I've eaten my veggies all my life so bring it on, I am educated and strong for the revolution. |
12-14-2003, 01:35 PM | #10 (permalink) |
beauty in the breakdown
Location: Chapel Hill, NC
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I recently moved from Mandrake to Debian (which I installed via Knoppix). I love it. apt-get is God's gift to man... Stable, fast, and anything I want is an apt-get away.
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"Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws." --Plato |
12-14-2003, 11:54 PM | #11 (permalink) | |
In Your Dreams
Location: City of Lights
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Quote:
I love apt-get's system as well. So easy to just select and install. |
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12-15-2003, 01:58 AM | #12 (permalink) |
Crazy
Location: Melbourne, Australia
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I prefer mandrake over redhat. out of the box, mandrake supports reading ntfs partitions and can play mp3s... for redhat u have to dl stuff to be able to do it, or for ntfs support recompile the kernel, although the rpm u can download is much easier.
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12-15-2003, 06:28 AM | #14 (permalink) |
Tilted
Location: South Korea
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I'm a gentoo fan myself. I am by no means a guru, but I enjoy gentoo because it challenges me to learn more about linux. It isn't just a 'toss your install cd in and go' distro. You actually have to configure things to get it to work right.
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Tags |
mandrake, prefer, redhat |
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