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Blue|Fusion Rated XXX
Joined: 30 May 2005 Posts: 441 Location: Cleveland, OH
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Posted: Sat, 25 Mar 2006 13:30:14 Post Subject: |
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If you want a linux OS that is will last you a long time without being outdated and needin to upgrade with downloading ISOs and garbage and don't want to put up with having to reinstall after you try and fail to do something that ruins the system (we all have those days...), then I suggest Gentoo. I live by it. I love it. Works great on both a P-D 3.2GHz and a P-II 350MHz . Download the 2006.0 minimal installation CD to do the install the real guru way from command line or get the new LiveCD with GUI installer.
EDIT: And installed with KDE and minimal apps, Gentoo installed in about 1.1GB of HDD space on the 350MHz PC. |
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Little Bruin
Boo Boo
Joined: 07 Apr 2003
Posts: 667
Location: Pic-A-Nic Basket |
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knight0334 Rated XXX
Joined: 22 Aug 2003 Posts: 2234 Location: Neither Here, Nor There
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BeerCheeze *hick*
Joined: 14 Jun 2003 Posts: 9285 Location: At the Bar
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Blue|Fusion Rated XXX
Joined: 30 May 2005 Posts: 441 Location: Cleveland, OH
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Posted: Sat, 25 Mar 2006 14:27:32 Post Subject: |
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I don't know about other distros but Gentoo now has modular xorg 7.0 in portage which can save some space if you install X. KDE has also been split up (by Gentoo devs) so you only need to install what you want and not waste so much space. Another plus about compiling is not having all the extra libs you don't need installed by RPMs which is why BSD or Gentoo or Slackware is good. I'm guessing SLAX is based off slackware?
And with a bunch of small drives, use LVM (Linux Volume Management). That way it acts as one big root (/) partition instead of seperate mountpoints. _________________ 5 home-built PCs, ASUS A6Jc Laptop, and a PowerEdge 2650 - all running Gentoo. Now if only I can get a car and plane to run it. Take a look at my Gallery! |
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