i started with a cd set that had debian, slackware, and redhat.
debian did nothing.
slackware installed but i could not get X up and running.
i did redhat last and almost everything worked, so i stuck with it.
that was RH 3.0.3.
later i did RH 4.0 every thing worked.
i heard lots of bad things about 4.2 so switched to Pacific High Tech.
it was and still is the easyest to install. but many apps i down
loaded had trouble installing.
tried debian from one of the installs but had too much trouble configuring
and installing stuff.
now i've gone back to RH 5.2 because all the addvise i get always seems
to be for RH or Slackware.
The problem I have with Debian is that in three tries
I have yet to have a
successful experience. It was my preference because the school
is using
it, but I must require more active brain cells than the 60's left me
with.
Unfortunately, I missed the install party. I was really hoping
the see it
done by the experts (presumably enabling me to mimic the success),
but,
alas, it wasn't meant to be. Other than that, I'm on their side
if not
simply because of their "totally free" approach, then because of the
support.
cabrubak@xxxxxxxxxxx on 03/10/99 10:44:13 AM
Please respond to aclug-L@xxxxxxxxxxxx
To: aclug-L@xxxxxxxxxxxx
cc: (bcc: Jeffrey Hansen/BFTC/Bombardier)
Subject: Re: [aclug-L] Flame bait... (distribution question)
On Tue, 9 Mar 1999, Greg House wrote:
> Perhaps I'm opening up a can of worms here, but I'm wondering what
other
> people's thoughts on this are. And how others are handling
it.
>
> I know a lot of you are running Debian, some are running RedHat,
and
there's > a couple with other distributions.
>
> I tried several of them when I was first getting started and the
one that
> ended up staying on my machine was Slackware. It seemed fairly
intuitive
> for me, so I kept it. Since then I've set up a couple of RedHat
systems,
> and now I'm working on a Debian system. What I'm finding is
that almost
> everything in terms of really current stuff only comes in tarballs
and
rpms. > For example, I wanted the lasted version of XFree86, no deb
files
available > for it (except some experimental builds a Debian developer
made, which took
> awhile to locate). I wanted the new Gnome 1.0...rpms...no debs.
> Enlightenment? NO debs (well, actually debian.org had them
in the slink
> directories, but they weren't on enlightenment.org)
>
> Are all you Debian users 6 months behind on stuff (the last frozen
release)? > Are you getting source for these things and compiling them
yourself? Are > you running development versions of Debian (slink
(until
today), potato)? > It just seems like when there's a package manager
that
you'll eventually end > up shooting yourself in the foot if you have
to
subvert it by installing the > stuff that's not packaged in your package
system of choice. It also appears > that the only packages people
are
doing of really up to the minute stuff are
> rpm packages. I like the concept of Debian.org (totally free), but
I'm
> seriously thinking about going back to RedHat because of the availability
of > current packages. Slackware'll keep track of the tarball
installations for > you, so that might be an option too.
>
I tried redhat 4.2, and 5.0, and after getting sick of things not working
,and since i could get "support" for debian I installed debian.
Yes I do wait 6 months for the newest debs, and that does kinda of annoy
me, but the reason it takes so long is that want to get as mnay bugs
out
as possible, and I admit it works. It is very stable.
> Greg
>
> ---
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+-----------------------------------------------------+
| The Cheez-Czar http://www.hackboy.com/~cabrubak
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
----
>From The Chalkboard of Bart Simpson:
I am not deliciously saucy.
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