Dueling Distros - It's All Good, Apparently 180
An Anonymous Coward points to a review listed on osfaq.com, summarizing: "Red Hat's latest release is here with the much improved 2.4 kernel. Its new features make it a compelling upgrade for both server and workstation installation. In addition, there has been more of an emphasis on security in this release than in previous Red Hat releases." Similarly, another nameless reader writes: "
The Duke of URL has given Libranet a favourable review.
It looks like Libranet may be heading toward becoming one of the big players in the Linux distributions game." I'm still looking for a good review of Mandrake 8.0, which seems to have generated few reviews so far. (Or distro reviews willing to be a little harsher in general.)
Watch out for AbiSuite fonts... (Score:1)
I had some fonts problems also, and finally tracked it down to installing AbiWord and the sucky fonts that go with it. I looked at /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fs/config , which is the font server config file, and uncommented the line that tells it to look in the AbiSuite fonts dir.
(You need to "/etc/rc.d/init.d/xfs restart" before the change will take effect.)
All of them suck (Score:1)
Linux has no future except among total dorks and people that would rather screw around with their computers instead of interact with the rest of society.
Re:The things you learn on /. (Score:2)
In Red Hat 7.0 and 7.1, you can manage xinetd (they don't use the old inetd anymore) with chkconfig. Dunno about ntsysv.
Re:RH7.1 still broke-dick GCC? (Score:1)
Requiem for a Debian User (Score:1)
thanks!
nick
Re:The old too many distros argument again (Score:1)
Those security issues (and bit rot) can actually be significant. Plus, the flying window logo is no gaurantee that your installation or daily use experience will be any simpler with WinDOS.
If you can admin your own box, Unix will not tend to hide useful information from you.
If you can't admin your own box, Unix will make it easier on the expert that does.
Linux can actually be EASIER to configure than windows. I'd still like to know how to get Win2K to put a monitor in DPMS suspend mode at will.
Re:Requiem for a Debian User (Score:1)
1) You can download the entire RPMS directory from a RedHat mirror to a directory, then type "rpm -Fvh *.rpm" in that directory as root and wait while it searches and updates installed RPMs (-F means "freshen"). However that doesn't resolve dependencies, so you'll need to -Uvh some packages that don't have older versions installed. I've done this a time or two and it works reasonably well.
2) You can download the entire "RedHat" directory (includes RPMS directory and a couple others), then download the installer imgs (boot.img, net.img, pcmcia.img), dump them to a floppy (dd if=boot.img of=/dev/fd0), reboot with the floppy in, and go through the normal Upgrade option (Which will resolve dependencies). Also, with 7.1, they say you can grab the
3) Download the
4) Buy the box set which comes with all the CDs and boot floppy, follow the detailed instructions in the installation manual.
Re:Requiem for a Debian User (Score:3)
Re:security/installation features (Score:2)
http://redhat.com/support/manuals/RHL-7.1-Manua
http://redhat.com/support/manuals/RHL-7.1-Manua
http://redhat.com/support/manuals/RHL-7.1-Manua
Re:Red Hat 7.1 (Score:1)
Re:$15 download? (Score:2)
(possibly with some kind of download verification, so those of us with unstable connections (*cough*AT&T Broadband,MA*cough*) wouldn't have to pay 4-5 times to get the download to finish (having the u/p expire after a couple of days might not be unreasonable) )
Once mirrors go up everywhere, the downloads from those could be cheaper, or free. THis would give people an incentive to use a free, local mirror, rather than clogging the main site. The decrease in people downloading from the main site would mean the mirrors could get the ISOs faster - so that's another advantage.
Since the distro companies won't be making a huge sum of cash off of the downloads of their distros (most are free downloads now) - they don't lose anything by doing this (and gain some extra cash to offset their now-slightly-lower bandwidth charges).
If users have broadband (or REALLY want to download multiple 700MB files over their modem) and want/need the updated distro *at* release - they can pay a small sum to do it, otherwise they wait 12-24 hours for their local mirror to sync up, and grab it free. (or pay a comparable sum to get a cd mailed from CheapBytes).
Willing to wait a couple months for a better package? Wait for the stores to carry the boxed copies (with printed manuals and such) with support/etc... (as is the case now)
I'd call it a win-win situation for all parties involved.
Re:The old too many distros argument again (Score:5)
I've seen a complete computer newbie sit down at a PC running WinME and be completely confused. There's little pictures of things they can't quite recognize (yet) and just about everything moves, or pops up a window, or a menu, or something else. After an hours worth of coaching, they get the basics of how to doubleclick, how to click in a dialog box to type, possibly even how to start up IE/OE and browse the web, send email, etc...but it DOES take some time.
And they still can't figure out the filesystem. They don't understand the concept of a directory (even if you go with the "folder" analogy) - they don't know how to download a file anywhere but the default location - they don't know how to save an attachment from an email before they run it - half the time they don't know that the things they download ARE files. If it's not on their desktop, it doesn't exist.
Take this same person, now that they've "learned" Windows, and sit them down in front of a *nix box - OF COURSE they're going to be confused! *nix doesn't work the same way Windows does (and auguably, it *shouldn't*), so all that "knowledge" they have about the way Windows works can't be applied. (Well, not entirely true - moving the mouse around generally does still move the pointer, etc...)
Now - take a complete computer newbie, and sit them down in front of a *nix box. Again, confusion - the *same* confusion the total newbie had when they sat down in front of the Windows box. After an hour of coaching, they can be at the same level.
Configurability is another matter - and there's a signifigant hump to get over - that being that hardware manufacturers (who would be the ones who know their hardware the best) seldom provide l*nix drivers for their hardware. They tend to only provide Windows drivers. Why? Because Windows is what *most* people have - and *not* supporting Windows is going to hurt their bottom line. Compared to Windows, the *nix installed base of home/workstation systems is pretty low - so generally not supporting *nix doesn't hurt their bottom line.
In addition, they tend to be SO protective of their "intellectual property", that even if a third party developer approaches them and says "I know you don't support *nix, but I'd like to write a driver so people who want to buy your hardware and use it with *nix can do so" gets denied, or forced to sign so many NDA agreements that the final product would be incredibly tough to distribute anyway.
This sets up a catch-22 of sorts. End-users (home/office) want support for the latest and greatest hardware NOW - not 6 months from now when a few brilliant and dedicated people have finally been able to reverse-engineer, legally, the means with which to support that hardware at the most basic level. They don't want to have to do research before they go to the store, in order to buy hardware that is compatible, and well supported - they want to buy the newest, flashiest thing they can find on sale.
Without support from the manufacturer, you're not going to GET that kind of support with *nix. SO people stick with Windows, and turn the whole situation around, blaming *nix for a lack of hardware support, whin in fact the blame rests on the manufacturers for not providing drivers, and placing roadblocks in the way of third party drivers.
Add to this the recent legal developments with regard to reverse engineering (IE: DeCSS) and you have a VERY hostile environment for good hardware/consumer tech support on a *nix platform.
Add to this the *nix community's distaste for binary-only releases of proprietary hardware drivers, and you have a REALLY bad situation.
For configurability under *nix to match that of Windows, we need manufacturers to support, or at the very least allow third party drivers to be written, with proper documentation of their hardware's features. In order for this to happen, the *nix community has to give a little, and allow for the possibility of proprietary, binary-only driver releases (at least until an open-source alternative can be developed). Both of these are big steps, and both sides quibble about taking small ones, let alone big ones like these. It's going to be a while before the situation gets better here.
OK - enough rambling - back to work =)
Re:Distro war again? (Score:1)
I posted an Ask Slashdot article on April 4th wondering how to choose a distro. Still not posted. Whee.
Since then I've chosen Mandrake 8, since it seems to support the things that I, as a BeOS fan/developer/user, need and expect from an operating system.
Re:Mandrake 8.0 (Score:1)
Next intel linux workstation I build will definitely be MDK8..
Your Working Boy,
- Otis (GAIM: OtisWild)
Stable Alpha distro? (Score:1)
I have a DEC PWS433a with 2MB Cache, 128mb RAM and a Matrox Mystique card (My PowerStorm 4d60t is only supported by Tru64 and NT, not XFree86 ;-p ).
Tru64 runs fine on it, so it's not the hardware that is buggy!
Re:Mandrake reviews (Score:1)
ftp://ftp.sunet.se/pub/Linux/distributions/mandrak e/iso [sunet.se]
...or...
a ke/iso [sunet.se]
http://ftp.sunet.se/pub/Linux/distributions/mandr
Re:So far so good. (Score:1)
Actually, that's a grammatical noun number error. mios is a possesive plural pronoun but Dios is singular noun. And you are missing an inverted exclamation mark at the begining of the sentence.
Re:Mandrake reviews (Score:3)
IRNI
Re:They're all good. (Score:1)
I have several Intel machines and random other archs.. I like having the majority of machines running my choice of distribution.. makes my life easier when I want to upgrade or whatever..
Just my worthless
Re:Requiem for a Debian User (Score:1)
However, whenever I've done this with Mandrake and Redhat, I've always ended up with a system that is somewhat confused at the end. I've switched everything over to Debian now, which at least has a working upgrade system.
-- PhoneBoy
Re:The old too many distros argument again (Score:2)
Because I erased it from my hard disk and there's no compelling reason to put it back.
Flamebait as I may seem...
Err, no. More like astroturfing
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Medusa indexing (Score:2)
This is the wrong design. It should index if you're idle *and* you have moved/created/deleted files, and it should examine only the directories involved. This should take a fraction of a second.
Also the hard disk doesn't really goes crazy on my system like you say, much more the same effect as when I execute "find /".
I agree with the original poster that this kind of disk activity is annoying, especially on a laptop. The same applies to period dbupdate runs under cron. It's about time to remove these warts.
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Re:Distro war again? (Score:1)
Tnx.
Re:RedHat 7.1: Piggish 250 MB root, installed cras (Score:1)
gcc 2.96-RH? (Score:2)
http://www.redhat.com/products/software/linux/rhl
And I see:
From the little "RH" there after the version number, can I conclude that RedHat is still shipping an oddball, non-standard gcc compiler?Re:No troll on 1st Post?? (Score:1)
Re:The old too many distros argument again (Score:2)
I can't count how many times I've thought that...as someone once said, the only real intuitive interface is the nipple. Everything - whether CLI, GUI, voice-controlled, 3D space-based...is learned. And the only reason people find 'doze earlier is that it's what they learned.
Re:The old too many distros argument again (Score:2)
Re:Requiem for a Debian User (Score:1)
But generally if you want to upgrade you would get redhat-7.1 on your favorite medium (f.x. a cd) start the install and choose upgrade system, instead of new installation.
Apt-get really is cool, but you can get a long way with rpmfind.net and tools like red-carpet.
Hope it helps.
Re:Stable Alpha distro? (Score:1)
Try lowering the colors to 256 - atleast just to see if that's what causing your problems too.
Re:Mandrake reviews (Score:1)
Re:Mandrake reviews (Score:1)
I got my install ISO image there yesterday, and am getting the ext cd image today as we speak. Decent data rate.
Of course, now that I've mentioned it, I expect it to be /.ed in no time. . .
Re:Requiem for a Debian User (Score:1)
RH 5.0
RH 5.1
RH 5.2
RH 6.0
RH 6.2
RH 7.0
RH 7.1
I have always selected the "Upgrade" option. The only snag I've ever hit is that you don't always get all the new packages installed, unless you specify them explicitly.
One thing I noticed this time though: I didn't get all the same install options by upgrading to 7.1, that I would have gotten by installing a clean system; for example, I didn't get a chance to configure a security level. I guess they assume that already-installed systems are already configured and should not be messed with, which is probably a pretty good assumption.
-TomK
Re:Red Hat headache (Score:2)
Re:Mandrake 8.0 (Score:2)
Re:Red Hat 7.1 (Score:2)
(I know you could compile yourself -- but the first time you do "make install" -- you have just blown away the whole advantage of any packaging database...)
In most cases, you can keep your custom built code separate from your packaged code by installing to /usr/local or /opt instead of /usr. OTOH, I see problems when configuration files in /etc or other important places need to be changed, but in most cases, packagers should still work.
Re:Speaking of LFS... (Score:2)
Linux (and every other OS that I know of) requires some sort of external support in order to put together a distribution from scratch - heck, Linus built the first Linux kernels on a Minix system, before gcc was ported.
So far so good. (Score:2)
distro comparison on Sony 505FX mini-notebook (Score:1)
Mandrake 8.0: Would not install. From what I can tell, it has something to do with PCMCIA initialization, which I cannot find a way to bypass during install. Using the Text Expert mode, I see that the kernel panics and the whole system locks up. From the limited research I've done, this is basically because the kernel tries to configure the PCMCIA, whereas the Sony BIOS has already done so, causing some major, so far unsolvable, hiccups.
Progeny 1.0: A somewhat different problem than above, progeny does a windows-esque "reboot" to continue installation. However, upon reboot, the installer does not "remember" where the CDROM is, resulting in an infinite "Please insert CDROM disk 2" type message. I could not find a way to switch to another console and could not pass the proper location of the CDROM to the install program. I was looking forward to an easy to install debian system.. I might try Stormix or just plain jane Debian.
Redhat 7.0: There were some errors in the install, seemingly related to PCMCIA devices, but the install program chugged right through them and I now have a functioning Linux distribution running on my beautiful Sony Vaio 505FX. I'm planning a clean reinstall to get rid of some fluff, but in the meantime Windowmaker seems a nice enough "GUI" for the small screensize, when I'm not just "toying" in console mode. I may just keep running in console mode and screw the GUI altogether. So far, most everything is working fine. I've yet to try network configuration, but I should tackle that soon enough..
So, 2 lose by default (installation *too* easy, maybe?), the other wins simply by virtue that it installs a basic system, which is what I want..
Anyway, my off-topic
Re:distro comparison on Sony 505FX mini-notebook (Score:1)
Thanks again!
parallel (Score:2)
The great thing about Linux is that a anyone can start a new project/distribution that competes and builds on the old, and everyone eventually benefits. For instance, I'm looking for time to do a better Mandrake than Mandrake distro. Mandrake has been pushing the 'ease of installation' envelope. I'd like to push it even further with a distro called 'Tutor Linux', that will be guaranteed to take a week to install. Each step of the installation would be accompanied by indepth analysis and discussion of why things are being done the way they are being done. Upon completion, the end user would have a complete understand of how and why the system works the way it does. Instead of hiding the difficulties of installation behind a graphical interface that mask the details, the aim of my distro will be to expose and explain the details so the user understands them, and is therefore no longer intimidated by them.
Expect to see my distro in stores, RSN!! 8*)
Mandrake 8.0 v redhat 7.1 :: One users experience (Score:1)
mandrake losing interrupts (Score:1)
This has not happened before.
Steel
Red Hat 7.1 (Score:3)
Wow. I have to say, I have never seen a cooler desktop. Plus, it runs bind9, has all of the crypto stuff that was added back in Red Hat 7.0 and a ton of other stuff that makes this the way to go for anyone who wants to get their feet wet with Linux or the long-time hacker.
Not to belittle everything else. Mandrake, Debian, etc are all good distributions and I applaud their efforts and those who use them, but Red Hat has been focusing right where I want a distribution to focus: latest and greatest tempered by usability and stability. I've always found that, eg, Debian does not make this trade-off where I want. Unstable is just a little too unstable and stable is just a little bit too old. I want a middle-ground, and Red Hat seems to walk that tightrope well, making the occasional gaff, but fixing them fairly fast with their updates.
Re:parallel (Score:1)
I didn't see a heck of a lot about Libranet that I don't already get with Debian unstable ... OK, maybe the newer packages are tested more for stability and interoperability, but I bet Debian has more developers working on Debian than Libranet does.
Re:libranet download? (Score:1)
Right... so apparently they seem to think that these fast connections are free or something ? Downloading "free" CD images is just an extra you get for paying a lot of money for a fast connection.
"Regarding charging for a download and whether this is in conformity with the GNU General Public License, it is. We have consulted with Richard Stallman of the Free Software Foundation and have been assured that what we are doing is legitimate.
Richard put it this way:
"Free software is about freedom, not price. Free software means that users have certain freedoms, such as the freedom to redistribute and change the software. To charge for a copy is legitimate; this is just as true for downloading as for a CD-ROM." ""
Yadda yadda... IMHO it's also perfectly legal to pay 15$, download the distro and redistribute it for free.
And BTW, i suppose Libranet is based in the USA ? Americans keep forgetting that it's harder to pay for things like this when you're in Europe or something...
Anyway, whatever.
uXs
So this is called a review? (Score:1)
I hope no one will call this a review of a distribution (the RH one I mean).
"I recommend that all new server installations use this distribution, and SMP servers upgrade to it to maximize the servers' capabilities. "
You can't be expecting any sysadmin or any user for that matter to base a decision to buy this on such a superficial advertisement?
Re:Mandrake reviews (Score:1)
Mod parent up (Score:1)
Re:Mandrake reviews (Score:1)
It takes forever to boot up though. This is not a distro for your spare 32 meg machine. This baby needs some room. Time for a CPU upgrade.
Re:Mandrake reviews (Score:2)
I do have a couple of beefs about it though. For some reason I can't su to root when logged into my user account. I assume this is some security setting, but I haven't found out how to disable it yet. Anyone know? Also, something is really fucked up with the fonts in Konqueror. They are just terrible, the letters are crooked and of varying sizes, pretty much makes every page look like it was written in 1337 5p34k. Anyone else notice this or know how to fix it?
Re:Watch out for AbiSuite fonts... (Score:2)
Re:Okay...I'll be the first to say it (Score:1)
Re:Stable Alpha distro? (Score:1)
The SRM install wasn't supported, when I built it, but, with a little bit of work, was able to build my own boot disk to get it to run. I don't use it much for games, but, it's a rock-solid file/database server.
Linux rocks!!! www.dedserius.com [dedserius.com]
Re:The things you learn on /. (Score:1)
each service which is listed in
R'ing TFM is always a Good Idea
{apropos | man -k} is your friend
-Mith
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Re:No troll on 1st Post?? (Score:1)
ncurses: ntsysv
GUI: Run Level Editor
Those are the Right Ways to do it. Here's why:
Change S10network to K10network and you've just broken sendmail, which should shut down BEFORE network, but now shuts down after it. In the case where you're disabling something, it won't matter much, but that doesn't make it the right way to do it.
should we all bow down to l33tness?
I'm and MCSE
I didn't say you should bow down to leetness, but you should at least learn the difference between "an" and "and".
Luckily, the poster to whom I replied appreciated my advice. Ironic that you call me a troll though (even though I've feed one with this reply).
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Re:No troll on 1st Post?? (Score:2)
*cough*
Not that I don't agree with you, just that manually playing around in
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I'm a karma whore! (Score:3)
ÕÕ
Re:Mandrake reviews (Score:1)
After 2 days of grief with no mouse support working (you do not want to run their graphical installer without a mouse)... I talked the thinkpad into enabling the serial port so I can at least use a serial mouse. Doubtless I'll get the trackpoint on the go with a little work.
I must say I'm impressed with it. It looks good, and it auto-detected my PCMCIA network card that is very new and so not supposed to work under anything Microsoft didn't write (DFE-680TXD; it's using a tulip chipset if you're interested)
Mind you, it's I guess a case that each new major revison of a distro has all the latest toys and that's a big part of the "wow" factor.
Re:Gnome 1.4 (Score:1)
Not so:
Gnome 1.4 released April 3rd [gnome.org]
Mandrake 8.0 released April 19th [linux-mandrake.com]
Re:Legacy-free Distro? (Score:1)
Re:libranet download? (Score:1)
Re:Stable Alpha distro? (Score:2)
Slackare Linux is one of the distros that has been around for the longest time but is updated often so it is now as 'modern' as the Debians and Redhats.
Legacy-free Distro? (Score:2)
e.g. One that uses Kernel 2.4 all the way, that doesn't have IPTables and the old
I like new versions of softwares. I hate old versions lying around.
Any recommendation?
I like Gentoo. If it uses apt-get or epkg I'd have chosen it in a heartbeat. Too bad.
Re:They're all good. (Score:2)
Red Hat Kernel 2.4.2 is crappy (Score:2)
The Cyclades patch applied without problems (it being an additive patch rather than one with modifications). However the Sangoma patch failed to apply and the kernel refused to compile.
We removed the patched kernel, installed a fresh kernel source from the RPMs, and patched *only* for the Cyclades card. The kernel source already had drivers for the Sangoma card so we tried to compile those instead.
Imagine our surprise when this freshly installed kernel source also refused to compile. It had errors all over the place. I assumed the Red Hat kernel had some patches so we got our SRPM to recover the "pristine source" kernel that was there. Still i was worried that this kernel didn't even compile.
After extracting all the files from the source RPM, I was baffled when I realized the Red Hat kernel had over 200 patches applied to it! no wonder the Sangoma patch barfed, as this beast could hardly be considered a 2.4.2 kernel anymore.
Finally we did extract the sources from the source RPM (despite all the mess that this operation was, it's nice to see that the RPM concept of "pristine source plus patches" really saved the day). Both the Sangoma and Cyclades patches applied without a hitch and 25 minutes later we had our system back up and running the way it was supposed to be.
One last rant, it seems that for some reason the Sangoma drivers which have been included in the kernel for quite some time never work fine. We always have to patch from the Sangoma releases. I wonder why haven't the updated drivers made it into the kernel. hrmm.
Re:RedHat 7.1: Piggish 250 MB root, installed cras (Score:2)
What's the bug report number for this? Oh, there is none.
Users who complain, but don't report bugs to us continue to not impress me.
Re:Red Hat headache (Score:2)
The services being turned off is intentional for security reasons (read the manual).
Run ntsysv, or "chkconfig ftpd on", "chkconfig telnet on",
Also, make sure the firewall settings aren't preventing accesses to the services you want to run (read the manual).
darwin and distros (Score:1)
Don't like your distro? Write a new one. Is it a piece of crap? It will go away. Is it worthwhile? Well, it still might go away. But over time, a process similar to natural selection allows the best software to rise to the top.
The downside of all this prolific spread is that standards become rare. This is why the Linux Standard Base is such an important idea.
Actual URL for the review (Score:2)
I think the URL for the review is mangled... The real one is here:
http://www.thedukeofurl.org/reviews/misc/libranet1 90/printable.shtml [thedukeofurl.org]
--8<--
Re:Mandrake 8.0 (Score:1)
=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\
Re:The old too many distros argument again (Score:1)
A linux distro is more like a toolbox than like finished a product: they are for people that need or like to tweak with things, that are unsatisfied with standard commercial offer.Your needs can be satisfied by any of the mahjor distros, but not without a little work from you.
If you like so much windows, just keep using it. Both Perl and GCC have been ported to it, so you have the tool you need.
Re:He's right! (Score:1)
Re:distro comparison on Sony 505FX mini-notebook (Score:1)
-Mandrake 7.2 and 8.0 install beautifully with a network installation. Just copy the cds to a directory in a different machine and use the USB floppy with the network image. You can also install from the cdrom if you use the pcmcia floppy.. I think you have to do F2 and give the magic line expert ide2=0x180,0x386. That seem to work on my but I didn't do a full install that way.
-Progeny 1.0: I had the same prob as you. I still had to follow on them.
-Redhat 7.1: flawless install with the magic line again. But then.. it's so ugly and it has lacks apps. I feel that I can't go back to it after MDK8.
Mayly
Re:Red Hat 7.1 (Score:1)
Sounds cool... just what I've been looking for, but how do I go about getting it done?
I just downloaded and burned the RH7.1 ISOs. I want to get Ximian, but the only option(s) I see on their web pages involve having a connection to the Internet under Linux (I can only use Windows98 to access the Internet... don't ask; long story). Is there any way to just download it all as an ISO, burn a CD, and install from there? I haven't been able to find anything like that.
If anybody knows of anything like that, please let me know!
Re:Red Hat 7.1 (Score:1)
Thanks! :)
Re:I'm a karma whore! (Score:1)
FYI, a gnu is a large water-buffalo look-alike.
Libranet ISO Mirrors Should exist (Score:1)
Some more ideas for Tutor Linux (Score:1)
There should be nontrivial questions after each step performed, so that the next step only will be started if the user has sufficient knowledge about the subject. And to make things harder, there should be a large enough pool of questions, so that after a wrong answer, you would get a different question :-)
And when the install is finally finished, it should be possiply to print out a fine diploma, whith the users name, the systems specifications, and the time it took to complete the install
security/installation features (Score:2)
Well, Mandrake still has them beat in this department, by offering security levels ranging from "Paranoid" to "Welcome to Crackers". ;-)
One thing I wish all distros would do better is explain what each setting will really do. What packages, etc. does workstation have that server doesn't? What changes at each security level? What will I get to see in "expert install" that I won't with the others?
It's frustrating when the features that get installed appear to be picked randomly (and hand-tweaking the install involves looking through thousands of packages...)
There's a fine line between making installation easy and dumbing it down, and some of the install options I've seen are dumbed down to the point where the user cannot make any sort of rational choice based on the information given.
Try Mandrake (Score:1)
Most definitely not.
I'm pretty much in the same situation (UK, dialup, no time to be arsing around for 3 days just to get X up and running). I used Redhat for a while and just got sick of the time it took to get a usable desktop system - that should happen upon installation, my time should be spent configuring things more specific to my own setup and writing software rather than endlessly trying to make someone elses software work. Then I tried Mandrake 7.1 (free with magazine) and it worked well: X configured itself, and I had everything up in no time. I occasionally upgrade vital apps but on the whole just wait for the next Mandrake release and upgrade the whole OS. I actually get some work done now instead of spending 90% of my time mucking around with Linux itself.
Re:They're all good. (Score:1)
????
Funny, for me it usually works out the other way around.
Re:The old too many distros argument again (Score:1)
Hey, what's this, some kind of porno?? I think you mean "desktop-cum-development..."
Re:libranet download? (Score:2)
Just installed Libranet last night (Score:3)
Well, as the story goes, I vowed a month ago to completely switch %100 to Linux once Mandrake 8.0 was released. I had been using Mandrake 7.x for a while, and it was pretty damn spiffy... but the versions of KDE 2 were kind of unstable among other things. With the release of Mandrake 8.0, I was really excited about an easy transition to a stable user-friendly Linux desktop. I downloaded the ISO and ran through the install. Everything was brain-dead-easy until I finished installing the application packages and went for the initial reboot. The installer kept giving me a no hdlists error, and so I tried expert install and many other options. Things got frustrating, so I decided to try something else.
Libranet was that something else. Any open-minded techie will be able to see the superiority of a Debian based distro, with regards to system updates etc, using apt-get. However, I also have two eyes which can see the superiority of KDE 2.1 to anything Gnome has the offer. I never got involved in any emotional or religious license arguements are crap like that. I just simply wanted the best Linux setup possible, and I didn't want to have to spend allot of time/effort/money to get it.
Libranet 1.9.0 has all the features I want, with a cutting edge journeling filesystem, the latest great kernel, KDE 2.1, etc... It is easy Debian based!
So the install. You want to know about the install? Well, lets just say that it ain't as easy as Mandrake, when Mandrake dosen't shit itself on you. When Mandrake's installer works, a 3 year old could install it. But Mandrake wasn't working for me at all, so maybe Libranet's more involved install actually helped.
The biggest problem with Libranet's installer was its reliance on floppies. Excuse my foul language, but it ain't fscking 1997 anymore guys. Most workstations don't use floppies anymore, using CD-RW instead. CD-RW is more dependable and its cheaper than floppies. Libranet's install requires you to make floppies if you are installing Libranet on SCSI harddrives. So, yes, the biggest and most difficult part of the entire install for me was trying to dig up an old floppy drive that I had stashed away at the bottom of a closet full of boxes of knick-nacks. After hooking it up and making the boot floppies, I try to boot my soon-to-be Linux box on them. Yup, the disks were bad, so I was back to trying to rawrite more boot disks until I found some old floppies that didn't have bad sectors all over them.
Floppies floppies floppies! After the floppy fiasco, the rest of the install was a piece of cake. And I mean easy easy easy! The installer didn't have a theme manager like Mandrake's, but the installer was doing one thing that Mandrake's installer wasn't doing for me yesterday: it was working!
Libranet's installer is super easy to use. You need to know a few obvious things to properly move through the installer for Libranet:
Again, just incase you guys don't get the point of how easy the install is... floppies can be a bitch and partitioning the drives requires actual though, but even the partitioning is as straight forward as cutting a birthday cake or a pizza, which most people have done at least once in their life.
What is Libranet actually like? Well, I could better answer this question a month from now, after using it everyday, but from what I have seen so far, Libranet seems rock solid stable and loaded with cool (and useful) apps. Of course, I was one of the cursed Northpoint customers that got his line cut, so I suck down the net through a 28.8 dialup now, but apt-get is just way too cool! With it, I probably won't download a new distro for another 2 years! If you have a dedicated net connection, like a cable modem or a DSL line... apt-get would be the Holy Grail of Linux for you. Installing and updating software is easier on a Debian Linux than on any Mac OS or Windows OS!
IT JUST WORKS!
Why more people don't use a Debian based distro is weird to me. I suggest Libranet 1.9.0 if you want to experiment with a Debian based distro, or if you simply want a better rock solid Linux setup. In my opinion, Debian should be THE core standard for all distros.
By the way, I am posting this from Konqueror, which after several hours of frantic use, hasn't crashed once. Konqueror is THE Internet Explorer killer.
Re:So far so good. (Score:2)
How long has it been since you tried Medusa?
Re:Medusa indexing (Score:2)
What it should do is schedule the book to be indexed and then do so when the computer is idle, also when someone searches for something should the indexer kick in.
Give it enough time. I'm sure the Medusa people have thought of this.
Re:I'm a karma whore! (Score:2)
So Mirror it! (Score:2)
Trackpoints all over... (Score:2)
There is some discussion on MandrakeForum [mandrakeforum.com], and somewhere else I read a response that said the person simply recompiled the kernel and it worked. Sadly, the dependencies on the Kernel-source RPM are also wanting... they need a ncurses-devel RPM that is unavailable on the CDs and the FTP sites.
Using RH7.1: BEWARE Mandrake 8.0 (Score:3)
Sadly, there is a definite bug in the Mandrake 8.0 release that is just getting recognized: The kernel was compiled with the ps/2 mouse support disabled in many configurations, including ThinkPads. Apparently, they thought that 'no ps/2 keyboard' (i.e. USB keyboard) was thought to mean 'no ps/2 mouse' as well. My ThinkPad could not access the trackpoint device (the keyboard mouse-pointer) in any way... on a kernel level. If you replace kernel-2.4.3-20mdk with kernel-linus2.4-2.4.3-2mdk, you get the ps/2 port back, but you must dig out compatible pcmcia modules for the earlier kernel. (I'm presently switching kernels between a mouseless session and a networkless session.)
It is Wednesday today, and I've been watching the cooker/cooker-fire for a new kernel, but to no avail. IMHO, Redhat got the 7.1 release out a timely way, panicking Mandrake into a premature release.
Don't get me wrong, I'm a featuritis junkie who loves Mandrake otherwise. I just wish this user-friendly distribution ideal for notebook systems were actually ready for this release.
Re:So far so good. (Score:2)
Medusa is only a file finding utility! Why does it need it's own daemon and to spin my harddrive every half hour? Dios mios!
This is annoying on the same scale that the 'Windows Explorer crashes take down my entire system' is annoying.
Besides Medusa, Nautilus and Ximian Gnome are pretty good.
Re:So far so good. (Score:2)
Re:The old too many distros argument again (Score:4)
You want something thats easy to setup and configure as Windows.
You want a decent desktop OS.
You want to do C and Perl.
Why not use.. Windows?
Flamebait as I may seem, theres nothing *wrong* with Windows as a desktop OS. It doesn't feature the same level of security as *nix, nor does it have the zero cost outlay advantage, but it does work, its simple to use, and there are squillions of apps and games and stuff for it. Its a case of using the right tool for the job. Windows might just be the right tool.
The old too many distros argument again (Score:5)
I currently run Redhat 7 and after loosing some stuff on it that I liked (such as enlightenment) and general flaws and badly built stuff (missing files etc.etc) I figured I'd move to something else.
I use it mainly as a desktop OS, would like everything I possibly need already configured and if possible running, reasonably secure and dare I say it?, as close to being as friendly as Windows as possible. Ie. I don't have to piss about with config options, it does it for me and i can get on with doing fun stuff.
I use my machine for web development and socket programming (so C and perl really). I don't have a perminant connection, just a dial up which I hardly use (since the phone is miles away from the PC and we in the UK still have to pay for isp calls) so cron jobbing apt-get-whatnot isn't really useful.
I've asked about and can I get a sensible answer about what is the best desktop-come-development-come-nice-windows-style-t hing-but-running-linux distro for me? Nope, everyone comes up with totally different distros for a variety of reasons! At the end of the day its confusing me and whilst I'm by no means a linux expert, I'm not a total dunce.
I'm totally lost. Do I upgrade or not? I'm no closer to picking a distro than I was when i first started. Its times like this when I really start to wonder if maybe it would be better to have a few really good distros rather than lots that seem to do some bits well and some not.
I just know I'm going to get shot down in flames and marked as "Troll" but i'm not. I'm totally and completely lost in the maze of distributions and seem to be unable to get a sensible consistent answer from anyone.
Am I alone?
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Re:Mandrake all the way (Score:2)
Distro war again? (Score:2)
They're all good. (Score:2)
Arathres
I love my iBook. I use it to run Linux!
No troll on 1st Post?? (Score:2)
On the topic of distro's, I've used RH, Slack, Mandrake, Debian, SuSe, etc. I personally like them all... preferred at this point is probably RH since it is what I first installed, and learned mostly for my first year running/admin'ing linux.
If RH has (finally) beefed up security, I for one will be forever greatful... gets really annoying having to edit inetd.conf, and go through rc3.d and disable practically EVERYTHING every time I install. I learned from the beginning, and I think this is (read in: should be) industry standard, that you should disable everything by default, and turn services on as necessary, after being sure to patch and update all dependant services.
The article didn't go in depth as to their security enhancement feature, aside from it being configurable during the install... Hopefully what I call secure is what they do too...
Okay...I'll be the first to say it (Score:2)
I will continue to recommend Linux as a low TOC and high ROI solution but it's an uphill battle. It's a shame that the "powers that be" won't listen when anyone mentions this line of thinking but I can tell you first hand that out in the real world it's the truth.