Would you recommend the product? yes | Price you paid?: D/L | Rating: 9
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Pros:
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i686 optimization, fast install, easy learning curve
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Cons:
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lacks dev tools
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JAMD is basically a very slimmed down Redhat 9 built for those who want to take advantage of the rpm resources RH9 has but loathe the bulk of RH9 itself (as I did).
JAMD installs in roughly about 15-25 minutes, depending on the speed of your computer. There is a partioner built in, I think, but I never used it. I just did a fresh install over my old distro, Lycoris. After it installed it configured my sound card so sound was good to go. Unlike Redhat 9 and how they disabled mp3 playing in XMMS, JAMD is fine with mp3's and plays CD's from the get go also.
The first desktop you get into is, admittingly, not the best, depending on where your personal taste lays. The default theme is a KDE Aqua with the Noia icons. But all it takes is some tinkering around in the control panel and a stop at http://www.kde-look.org to fix it.
JAMD comes with Mozilla, Open Office 1.0.2, K3b, Kopete, Kbear and more. Adding your own programs is as easy as finding an RH 9 rpm for what you want. I traded out Kopete for GAIM, Kbear for Gftp and Mozilla for Firefox and Firebird.
There is a slight tradeoff for such a good distro, mainly in that it lacks dev tools so you really can't build anything from scratch. There is a list on the JAMD forums of what needs to be installed and nearly all can be found with a combo of http://rpmfind.net and Synaptic.
JAMD has also now merged with Blue Linux into a distro called Ares Linux. The release notes on the site indicated a Feb release but now the site estimates probably late March. Nevertheless, I still think that JAMD is a remarkably good distro, and as someone who has had College Linux, Lycoris, RedHat 9 and various others, JAMD has stayed on my computer for 8 months now. Though JAMD, by today's standards, is dated, I would suggest it for anyone looking into a good, stable desktop computer aimed towards the linux newbie or even towards getting the family computer away from Windows.
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