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| Hi - been thinking about changing linux distro. I had a look a the slackware site, but it seems very 'bare bones' compared to suse, gentoo, fedora core etc. Is this OS just for pros? or can it be used by beginner home users like me? thnaks |
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| On Sat, 20 Aug 2005 15:21:13 GMT, kitt <kitt@home.net> wrote: > Hi - been thinking about changing linux distro. I had a look a the > slackware site, but it seems very 'bare bones' compared to suse, gentoo, > fedora core etc. Is this OS just for pros? or can it be used by beginner > home users like me? I don't think it really matters if you're a beginner or not, but rather on what you want to get out of your OS. If you're interested in learning about Linux and learning how to set things up your own way, then Slackware is probably a distro you will like. If you decide to take the plunge, I suggest having a look at the Slackware Linux Essentials, which is at <http://slackbook.org>. -- Mark Hill |
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| kitt wrote: > Hi - been thinking about changing linux distro. I had a look a the > slackware site, but it seems very 'bare bones' compared to suse, gentoo, > fedora core etc. Is this OS just for pros? or can it be used by beginner > home users like me? IMHO, it is true that Slackware isn't for each and everybody. But the point is not how experienced you are, but your motives for using it, and your attitude towards an OS. Slackware is about Doing It Yourself, Being In Charge and Knowing What The Fuck You're Doing. For the quick I-want-this-running-without-thinking-about-it, SuSE and Mandriva are probably better. But if you are interested in how stuff works, or fed up with other distros dictating and restricting your usage, then you are a Slacker at heart A quick note on Debian: Debian is for people who think they're good enough to be a Slacker, but still need to have someone (apt-get) to hold their hands and can't deal with vanilla versions. 'Nuff said ~Mik -- Tabula materna combusta est! // My motherboard's toast! From "Informational Latin" by Henry Beard |
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| 20 Aug 2005 15:21 UTC, kitt typed: > Hi - been thinking about changing linux distro. I had a look a the > slackware site, but it seems very 'bare bones' compared to suse, gentoo, > fedora core etc. Is this OS just for pros? or can it be used by beginner > home users like me? Slackware is great. Looks a bit rough round the edges but it's very well put together. No more difficult than any of the other distros. -- Email: News <news@highspeed.flyer.co.uk> The network is down because: Those damn raccoons! |
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| kitt wrote: > Is this OS just for pros? Yeah, pretty much. > or can it be used by beginner > home users like me? It CAN be if you are willing to spend a lot of time reading the manuals, asking questions, and learning how to do the configuration (i.e. sound/video, apache, mysql, etc.... if you need them) And then you will have to learn how to use Slack's arcane and antiquated package manager when you want to add new software or update what you have. (Note, the package system is not bad, it is just a hell of a lot more complex than Debian's Synaptic/ pt-get or Gentoo's version of ports (taken from BSD.) There have been lots of beginners who have started with Slackware and have been successful and happy with it. But I would advise against it. I think the best route for a newbie is to start with one of the live CD distro's such as Ubuntu or Mepis or Kanotix. If you don't like any of those, after you get a 'taste of Linux' moving 'up' to Slackware will be much easier. It's just a long learning curve for a Linux newbie and unless you are willing to commit to many, many hours of reading docs and asking questions on help-sites (use LinuxQuestions.org, not this NG... as this group is mostly newbie-hostile ... the kirtan's maha mantra here is 'RTFM') you will be better served with a choice of a distro that is more newbie-friendly. The progression I'm seeing these days is that people start with Ubuntu because it gets lots of press, and has won accolades for being easy to install and use (it's a LiveCD). Then I see a lot of folks give my favorite, Kanotix a try... mainly because it is blazingly fast (optimized for i586 hardware). Then, when they feel comfortable, they move to Debian proper. I'm not sure WHY they make the move to Debian from the Debian-forks, but a lot of folks do. Like Debian proper, I'm not sure why anyone moves to Slackware anymore, but lots of people make the switch. The only reason I run it is because it's the only distro that runs WELL on some older hardware I have. Bottom line, you don't 'move' to Slackware.... you commit to it. It has a unique 'way' of doing things and a very unique community... most often hostile to newbies who ask dumb-ass questions... like the one you asked. :-) :-) :-) <g> Al C. |
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| On 2005-08-20, kitt <kitt@home.net> espoused the following: > Hi - been thinking about changing linux distro. I had a look a the > slackware site, but it seems very 'bare bones' compared to suse, gentoo, > fedora core etc. Is this OS just for pros? or can it be used by beginner > home users like me? > > thnaks kitt, I am just an average home user, not in the IT biz in any stretch of the imagination. I would try several different distros including Slackware. You have nothing to lose by trying. Slack will require a bit more of a time commitment than the big distros. But the trade off is that you have a more stable system, IME. Good Luck, Scott Cole -- Only trust pipesmoking penguins. "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." --Benjamin Franklin |
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| kitt wrote: > Hi - been thinking about changing linux distro. I had a look a the > slackware site, but it seems very 'bare bones' compared to suse, gentoo, > fedora core etc. Is this OS just for pros? or can it be used by beginner > home users like me? > > thnaks Kitt, go for it! In some respects Slackware does things differently to other distros, so for that alone you might want to try it just to see what its about. Personally I found using Suse 7.0 tricky, too many packages, too many sub packages, so many dependencies and bugs, I found it difficult to learn how to use and very difficult to add my own stuff / change things. Then I tried Slackware 8.1, after giving up on Suse, it was a breath of fresh air. It worked, and I could change things quite easily. It was a steep learning curve as I had no idea what I was doing, but it was Slackware which got me hooked on Linux and OSS. Is it right for you, well, theres only one way your going to find that out |
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| Chiefy blithely blithered > 20 Aug 2005 15:21 UTC, kitt typed: >> Hi - been thinking about changing linux distro. I had a look a the >> slackware site, but it seems very 'bare bones' compared to suse, gentoo, >> fedora core etc. Is this OS just for pros? or can it be used by beginner >> home users like me? > > Slackware is great. Looks a bit rough round the edges but it's very well > put together. No more difficult than any of the other distros. function rant() { I dont know where you're buying your CDs from but go somewhere else. "Rough around the edges"? I dont even know what that means. Slackware has never gone haywire on me for no particular reason. It hasn't changed much in the years I've been using it, so I'm pretty much finished with the learning curve. Almost everything compiles on it properly the first time and if it doesn't, I didn't need it in the first place. Compared to the other OS on my computer (it didn't even come with a compiler!) it's so smooth around the edges it's practically a perpetual motion machine, just roll it down the street. I've seen pool balls with edges so rough in comparison I could use them to sand my deck with. Slack, in a nutshell, rocks. } rant -- Some programming languages manage to absorb change but withstand progress. |
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| kitt <kitt@home.net> wrote: > Hi - been thinking about changing linux distro. I had a look a the > slackware site, but it seems very 'bare bones' compared to suse, gentoo, > fedora core etc. Is this OS just for pros? or can it be used by beginner > home users like me? Main difference is the packaging system. Other distros break up packages into many sub-packages, which is the very reason for many of the dependency problem that you hear about. Whereas, Slackware tends to have packages as self-contained as possible. Also, in other distros, you are given choice of "server", "workstation", etc. installation types. No such concept exists in Slackware. Whether a machine is server or not, depends on whether or not it runs server program. That's all. Initial label during installation has nothing to do with it. What I do (and recommend) is install everything from the 2-CD set to harddisk. Then, configure which services (/etc/rc.d/rc.*, /etc/inetd.conf, etc.) you want enabled. -- William Park <opengeometry@yahoo.ca>, Toronto, Canada ThinFlash: Linux thin-client on USB key (flash) drive http://home.eol.ca/~parkw/thinflash.html BashDiff: Super Bash shell http://freshmeat.net/projects/bashdiff/ |
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| On 2005-08-20, kitt <kitt@home.net> wrote: > Hi - been thinking about changing linux distro. I had a look a the > slackware site, but it seems very 'bare bones' compared to suse, gentoo, > fedora core etc. Is this OS just for pros? or can it be used by beginner > home users like me? > > thnaks Contrary to what you may read in this thread, Slackware is rock solid, a good choice for dedicated users. The biggest hit against slackware is that its package manager is old or it's only good on some older machines. That's utter bullshit, the mumblings of amateurs. Slackware only requires that you use some of those gray cells between your ears...it requires you to think and read. It's as simple as that. ken |