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On 11/17/2008 10:24 PM, Bruce Borland wrote: > What is a good Linux distribution? In 2003 I purchased Red Hat Linux=20 > 9 because it was recommended as a version which was easy to load. My=20 > machine was purchased in 2000 (533 MHz CPU, 128 MB RAM, 10 GB hard=20 > drive). I hear that Red Hat 9 is obsolete, but I have never been able = > to do much to modify or update it. It seems that the easier the=20 > distribution is made for the user, the less the user can have control=20 > of the system. (It reminds me of my experiences with Windows.) I am=20 > also concerned with newer products having more "bells and whistles"=20 > which take up RAM and hard drive space and produce visual clutter and=20 > rarely offer anything I could use. I prefer simplicity in my products.= > > I would like to bring my machine in to the InstallFest, but I have no=20 > other Linux distributions. I also would like to learn more about=20 > maintaining and updating a Linux OS. Any suggestions? I do not have a recommended distro. I've found that Ubuntu on my laptop=20 maintains itself very well, and when the next release is available, all=20 you need to do is to click on a button. There was one issue, and that is = whether you set your system up for normal or LTS. With LTS, you do not=20 get every upgrade, because LTS is similar in concept to an Enterprise=20 distro. In the past, I had performed successful upgrades of SuSE. While I am currently running Fedora 9, I have no personal experience=20 with upgrades as in the past, I had normally done clean installs. I may=20 do an upgrade to Fedora 10, just to see how stable it is. I have not used a pure debian system in years, and Dan made some good=20 comments. So, I don't think this clears anything up. --=20 Jerry Feldman <gaf-mNDKBlG2WHs at public.gmane.org> Boston Linux and Unix PGP key id: 537C5846 PGP Key fingerprint: 3D1B 8377 A3C0 A5F2 ECBB CA3B 4607 4319 537C 5846
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