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How To Choose a Linux Distribution - Page 2

post #21 of 39
Thread Starter 
Just to clarify, when you say sound you are meaning consumer sound. If you want professional sound Ubuntu is not a good choice, but those of us that do that are few and far between and if someone needs help with that it is better just to ask in a seperate thread and I can give you a hand

Seablade
post #22 of 39
Ive thought about turning an old Pentium 3 computer into a Linux system but again with so many distros I cant decide. My gut feeling was Ubuntu but Im still undecided.
post #23 of 39
Thread Starter 
If you are using a computer that old, you should go with Puppy Linux, Damn Small Linux, or one of the other minimalist distributions really.

Seablade
post #24 of 39
Quote:
Originally Posted by Seablade View Post
If you are using a computer that old, you should go with Puppy Linux, Damn Small Linux, or one of the other minimalist distributions really.

Seablade
What about a system with newer hardware? Would you recommend Ubuntu then?
post #25 of 39
Quote:
Originally Posted by ghazgull013 View Post
What about a system with newer hardware? Would you recommend Ubuntu then?
Yes... Ubuntu is the most user friendly, esp the last two (9.04 and 9.10 where wifi is involved)... A lot of other distros are ubuntu based (which in turn is Debian based)... For a small Distro, puppy is good, and I have had Damn small Linux work albeit slowly on a thin client PC on a 128mb PCMCIA card as a hard drive, 8mb of system RAM and a 275Mhz CPU... Biggest issue was internet - too slow.... I am going to give Linux mint a good beating this weekend on a netbook....
post #26 of 39
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ghaz013 View Post
Ive thought about turning an old Pentium 3 computer into a Linux system but again with so many distros I cant decide. My gut feeling was Ubuntu but Im still undecided.
I know that I'm responding to an old post, but I wanted to say that I've been using Zenwalk on my Dell Latitude C400 (Pentium 3 256MB RAM) and have not had any problems.
post #27 of 39
Quote:
Originally Posted by mb67 View Post
I know that I'm responding to an old post, but I wanted to say that I've been using Zenwalk on my Dell Latitude C400 (Pentium 3 256MB RAM) and have not had any problems.
Actually its good you responded because I wasnt sure that kind of an old CPU could handle an OS.

I'll look into Zenwalk!
post #28 of 39
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ghaz013 View Post
Actually its good you responded because I wasnt sure that kind of an old CPU could handle an OS.

I'll look into Zenwalk!
Actually with most linux distros you can run on anything newer than a Pentium (586). Easy way to tell is to see how the repositories are named or the extension to the names of the binaries. For example: if your distro lists a i686 or amd64 repo, the first would run on any hardware newer than a Pentium-pro the latter any AMD or Intel 64bit processor. Another example could be a binary named tar-1.22-i586.rpm would be compiled for any 32bit or 64bit processor equal to or newer than an original Pentium. On the other hand a binary named tar-1.22-amd64.rpm will run on any 64bit processor from Intel or AMD.

Check out different distros, most have more than one repo and each repo is compiled for different architectures. I don't know if this is still the case as I haven't run Debian in more than 5 years, but at that time they still compiled and supported the i386 which was 20 years old at that point. It may take forever to run an app on a 386 but it would indeed run on one.

I hope this clarifies things.

Ciao
post #29 of 39
Just tied xPUD which is a 'fast' loader basic setup... Very good, a bit buggy, only draw back is the lack of support for wifi cards (won't see realtek)... You download it and install it through M$ windows and choose to boot to it... Get online very quickly...

Also have a look at Moon OS a really cool looking ubuntu derivative... Tried it on an old eeepc900 and it ran flawlessly....
post #30 of 39
Mandriva for starters, easy to use. For robustness and solid server configuration I prefer Suse.
post #31 of 39

being deciding on which linux works best for my acer 1604

been trying to decide on which linux version to put on my acer 1604 for some time now, i've got about a dozen disks all with different version of linux, mind you i'm still learning, still dont know how to install software unless i use the repository,,, ahhh never mind i'll learn i suppose,,, hopefully,,,

been reading this article for a while now just digesting stuff,,, doing research on distrowatch but articles helped me out a bit....

good stuff,,,

hope i posted in right place if not sorry
post #32 of 39
You might want to check out other threads in the section about different versions. Many good discussions and tips

cheers ...
post #33 of 39
THANK YOU SO MUCH really helpfull thank you
post #34 of 39
If you want to learn a LOT about how linux works, fire up vmware (or something similar) and do a LFS install in it. I do NOT recommend LFS for a primary OS, but I learned a lot about linux doing it.
post #35 of 39
Quote:
Originally Posted by s0be View Post
If you want to learn a LOT about how linux works, fire up vmware (or something similar) and do a LFS install in it. I do NOT recommend LFS for a primary OS, but I learned a lot about linux doing it.
This is absolutely the wrong advice to give any newbie to Linux. LFS and Gentoo are the two most difficult Distros to use and setup. A new Linux user would be best advised to use a Distro with more "hand-holding", precompiled binaries, and setup tools to help with installation and daily maintenance of the system. Only an experienced user should attempt a sourced based OS like LFS or Gentoo or else they may get discouraged and not give it the chance it deserves.

Only after building up their chops on an Ubuntu, Kubuntu, Debian, Fedora, Suse, Mandriva or PCLOS should one attempt an OS like LFS, IMHO. Since the topic of this thread has been, "How to choose a Distro?" and most of the posters and readers aren't hardcore experienced users, recomending LFS is problematic.

Ciao
post #36 of 39



What release of Zenwalk are you using I would like to do the same on my Dell C400?

Quote:
Originally Posted by mb67 View Post

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ghaz013 View Post
Ive thought about turning an old Pentium 3 computer into a Linux system but again with so many distros I cant decide. My gut feeling was Ubuntu but Im still undecided.
I know that I'm responding to an old post, but I wanted to say that I've been using Zenwalk on my Dell Latitude C400 (Pentium 3 256MB RAM) and have not had any problems.


 

post #37 of 39
Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnnyOnTheSpot View Post

What release of Zenwalk are you using I would like to do the same on my Dell C400?

I did not realize that there is cost involved for this Linux flavor, I am impressed with the minimum hardware support spec and the continuing though ..

- Pentium III class processor
- 256 Mb RAM
- 4Gb HDD

cheers ...
post #38 of 39

happy.gif

 

A Linux distribution is a member of the family of Unix-like operating systems built on top of the Linux kernel. Such distributions (often called distros for short) are Operating systems including a large collection of software applications such as word processors, spreadsheets, media players, and database applications. The operating system will consist of the Linux kernel and, usually, a set of libraries and utilities from the GNU Project, with graphics support from the X Window System. Distributions optimized for size may not contain X and tend to use more compact alternatives to the GNU utilities, such as BusyBox, uClibc, or dietlibc. There are currently over six hundred Linux distributions. Over three hundred of those are in active development, constantly being revised and improved.

Because most of the kernel and supporting packages are free and open source software, Linux distributions have taken a wide variety of forms — from fully featured desktop, server, laptop, netbook, Mobile Phone, and Tablet operating systems as well as minimal environments (typically for use in embedded systems or for booting from a floppy disk). Aside from certain custom software (such as installers and configuration tools), a distribution is most simply described as a particular assortment of applications installed on top of a set of libraries married with a version of the kernel, such that its "out-of-the-box" capabilities meet most of the needs of its particular end-user base.

One can distinguish between commercially-backed distributions, such as Fedora (Red Hat), openSUSE (Novell), Ubuntu (Canonical Ltd.), and Mandriva Linux (Mandriva), and entirely community-driven distributions, such as Debian and Gentoo.

post #39 of 39

happy.gif

 

 

Linux (play /ˈlɪnəks/ lin-əks, also pronounced /ˈlɪnʊks/ lin-uuks) is a Unix-like computer operating system assembled under the model of free and open source software development and distribution. The defining component of any Linux system is the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released October 5, 1991 by Linus Torvalds.

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