Distribution Finder
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Author | Content |
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linuxscreenshot Jun 24, 2014 10:22 AM EDT |
Distribution Finder is another good tool. [link removed] |
flufferbeer Jun 24, 2014 11:34 AM EDT |
@linuxscreemshot, > Distribution Finder is another good tool. Nice selection tool that AVOIDS emphasizing Baboontu and its wannabes like how some other How-to-Choose-a-Linux-Distro selection tools and how the BeerkleyLUG blogposting all seem to do! Only major weakness with this tool seems to be the inclusion of overly large number of tha onesy-twosy Base distros here, like Android, CRUX, DSL, KNOPPIX, KuBOOboontu, LFS, openSUSE, Salix, Thinstation, TC. Just my 2c |
lqsh Jun 24, 2014 1:16 PM EDT |
Shouldn't a distro chooser/finder show all available options, and not downplay Ubuntu or your so called "onesy-twosy Base distros", that don't appeal to you personally? |
mbaehrlxer Jun 24, 2014 1:28 PM EDT |
what do you mean by onesy-twosy Base distros? given their history, i don't see what's wrong with some of the base distros you criticize: Android is significantly different from anything else to warrant inclusion. same goes for DSL and LFS. knoppix, openSUSE are certainly old enough too. only kubuntu and lubuntu i'd throw out as redundant. what's missing in the selection though is a choice of packaging formats. and some javascript to make the available choices automatically adapt to the selections already made. greetings, eMBee. |
vainrveenr Jun 25, 2014 11:49 AM EDT |
Quoting:Shouldn't a distro chooser/finder show all available options, and not downplay Ubuntu or your so called "onesy-twosy Base distros", that don't appeal to you personally? Since the author of the piece extensively brings DistroWatch links, another DistroWatch link is its own "chooser/finder", found at http://distrowatch.com/search.php. Instead of the three Category, Desktop and Base chooser headings of the Distribution Finder, DistroWatch's Simple Search Form has the eight chooser criteria of: And DistroWatch's Advanced Search Form vastly expands on this with over 200 available options, so the distro results of given search can at least in theory be much more finely-tuned compared to the Distribution Finder. |
Scott_Ruecker Jun 26, 2014 12:07 AM EDT |
I am going to finally finally finally get started with Linux From Scratch soon, that will put wrinkles on my brain gosh darnit! |
gary_newell Jun 26, 2014 3:38 AM EDT |
"I am going to finally finally finally get started with Linux From Scratch soon, that will put wrinkles on my brain gosh darnit!" My advice if you are going to do this is do it in stages on a spare machine and make sure you read more of the theory rather than worry about the coded steps too much otherwise you will find yourself copying and pasting code without necessarily understanding why. I managed to get through and create a Linux From Scratch build and it helped a lot from a personal understanding about how Linux works in general. It can be frustrating at times though |
Steven_Rosenber Jun 26, 2014 12:54 PM EDT |
Quoting:I am going to finally finally finally get started with Linux From Scratch soon, that will put wrinkles on my brain gosh darnit! Isn't Arch enough? |
gus3 Jun 26, 2014 6:35 PM EDT |
gary_newell, Gentoo can automate the frustration for you. |
mbaehrlxer Jun 27, 2014 3:21 AM EDT |
you mean with gentoo frustration is automatic? ;-) doesn't gentoo also automate away most of the learning? greetings, eMBee. |
Steven_Rosenber Jun 27, 2014 12:56 PM EDT |
You can use Ports in BSD (Free-, Open- and probably the others, too), and have compiler messages whisk across your terminal for hours on end, but you really don't have to know anything much to make it happen. |
vainrveenr Jun 27, 2014 4:28 PM EDT |
Quoting:I managed to get through and create a Linux From Scratch build and it helped a lot from a personal understanding about how Linux works in general. Quoting:you mean with gentoo frustration is automatic? ;-) The quintessentially "frustrating" alternative is apparently Slackware Linux, number 32 in the blogpiece author's extensive list of DistroWatch references. AAMOF, Slackware Linux has attracted past frustration from its users and reviewers, even noted here at LXer. Most notably: - The post 'Slackware 12.1 First Impressions', linked to at LXer via http://lxer.com/module/newswire/view/103421 along with its extensive More nonsense about Slackware comment thread. - The post 'Slackware Linux 13.0 - Oldest Linux Distro Gets Major Overhaul [DistroWatch Weekly #323]', linked to at LXer via http://lxer.com/module/newswire/view/126280 along with its extensive A balanced and complete review comment thread. Another related quote is the following from the LXer thread Strange Comments On Mandriva: Quoting:Quoting:If you are one of the Linux users who is looking for a bit of an education in your Linux experience ... Would perhaps one or more readers agree, from the above, that LFS, Slackware, or Gentoo will themselves probably be more frustrating to learn than Ubuntu, and yet will certainly enable adopters of one of the former three distros to learn Linux quite well ?? |
gus3 Jun 27, 2014 4:50 PM EDT |
I just want the system to do what I want! Oh, and a pet unicorn. |
jdixon Jun 27, 2014 4:59 PM EDT |
> Would readers readily agree that LFS, Slackware, or Gentoo will be frustrating to learn, and yet will enable adopters to really learn Linux quite well ?? Uhm, no. Slackware is easy to learn. It, depending on what you want to do with it, can be frustrating to setup/use. Slackware is missing many of the "ease of use" and "enterprise" features of many other distro's. It doesn't do dependency checking/installation for you. It doesn't include PAM. It doesn't include SELinux. It doesn't have Gnome. It doesn't preconfigure everything out of the box the way some other distro's do. Its repository of precompilled software is smaller than most other distro's. But, IMO, it is easy to learn, and if you only need what's included by default (true for probably 80+% of home users), it's pretty much as easy to use as any other distro. If I were setting up a server for enterprise use which needed the extra features of PAM, SELinux, etc., then I wouldn't consider Slackware. If I were a user wanting to easily install/uninstall every program under the sun I wouldn't consider Slackware. But if I want a simple, fast, and rock solid installation that does only what I want and nothing else, then I'd use either Slackware or Arch. |
lcafiero Jun 29, 2014 3:11 PM EDT |
Sorry that I'm late to this party, but I have to say that this is awe-inspiring. Simply awe-inspiring. So apparently we can categorize distros into Ubuntu and its family, Ubuntu-based, Debian-based, and -- wait for it -- everyone else and remain oblivious to the fact that Red Hat and Slackware and their derivatives consistently and historically have contributed far more than the vowel-laden poseur. Amazing. |
jdixon Jun 29, 2014 4:00 PM EDT |
> ...and remain oblivious to the fact that Red Hat and Slackware and their derivatives consistently and historically have contributed far more than the vowel-laden poseur. You do have a way with words, Larry. :) Now, tells us what you really think. |
vainrveenr Jun 29, 2014 10:30 PM EDT |
From an above commentator in this thread ::
Quoting:> Distribution Finder is another good tool. OTOH, from the presumably identical commentator commenting in the past More nonsense about Slackware thread :: Quoting:I've written before, the degree of newbie-friendliness, user-friendliness, performance, upgreadeability, a host of others factors in a Linux distro is like brewing beer. From an above commentator in this thread :: Quoting:Quoting:I am going to finally finally finally get started with Linux From Scratch soon, that will put wrinkles on my brain gosh darnit! OTOH, from the presumably identical commentator commenting in the past More nonsense about Slackware thread :: Quoting:Triple-booting Ubuntu, Debian and Slackware -- I might just do that. From an above commentator in this thread :: Quoting:Slackware is easy to learn. It, depending on what you want to do with it, can be frustrating to setup/use. OTOH, from the presumably identical commentator commenting in the past More nonsense about Slackware thread :: Quoting:The three advanced user distros I could argue for would be Debian, Gentoo, and Slackware. Both Debian and Slackware are far easier for beginners than they used to be, but neither is ready for the absolute newbie. I've never used Gentoo, so I can't speak for it personally, but people I trust recommend it. And again further down the same same thread :: Quoting:> Because if you use one of the so-called "user-friendly" distributions, you'll never learn anything, and you'll always be a "newbie." And yet again, further down in the same thread with the comment ending as follows :: Quoting:> Slackware is a great base on which to build a distribution. For most people it is anything but a great distribution in and of itself. -- Perhaps whether they readily admit it or not, various persons here may agree in the end that at least for Slackware, its own adopters will certainly learn Linux quite well ?? |
jdixon Jun 30, 2014 6:44 AM EDT |
> ...at least for Slackware, its own adopters will certainly learn Linux quite well ?? I apologize. I should have noted that I agree with that portion of the statement. :) It's only the hard to learn part that I disagreed with. Though since it doesn't use the same update tools as Debian or Red Hat, and is missing their "enterprise" features, you won't learn everything you need to know to maintain a system you might use at work. And yes, if it isn't obvious, I use Slackware. There are a handful of us here who do. |
Steven_Rosenber Jun 30, 2014 9:42 AM EDT |
Quoting:So apparently we can categorize distros into Ubuntu and its family, Ubuntu-based, Debian-based, and -- wait for it -- everyone else and remain oblivious to the fact that Red Hat and Slackware and their derivatives consistently and historically have contributed far more than the vowel-laden poseur. It would have been nice for the article to mention that Ubuntu is a Debian derivative, CentOS is a Red Hat clone, and that Slackware has its own derivatives, for sure. |
lcafiero Jun 30, 2014 12:45 PM EDT |
Steven_Rosenber - There are multiple problems with this list, the most glaring of which is that the person who compiled it, at the very least, didn't do his or her homework and, at worst, compiled it with the complete intention of shilling for Ubuntu without any proper regard for history and contribution. The truth lies somewhere in between, no doubt, and if I were a gambling man, I'd bet on the side of lack of proper research. My guess is that despite the fact there's a disclaimer regarding the various levels of those who post -- and this would definitely be Exhibit A -- I would hope that Berkeley LUG would get a tighter grip on vetting materials they post. |
flufferbeer Jun 30, 2014 2:02 PM EDT |
@Steven_Rosenb and @lcafier, > It would have been nice for the article to mention that Ubuntu is a Debian derivative, CentOS is a Red Hat clone, and that Slackware has its own derivatives, for sure. > There are multiple problems with this list, the most glaring of which is that the person who compiled it, at the very least, didn't do his or her homework and, at worst, compiled it with the complete intention of shilling for Ubuntu without any proper regard for history and contribution. +2 .... another possible Baboontu fanboi there. Seems to me that one or both of you should consider submitting a better post to that particular LUG! @vainveen, > OTOH, from the presumably identical commentator commenting in the past More nonsense about Slackware thread :: And your point is what? That I don't like Baboontu as I just wrote above?? That Slack remains a definite non-nwebie distro? I see ZERO inconsistency in what I wrote then and now! -fb |
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