I know that Linux is best for servers and programing... but I've seen development and in making it for personal use... and of course I'm interested in being able to do as much as possible with my computer and have it work at good efficiency ...
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ok.... I'll need to decide
I don't have the experience you all have... and it would be good for my judgment if you could all enlist the ones you like and explaining why and how dose it compair to others..
I think that would be best |
example
I voted for Ubuntu because:
(+)
it has bugs and glitches especially on graphics but overall I decided on ubuntu (basically because I wanted to start the vote and it's the only one I know) |
I answered "Debian" even though I don't even use it right now (I use Ubuntu and gNewSense). The thing is that Debian spawned off all the very best distro out there, bar none (sorry RPM users, your distros suck: I know, I have used them for years before swithing from RPM-hell to APT-heaven). Debian is therefore *the* ultimate distro as it makes all the rest of them possible.
Of course, Debian is awesome in its own right, not just as a parent-distro. Cheers! Mamadu |
sidux, better yet Google or take a look at distrowatch.
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I vote for Microsoft Linux XP, but since that is not on the list, I'd go with my personal favorite of Red Hat because I am most familiar with it.
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Quote:
Download some live CD's and try them, silly polls isn't going to help. IGF |
I voted for <insert distro name here>.
I used to be a distro hopper, but not any more. I've always had problems with <insert hardware here>, but after installing <insert distro name here>, it just worked! I've tried <insert another distro here> but had nothing but problems, I don't know why people keep using it. <insert distro here> is the distro hopper stopper! If this poll is to continue, expect a lot of replies to end up like the above. The problem is that even the best of linux distributions have certain problems with certain hardware. Ubuntu is very popular, for instance, and there is a very good reason for that. But what happens if you download Ubuntu, install it, and there are problems everwhere with your installation? Do you think that since the majority of people voted it to be the best, that every other linux distribution will do the same? Also, do you consider stability to be of the utmost importance, or is the latest and greatest in package selection more to your fancy? Do you mind venturing into the CLI to configure and fix things? How powerful is your hardware? Do you need 64-bit support? There are numerous questions that narrow down which distro would best suit you. Did you put any personal research into any of these distributions? The reason I ask this is because you have LFS on the poll, and then follow up by asking which would be best for a newbie. Did you actually look at the 2007 awards for best desktop distribution (the previous link I posted)? Not only is the poll almost exactly the same, but there are 15 pages of comments as to why people chose the distribution they did. And after all that, you'll still be at square one until you actually test them. If you're wondering why people are so reluctant to answer this poll, it's because this question is asked so many times, that all the new threads get merged into a 'Which Distro Megathread'. The answers are always opinions. Is Gnome better than KDE? DEB better than RPM? Or Source? All answers are opinions. You have to test them to find out what you like. |
Quote:
IGF |
No Gentoo?
Ubuntu: Innovative, excellent community, huge repositories, constant updates
Debian: Ubuntu's dad, stable, wise, slow to adopt but always trustworthy Gentoo: Source distro that works! Stable, new, fun, great learning resource LFS: Similar to gentoo, but less useful on a day-to-day basis - Learning platform mostly |
Caldera rocks!!!
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Slackware, obviously.
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yay, let the pointless popularity contest begin! :rolleyes:
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I understood that the only way is to try them.... but I don't have that mutch time....
but with the advices made... I'll at least have a place to start... oh and one more question... what's the diferentce between Kubuntu and Ubuntu ? (regardeing ...Performance) |
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