Best Linux Distribution (linuxjournal.com) 215
Linux Journal: We started things off with Best Linux Distribution, and nearly 10,000 readers voted. The winner was Debian, with many commenting "As for servers, Debian is still the best" or similar. One to watch that is rising in the polls is Manjaro (7 percent), which is independently based on the Arch Linux. Manjaro is a favorite for Linux newcomers and is known for its user-friendliness and accessibility. And, now for the top three LJ winners: Debian (33 percent), openSUSE (12 percent), and Fedora (11 percent).
Umm. (Score:2)
No link to TFA? Then again, this is modern day slashdot.
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https://www.linuxjournal.com/c... [linuxjournal.com]
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Now it's there. Didn't show up before.
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Honestly no link is needed - the summary is about all there is. It is a website poll result. No discussion or information. No real reason to look.
I can't wait to see linux journal's article on whatever slashdot's current poll is next week!
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Best Linux Distribution? (Score:5, Funny)
Best Linux Distribution?
Well, that's one way to start a, cough, cough *debate* ... now where did I leave my flame resistant suit?
Re:Best Linux Distribution? (Score:5, Funny)
Slackware?
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I do not know why this is funny, but since we are doing meaningless polls, Slackware was rated the best server in LQ for 2018:
https://www.linuxquestions.org... [linuxquestions.org]
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-wear : A suffix applied to mean the garb associated thereof.
Slacks, n : A name for fancy pants, as opposed to informal jeans or sweatpants. The sort you wear with a suit.
Dude asked where his "flame-resistant suit" was. Other dude made a garment pun.
There. The joke is dead now. It died in a fire.
Yeah, Slackware. (Score:2)
For almost 20+ years of sysadmin work and IT direction, Slackware has been my Linux choice if I needed something quick, reliable and straightforward. If I went away from MacOS on the desktop, I have no doubt I'd be running Slack there again as well. Simplicity is a great thing.
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I agree with your logic. Android is Linux, though not GNU/Linux. You can install busybox to get a fairly complete traditional userland, or you can use Linux Deploy to install a truly complete one. I don't see how anyone can justify claiming that ain't Linux.
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Pre-existing ecosystem is not a valid argument, all those flavors were concurrent to android, and the ecosystem argument is used for favouring windows over GNU/Linux
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Hell, I don't need a flame-resistant suit, burn it down for all I care!
Fanbois unite! Go and crowd around whatever is the popular flavor of the week. Oh, Debian again? LOL awesome! Black gets to be the new black this season!
I get no benefit at all from others making the same choice as me.
Linux is for experts. If you have a good reason to use linux, you probably know what it is. You can probably select the distro that best meets the needs of your use case. I prefer the business-y one that has been unpopular
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Linux is also good for mostly clueless end users who use nothing more than a web browser and email client. Since I put Mint on my mom's computer (she's 81... ) a couple of years (when the "auto upgrade to win10" crap started) I've stopped getting calls about fixing her computer from viruses, expired trialware crap, etc.
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Right, but Mom has you, and you understand her use case.
Clueless users that don't have an i.r.id10t around to do it for them would have an easier time buying some sort of netbook, running who cares.
Different strokes for different folks (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't see much to argue about. Different uses and different users have different needs and preferences. As sqorbit said, the question itself is silly. Like asking "what vehicle is best?" - kinda depends on whether you want to haul 10,000 pounds of cargo, race a slalom, or impress your date. Sometimes a semi truck is the right thing for the job, sometimes a motorcycle is.
I run different distributions for different roles, and other people will prefer other distros for those same roles because they have different preferences. For example my "default" distribution for general computing is CentOS. One reason I choose CentOS is simply because it's the one I'm most familiar with, having used that lineage for 15 years under various names. Someone else might choose Debian or Ubuntu for the same reason - it's the one they know best.
A major difference to consider for desktop / laptop use is whether you prefer cutting edge new features or stability and reliability. In the Redhat / CentOS realm, Fedora is cutting edge, Redhat / CentOS is stable. Neither is right or wrong, better or worse, it just depends on what you want. So instead of spending time trying to find "the best", spend that time asking "what are my needs and which fits my needs best?"
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For me with other non-Linux OSes like Mac OS, iOS, Android, Windows, etc. They have their strong and weak points to me.
Ill-defined question. "Best for what purpose". (Score:5, Interesting)
Linux is in far too many places for "a" "best" distro.
But it's not hard to pick candidates for the best for specific purposes.
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This is probably the better answer for my server use. In our environment, we have lots of closed source software like Oracle. In addition, the backup and monitoring software didn't work on non-Red Hat distos for many years. Since we're not a large team managing 1,200 servers now, consistency in the Unix environment is important too hence we have mostly (for current systems) Red Hat.
And since I'm working on similar stuff at home, my home environment is CentOS for the most part with a few Red Hat systems.
[Joh
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Out of interest, why do you prefer not to use Debian for serious matters?
I ask as someone with not much experience using Linux - I run Mint on my laptop, and have a couple of Debian boxes running simple things like SpamAssassin and MySQL and Dovecot. I've found Debian to be perfectly acceptable to use and setup without a GUI, but it sounds like you have some deeper experience than me.
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Aha, yes, a good point. I hadn't considered any contractual or compliance issues, as the business I work for is far to small for it to be a real issue. I can definitely see how an OS that makes no guarantees or commitments and offer no lines of responsibility may be a big issue for some businesses.
Thanks for answering my question.
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Best for what? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Best for what? (Score:4, Informative)
I helped my mother (74 years old at the time) install Debian in her new computer, through a voice-only call. I was surprised how easy it is to do it nowadays.
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I've been using Linux for almost 20 years. I can't recall ever manually installing firmware (short of running the nvidia installer.) I think I had an old bother or cannon printer that I had to find the correct drivers for but I even have to do that with my windows 10 machine for my HP Envy wireless printer.
Too complicated (Score:2, Funny)
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Just use Windows. Choice sucks for the average user. Preinstalled is the way to go. People have no idea there is a difference between hardware and software and that you can choose to install your OS. Microsoft understood this. Why can't Linux world understand that?
You realize there are companies that make computers with Linux pre-installed, right? Dell is one of them.
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Just use Windows. Choice sucks for the average user.
Unironically agree.
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Good luck with your ads that winblows is going to push.
Do you have any idea how rare it is to see an ad from Windows? Of course not - you hate Windows, and a friend told you a story about ads on Windows that confirmed your bias, so why question it - just repeat it.
Whatever ads you imagine "Winblows" pushes on you are dwarfed by the ads pushed on you when you take your browser - regardless of operating environment - to any social media website, any news site, etc.
Used slackware for 8+ years...and then Mint (Score:5, Informative)
...After Mint I never looked back.
Windows 10 gives me hurdles of issues.
Mint Linux? Works, and works - and works. Love it.
Mint for me as well (Score:4, Insightful)
An interface that never changes? Yes please.
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You can install the Windows subsystem for Linux.
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You can install the Windows subsystem for Linux.
You can wack yourself over the head with a 2x4 as well, but a discussion of the merits of 2x4 wacking, does not belong in this thread either.
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While I wouldn't recommend using WSL for your primary computing needs (just because it is rather slow, compared to native Linux) however it is rather good for those random Linux only tasks, and with a choice for Ubuntu, Fedora and Suse gives you the core features that you need from the distributions.
I see WSL and Wine as different side for the same need. If you are using mostly Linux and need the random Windows App, then a Linux OS with Wine, works. If you are using mostly windows with the random Linux too
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Re:Used slackware for 8+ years...and then Mint (Score:4, Insightful)
They are alike enough that you don't need to relearn every time you need to do something, but philosophically they are different in ways that make sense.
Linux Mint (cinnamon) installs basically all the software you will need for a desktop, this gets you up and running quickly and easily.
On the other hand Debian installs just about nothing then you add the features and services you need. Making for a more secure install out of the box.
This is a winning combination in my book. I am even starting to get used to systemd.
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I have tried many desktop Linux distributions over the years, but one thing really stands out. Every time I used Mint is was a positive experience, not so much any of the others. I reinstalled my desktop OS a few months ago, removing Ubuntu (the last time I will ever give it a try I think) and installing Mint Cinnamon.
It was the correct thing to do.
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Re:Used slackware for 8+ years...and then Mint (Score:4, Informative)
Same, started with Mint 13 or something, now at 17.3 with Xfce, I like it, it just works, everything works, nvidia GPU, wifi, BT, sound, etc
Mint's great for new users (Score:2)
My daughter is taking game programming and was struggling with working with Ogre and another graphics engine (I can't remember which one right now) and was struggling to do the builds on Win10.
I pushed her onto Mint and she was able to get up and running in a few hours despite being very nervous about wanting to learn Linux. She's still scared of Ubuntu (my default) but she loves Mint.
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After changing the sources I run apt-get update && apt-get dist-upgrade to update to the new version.
Admittedly I do keep a bootable USB key to hand for the times this causes GRUB to eat itself.
I've had very little in the way of reinstalls since I started using Mint, but I still prefer Arch.
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This process has worked for me as well, although it is always best to be prepared for the worst. With my /home mounted on a different device (well, RAID-1 setup actually) reinstalling from scratch if needed is quick and easy and doesn't endanger my own data files.
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Windows 10 gives me hurdles of issues.
Windows never gives me even one hurdle of an issue - most likely because I took the time to learn how to work with it, and given the fact that around 95% of desktop end-users also use Windows, I think you are an outlier.
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Windows 10 gives me hurdles of issues.
Windows never gives me even one hurdle of an issue - most likely because I took the time to learn how to work with it, and given the fact that around 95% of desktop end-users also use Windows, I think you are an outlier.
My spell-checker didn't get the word "outlier" and neither did I (I'm not natively English).
But besides that, I'm actually a windows supporter. We've recently rolled out Windows 10 in our organization, and I challenge your windows fancy any day of the year. :p
Re:Used slackware for 8+ years...and then Mint (Score:5, Informative)
Windows 10 isn't so bad actually.
But the thing is - Mint never let me down. I use Win 10 at work, and I even have a win 10 partition on a separate drive...which does get bluescreened once in a blue moon, but Mint? Never happens. I can turn Mint on every night, and it never fails me - ever!
I'm a pragmatic person at my age now, I'm in my 50's. I remember my days compiling Slack to my preferences, and not to forget ...lazing off with Mandrake and Red Hat linux, ah - those where the days. But Mint (Ubuntu essentially) has won me over, because I'm now too old for "shit that don't work". I just wanna come home, be comfortable, watch my shitty netflix series, play my steam games...and surf my silly youtube videos and whatnot...Arduino comes to mind (yes I use that....semi daily)
The thing is - Mint made everything work out of the box, no permission shit, no endless nerding around like I was 20 again... ...And still - it works SOOOO much better than any windows OS I remember messing around with for the last 25+ years.
Thanks Mint + Ubuntu + Linux people for your tireless efforts, you truly are the kings amongst men.
Alpine (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Alpine (Score:4, Informative)
systemd moves various services that were previously provided by applications instead of the OS into the OS itself. This has various advantages and disadvantages vs. more traditional unix OS design.
In addition to people who don't like it for rational reasons, there is also a bunch of more militant OSS types are convinced this is part of a giant "flouride is turning us into commies" style global conspiracy, which is where most of the constant arguing comes from.
Re:Alpine (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Alpine (Score:4, Insightful)
Linux and in fact all Unixes are built around the philosophy of having a bunch of simple tools. Each one doing its specific job well. systemd inherited the Windows philosophy of being a hairball that tries to do everything.
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There is something very strange about people who care more about philosophy than their computers actually being functional.
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I assume you are also an Emacs user.
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Quick but trying to be detailed explain of systemd.
The technical So systemd is an init for some Linux systems. When Linux or for that matter any UNIX like OS is done loading the kernel into memory (RAM), as it's last step it calls a program called "init". Typically this program is in the /sbin folder. There's tons of different init systems that have been written for all kinds of different *nix OSes. Your most basic init would need to call a program called "agetty" which basically loads a terminal for y
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Thank you.
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I figured it was some sort of religious debate that delved into minutiae of the Linux subsystem
Well it sort of does touch on a religious point in *nix systems. The mentality, the best I can describe it, is a million little gears. So you build a gear that does a single thing and you make that gear the best it can be at doing that one thing. This notion is typically called loosely coupled. Having a systemd aware program makes it tightly coupled to systemd which some would say goes against the loosely coupled philosophy of *nix. Remember systemd is more advanced and has dbus acting as a highway to
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--Remember the MCP (Master Control Program) in the original TRON movie? That's systemd in a nutshell...
WHAT? No Gentoo??? (Score:5, Funny)
I guess I'll have to manually compile my own list...
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Thanks for the laugh. I haven't used gentoo in years, but I might need to go back to it at some point soon. I bet compiling it is soooo much faster on modern processors. I have yet to use an OS that was snappier and more responsive than my old gentoo installs.
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I still use Gentoo on my systems, but I'm increasingly worried as they seem to be struggling to keep all the packages current. I suspect the number of packages a distribution should have available is increasing over time, but the Gentoo community has shrunk, which is a dangerous combination.
That said, having a source distribution makes running with local patches trivial. I also really like openrc, but I'll admit that that's in large part due to my extensive experience with it, so I really understand how i
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having a source distribution makes running with local patches trivial.
It also makes building or developing non-distro software much simpler. With binary distros, you always run into the issue of installing "devel" packages of libraries if you need to compile against them. You may also need to worry about compilers -- I mean, who needs a compiler when you're only trying to "use" a system? But in practice you often need to compile stuff even if you're not developing it.
Mac and Windows users may be used to this artificial separation between users and developers [iki.fi], so I have a h
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It seems to me that Gentoo has settled into a core group of users who have been using it for years and its popularity percentage has stabilized at that level. My primary workstation has been Gentoo since 2004 (with an occasional emerge @world when I buy new hardware). In that time I've noticed on the forums a number of regular users who have been there as long as I have. I suspect a large number of those users are like me--engineers, software developers, and other folks with technical backgrounds who aren't
Best for what? (Score:4, Insightful)
It all depends on what I'm trying to do with it.
Desktop, Laptop, Server, Router, DVR, NAS, Phone, IOT device?
Best at what? (Score:5, Funny)
Debian is a pessimized distribution. It's compiled for the worst possible case. It has a filesystem layout guaranteed to cause conflicts between packages and they've not bothered to resolve those except where it's "noticeable". The default disk layout is sub-optimal. It puts ideology over getting anything done.
I'm not impressed by the others, either.
Frankly, I'm horrified by the state of Linux distributions. That people voted Debian up is not a surprise, however, because nobody expects the best from their computers any more. I used to run three MUDs on a 16 MHz 386SX, in addition to a mail server, DNS server, modem pool and an instance of X. I could compile GateD or Perl in the background without interfering with anyone's work. Did it do less? Well, it had just as many fonts in LaTeX, so I could still do all the DTP that Libre Office can do. Admittedly, I couldn't WYSIWYG it but nobody does that with LaTeX anyway and anyone who does it for regular documents is paying far too much attention to presentation and not enough to content.
(I forget where I saw the article on PowerPoint, but it argued that this emphasis on presentation was endangering R&D, promoting really bad ideas over much better ones, and was responsible for endangering the modern economy and several western democracies. Ok, maybe they overstated the threat to the economy, since you have to have one to endanger.)
Modern Linux is not as fast because of poor design choices by distros. We have no Linux Desktop because of even worse design choices by distros.
https://itvision.altervista.or... [altervista.org]
These problems are THEIR fault (and the fault of OSDL's closed-door meetings with vendors). Yes, in almost every respect, Windows is worse. But Windows has mindshare and enough money to afford to be worse. Microsoft should have been broken up in 1998 when it was ordered to do so by the courts, but the appeals court reversed that - probably under government pressure - and we have to live with the fact that we're competing against Sauron.
And, yes, GET OFF MY LAWN!
Power-point comment (Score:2)
I think the book you are trying to remember is this one: How PowerPoint Makes You Stupid: The Faulty Causality, Sloppy Logic, Decontextualized Data, and Seductive Showmanship That Have Taken Over Our Thinking – February 28, 2012 by Franck Frommer (Author), George Holoch (Translator).
If you just google "PowerPoint Makes You Stupid" you will find a range of articles on the topic.
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In terms of UI, it's kind of hard to say that Windows is worse than Linux. Almost every new Windows system is being shipped with Windows 10, which has a (more or less) consistent UI across the board.
Someone used to using a Linux system with KDE is going to have some issues using LXDE or Gnome, though. The menus and control panels are pretty different.
Sure, Windows totally screwed up their UI in Windows 8, but they learned from this mistake and haven't repeated it. If you take someone who's used to Windows X
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Almost every new Windows system is being shipped with Windows 10, which has a (more or less) consistent UI across the board.
Windows 10 is the LEAST consistent Windows UI ever. It's split between this Windows 10 interface and the traditional old windows system. Just take the control panel for example. Some settings are in this new UI model which is a rip off of the OS X system configuration and the other half are still a jumbled mess in control panel. In every version of Windows up until Windows 8 I probably would have agreed with you but it's an absolute mess now.
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Modern Linux is not as fast
Citation needed. The modern Linux kernel may have more in it and may require more resources to run, but KPTI aside Linux has never been faster. Aside from a few minor dips as some features are added without maturity Linux kernels have mostly seen slight speed improvements between versions, with a few introducing good step changes in performance improvements.
What you're complaining about is the software that we expect to do more. That's not an OS issue.
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Just a hunch, but (Score:2)
I suspect people who are paid to do Linux system administration do not make up a significant percentage of Linux Journal's readership.
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Yeah, I'd imagine that professional sysadmins would mostly go for CentOS or RHEL, with handful going for Ubuntu or SUSE.
Whatever magic Mint uses (Score:3)
It's working. Suse got me off Windows back in 2009 then I tried Mint a year later and been using it since and have had minimal hw/sw issues.
Not a pro. But Deb's da best, no contest (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm sharing my opinion: I think Debian is still king because of mostly 3 key areas it shines: simplicity, choice and community support.
Ubuntu thrived for some years on Deb's back, as it brought its simplicity front and center, all wrapped up in tried and true UI choices with Gnome (2) and Xorg (eventually birthing its own now defunct attempts at GUI - Unity, and dserver - MIR), and they spiced it up by pulling a RedHat on the support part: "hey, we got all the good things of Debian 6 months later, bicuzz pro QA and commercial level polish yadayada". Choice was, barely, still there, through different flavoured ISOs ranging from GUI preference to architectures and whatnot, and naming each individually for branding purposes, something typical from consumer-grade software.
It was well and good, until QA and polish stopped losing focus to marketing and stupid endeavours like dethroning Android or the tablet "market".
Like many, I was the kind who believed [insert letter]Ubuntu-like flavouring was essential in a distro. But now, in all honesty, I believe there are exactly 3 separations a distro really, truly needs - to GUI or not to GUI (Desktop vs server/headless), net-install vs 5 DVDs with all the internet in 'em bicuzz Africa and pacific Islands; and obviously, if you can live without compiling (most of us do), architecture. Release-wise, there should still be LTS, stable and, well, straight-from-the-chunk, but those are a matter of politics involved and not exactly "static" choices, such as the afforementioned architecture, server/desktop-bound or www-availability. Debian follows all these principles, and packs each flavour with exactly what they need.
The thing Debian makes best though is not their choice of flavouring, but the way they pass control onto you, the user. From the simply amazing installer:- you want a GUI? Pick from this not-so-verbose, yet essential list. You wanna continue this installation from ssh? Kewl, install ssh now, set up basic drivers, network and creds, and you're good to go. Do you want that graphical install instead? Maybe you want the ncurses one bicuzz you fancy them Nvidia GPUs which won't work until you can wget them from closedsource.nvidiacorp.bad.org ? Install gparted for all-you-can-eat partition choice. I'm not even getting on the REALLY advanced stuff.
Systemd, grub, dpkg, so straightforward, no complications. Aptitude and that god-send APT. Debian has the tools to get everyone NOT thinking too hard on stuff like dependency management, but still make an effort, ever feeling in control if need be. Updating, and UPGRADING are a breeze, both for individual packages and the distribution itself. Unnatended, or even hot upgrades work as intended and crash much less than most others - something only achieved with a very deep level of organization on the core development. Migrations to new releases are easy. Migrations to new machines are feasible without dedicated backup tools (although they are great if you can get them configured properly), and even when you have a problem, it's usually recoverable with a Google search or 2.
And the thing I love most about Debian, pretty much the same thing that makes me still love Windows: it doesn't fail on 95% the hardware people want to get it working. To y'all OS developers out there - packaging your distributions with the "bare minimum" of drivers is NOT that great a feature when you want your software to have the support a stable OS deserves (*cough* Archlinux*cough) - if you don't have a community large enough ABLE TO BOOT your OS effortlessly, there won't be a community to WANT to give back, and will end up with LACKING community support - read: death sentence in FOSS (well, unless you're RedHat).
It's that simply really. If a critical mass doesn't get to even install your OS successfully, you won't ever get the traction you need for it to be mainstream. But hey, maybe that's not what you want...
Getouttahere!
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Government use is not exactly gold standard these days. That's the same government using McAfee because "quality" and banning Kaspersky because "Russia".
I won't ever downplay RedHat - I think what they do is amazing, and I think any institution needing professional Linux services needs to go to the best pros, and those are definitely them. Now for personal use - one that needs support fast (read: self-support), cheap (read: free), and the most stable, tweek-able, productive graphical environment (read: GNOM
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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That's great and all, but did you remember to grab legacy drivers for Voodoo3 and Aureal?
SCO (Score:4, Funny)
Best for what? (Score:2)
Best support?
Best security?
Best feature set (for what purpose?)?
Best for non-technical users?
Best for power users and/or developers?
Most mature/robust?
Highest performance?
Best to know for getting a job?
I use Mint for casual use and CentOS for heavy lifting. Mint because I like the interface and CentOS because having Red Hat skills is useful for finding and/or continuing employment. I'm sure that if my criteria were different my Linux flavor would be different also.
why no RHEL? (Score:2)
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RHEL doesn't exactly inspire 'enthusiasm'. It's whole raison d'etre is to provide solid environment without threat of unexpected disruptive technology. For example, the most recent RHEL is still producing an environment that resembles state of the art 4 years ago.
The sort of people who are enthusiastic enough to be so proactive about it are going to be more impatient with the cadence than appreciative of the stability.
Let me put in a good word for Devuan (Score:3, Interesting)
No systemd and it does all the things I want. In particular, it let's me run me-tv, which doesn't run well on ubuntu because of something to do with gui libraries. (Each side blames the other last I checked, which I admit was quite awhile ago.) Before Devuan, I had to run me-tv on Linux Mint, which is a very good distro (if you're comfortable with systemd, which I'm not.)
best? (Score:2)
Tried out something new on my newest Laptop ... (Score:3)
I got meself a refurbished ThinkPad X220 for college and portable web development, pimped it out with 8GB RAM and a 250GB SSD and thought I'd try something new off the beaten Debian/Ubuntu track.
Manjaro i3 [manjaro.org] seemed like a nice candidate. And sure enough, it holds up nicely. Rolling updates (manjaro is arch based) and i3 is a very neat tiling WM that's really fast and nice and easy to configure. The manjaro i3 defaults are nice as is the turquoise on dark-grey design. Technical but still modern and sleek.
Manjaro is the new kid on the block and might just be yet another passing distro-fad but for now it holds up and I'm enjoying it. yaourt is a CLI tool for installing non-standard packages and so far everything I've needed could be found on AUR [archlinux.org].
Bottom line: Wanna try something new with i3 as default? Yours truly recommends Manjaro i3. Give it a shot,
News for nerds (Score:2)
The best linux... (Score:2)
It might be Mac OS X... Well if not that lets see how well it does what Mac OS X does:
1) easy way from the startup disk/usb drive create a Mirror system(all partitions)
2) easy way from the startup disk to install to a SSD/HD accelerated system
3) easy way to get WIFI working
4) easy way to get accelerated 2d/3d graphics working as good as Windows 10
5) easy way to boot the thing from UEFI
6) easy way to get chrome/Firefox to work
7) easy way to get a known/modern Antivirus to work
I am telling you the linux comm
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Good luck monetizing software on Android/Linux.
Amazon (Score:2)
I ordered from Amazon Distribution Network my "Penguin Stuffie" and placed it on my desktop.
For only certain values of "best" (Score:2)
Overwhelmingly, most organizations, at least in the US, run RedHat, or one of its children, with, so far as I know, CentOS being the most-used.
We were using RH at AT&T 9 yrs ago; where I work now, for a federal contractor (civilian sector) we have a few RH licenses... and the other 97% of our systems are CentOS.
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Manjaro actually got 4%. Mint above it on the graph got 7%.
I agree. Msmash misread the poll and the summary is wrong.
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I cant believe 10,000 people changed their minds in 24 hours
In Putinist Russia, mind changes you!
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[spoken in heavy Russian accept]
In Capialeest America, za bank robs you.
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Nearly an entire county changed their mind less than 24 hours after the November election.
Wrong.
First off, if we assume voting results were an accurate reflection of the mood of the country at the time of the election, Hillary's supporters didn't change their opinions after the election - they didn't like trump before the election, and they didn't like him after the election - no change.
Second, Trump's supporters liked Trum before the election, and they still like him after the election - no change.
Currently Trump is running about 40-45% popularity, slightly lower than his election results - so
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Trump's approval rating is actually at 48% right now, a full 4 percentage points higher than Obama at the same time into his presidency. It's great to have an effective leader that cares about the middle class rather than one that mugs them for their milk money.
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The question is the reachable audience for the poll. How many Linux users go to Linux Journal regularly? I know I don't and never have, and I've been using linux since kernel 1.2.x.
Something about the audience correlates highly to the results they got. Which is intersting, but not particularly telling about the wider market.
Objectively, the most prolific linux distribution is nearly certainly android, but doubt many people in that userbase care at all.
Other distros may have more enthusiasm, but perhaps d
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Going from 25 to 26, audio just stopped, and hours were spent learning way more about pulse audio than I ever cared to know.
Going from 26 to 27 the DisplayPort output decided it no longer wanted to work on an AMD video card. Spent awhile researching that and eventually rolling a custom kernel until the fix made it to the official fedora kernel.
Sounds trivial and user-friendly to me...
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I don't use Fedora too often, but I have a Fedora partition I try to keep up to date weekly or so, for testing stuff.
Going from 25 to 26, Wayland stopped working. I was able to use X just fine. It fixed itself after a number of updates. Going from 26 to 27 was uneventful.