wazdog wrote:
Howdy y'all. I'm a new Linoder, as I just purchased the 96 a few days ago. And guess what? I'm a brand-spanking new Linux user as well.
- j
What follows is OPINION. It's entirely possible many people here will disagree with me vehemently, and that's OK, because they have a right to their opinions too.
I started out with RedHat, figuring that as the industry leader (RedHat, not me) I couldn't go wrong learning RedHat. I ended up switching to Debian, partly because of RedHat's EOL of Red Hat Linux, and partly because I had heard so many good things about Debian.
It's stable, and stuff pretty much works the way you'd expect it to. I don't know if I'd recommend Debian for a first distribution, though. You won't really appreciate it unless you've wrestled with another distribution first. Here was my experience installing the linuxdoc-tools package, both on my redhat system and on Debian: 1) RedHat -- download the linuxdoc-tools RPM, and rpm -Uvh linuxdoc*.rpm. LinuxDoc has a dependency, so I had to go to rpmfind.net and track it down. That package reported a dependency, so I had to track that package down. That package had a dependency...I ended up going through that cycle about five or six times before I got linuxdoc-tools up and running. 2) Debian -- "apt-get install linuxdoc-tools" That's it. Plus, update the entire system (without having to register with Red Hat Network) with this: "apt-get update && apt-get upgrade" and you'll have all the bug fixes and updates Debian has.
Which brings us to the updates. Debian is just as fast as anyone with security updates, but upgrades and new versions take a LOOOONG time to make it into the stable Debian distribution. They go through a somewhat paranoic testing period before releasing any product as stable. This means that the software included in Debian is somewhat stale -- long past the bleeding edge -- but very, very stable. Debian stable isn't well suited for a desktop OS, but for a server I want rock-solid stability, not flash. Debian gives me that. (Plus, you can compile any program from scratch, just like you can with any *nix OS -- but you give up the easy Debian upgrades.)
Debian is the only distribution I know of that actually recommends doing an overlay install of a new version of the OS over the old version. It's as simple as "apt-get dist-upgrade".
As a side note, I'm looking for a free (both open source and free as in beer) disribution for my home desktop, currently running RedHat 8. Any suggestions?
_________________
John Schofield
Apple Certified Technical Coordinator
Office Mechanic Consulting
Mac, Unix, and PC Computer Support
www.officemechanic.com