VonPickle
Well-Known Member
Ubuntu on my desktops and CentOS on my servers, works great.
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so does SimplyMepis--this one is a Debian derivative and just works. PCLinuxOs is RPM based, and in my experience, has been harder to understand than Debian based Linux. But each to his own.
PCLinuxOS uses APT-RPM, based on Advanced Packaging Tool (or APT), a package management system (originally from the Debian distribution), together with Synaptic Package Manager, a GUI front-end to APT, in order to add, remove or update packages.
If there is enough memory on the machine, and an active network connection, the Live CD can update packages. PCLinuxOS is also designed to be easy to remaster after installation, creating one's own personalized Live CD, using the mklivecd tool.
A Linux distro is like a car, you love the particular make and model or just hate it.
Luckily with Linux you can pick and choose your flavour until you find what is right for you.
It will be a sad day indeed if the only distro people pick up and install is only Ubuntu, experiment!
That does not mean it is based upon Debian, they only use a Debian tool (package management). Originally PCLinuxOS was a fork of Mandrake/Mandriva.
EDIT:
Reading the posts again I see what you are getting at, because it uses the same package manager as Debian bases distros it should not be a problem to get a handle on it.
Originally PCLinuxOS was a fork of Mandrake/Mandriva.
Hey Guys,
I hope someone here can answer a question for me.
I have an HP notebook which I keep in the lounge at home which I purely use for wireless ADSL, browsing & downloading. Lately I have got some funny spyware, my browsers have been stuffing around & I got some dodgy things running in the background.
I got 2 buddies who work in IT & they hate windows with a passion. They use Mac & Linux & they say I should use Linux as there are SO many advantages. Which version of Linux do you guys reckon I go with? Taking into consideration what I use the notebook for, very basic browsing & downloading.
Suggestions & perhaps why?
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I have not tried the latest version but they were surprisingly stable and reliable. I remember back in the day I installed Madrake, could not get something to work, hear of PCLinuxOS, tried it and it just worked. I would not toss the baby with the water, PCLinuxOS has some potential for the newbies.That's enough reason to stay the hell away from it.![]()
I have not tried the latest version but they were surprisingly stable and reliable. I remember back in the day I installed Madrake, could not get something to work, hear of PCLinuxOS, tried it and it just worked. I would not toss the baby with the water, PCLinuxOS has some potential for the newbies.
Go for Ubuntu (classic Gnome) or Linux Mint (Ubuntu with some extra's)-
Linux Mint because everything works out of the box,
There is no need to install codecs for movies or music etc...
And the best thing you will find out about Linux is that there is always someone who will help you out if you run in any problems but remember to google search on your problem before making a post in a forum.
Google solves about 95% of all my problems with Linux.
Definitely Ubuntu 10.04 Netbook Edition - Its awsum - can do everything you want, cant get viruses, and it comes with all that nifty software like OpenOffice.org which is full office suite almost identical to Office 2007....
bottom line: get it, its awsum...
I know for there will be a Linux version of just about every program out there but does anyone know if you can install Blackberry's Desktop Manager on Linux? I will check it out today sometime but if someone here knows already, just a yes or no would be cool.
I know for there will be a Linux version of just about every program out there but does anyone know if you can install Blackberry's Desktop Manager on Linux?
D3x, it's interesting to hear you say you prefer Mint over Ubuntu. I've used Ubuntu since back in the Feisty Fawn days (was that 7.04??) and recently gave Mint a LiveCD test drive. Within a week, I had switched my notebook, my two PCs and my iMac over to Mint. I can't specify any one feature or function that prompted the switch, but I'm now a happy Mint user.