What is the learning curve on Arch? Ive dabbled a bit but nothing serious.onken said:I used Fedora for years but the 6 month release cycle just fucks me off too much, really what is the point?
Moved to Arch about a year ago and haven't look back; lean, fast, intuitive and rolling release.
onken said:I used Fedora for years but the 6 month release cycle just fucks me off too much, really what is the point?
Moved to Arch about a year ago and haven't look back; lean, fast, intuitive and rolling release.
Right, then I assume that it's Opera failing (it's also crashing somewhat frequently, I wish their Linux versions were better). Thanks!Polari said:Seems OK here, but if it's enough of annoyance maybe switching to Chrome (which uses its own Flash install) might help.
Wow, Minitube works fantasticly. But no ads = no money to some channels I like to support. If I understand things correctly right now it's Google's fault but even so...itxaka said:I use minitube for youtube videos. Blazing fast, all the options, none of the problems. Give it a try if you want. It's a bit of problematic to having to cut and paste the youtube lnk but well, takes a couple of seconds.
medium to low as far as I'm awarePctx said:What is the learning curve on Arch? Ive dabbled a bit but nothing serious.
Nope, it's what the majority of people that aren't interested in Gnome 3 are moving to. Even Linus made the switch to XFCE because of it.Brettison said:Am I crazy for thinking at this point if you want a Gnome fork just use XFCE 4.8 instead? I mean it's already out, and basically everything everyone wanted from the old gnome anyways. Plus it's light on system resources.
yes, xfce is not gnome2. and besides, lxde is better.Brettison said:Am I crazy for thinking at this point if you want a Gnome fork just use XFCE 4.8 instead? I mean it's already out, and basically everything everyone wanted from the old gnome anyways. Plus it's light on system resources.
Tworak said:yes, xfce is not gnome2. and besides, lxde is better.
Mint is very user friendly and probably the best for transition from WIndows to Linux. Ubuntu has a large community and support. Fedora is a good distro for a work computer maybe? Why not give them all a try and see which one you like. Start out with Mint to learn some of the basics for Linux and then move on to other distros. Yeah, Linux is less bloated than Windows and will offer better performance.BoboBrazil said:So what's the way to go for Linux? Ubuntu, Fedora, or Mint? I've been thinking about switching away from Windows 7 for awhile now. Linux should offer me better performance yes?
MC RaZaR said:Mint is very user friendly and probably the best for transition from WIndows to Linux. Ubuntu has a large community and support. Fedora is a good distro for a work computer maybe? Why not give them all a try and see which one you like. Start out with Mint to learn some of the basics for Linux and then move on to other distros. Yeah, Linux is less bloated than Windows and will offer better performance.
Andrex said:In the meantime, at least mess around with Fedora 16, just came out yesterday and has a great new desktop environment you won't find anywhere else.
BoboBrazil said:Thanks, should I go with the 32bit or 64 bit edition? I'm on an athlon 4000+ with 4 gigs of ram. I should wait for Mint 12 to come out right? It seems like it is coming in a few weeks at the latest.
you mean like:barnone said:In my bash terminal, is there a way to create a shortened variable for a path like this:
https://blablabla.bla.bla/blabla/~bla
so that I don't have to type it out everytime? Something maybe like how $HOME or $PATH stores stuff. Thanks !
barnone said:In my bash terminal, is there a way to create a shortened variable for a path like this:
https://blablabla.bla.bla/blabla/~bla
so that I don't have to type it out everytime? Something maybe like how $HOME or $PATH stores stuff. Thanks !
Andrex said:Hrm, isn't Debian mostly used as a command line/server OS though?
All this makes me wonder how Gnome OS will look and play when it finally surfaces. There's a lot to look forward to in the development of that DE right now, love it.Andrex said:So is all you really want is a Gnome-using distro that can open .deb's?
Taking bets on Mint going GNOME 3.4 in next release??Brettison said:They definitely seem a little more forward thinking design wise. Gnome Shell going forward screams lets creative side of the brain to me where as Unity seems more Left Brain.
What would be killer for me is if the next version of Debian went straight Gnome Shell. That would be A to the WESOME, and probably immediately become my defacto linux distro.
Why bet? It's confirmed Or do you mean specifially 3.4?Pctx said:Taking bets on Mint going GNOME 3.4 in next release??
peakish said:Why bet? It's confirmed Or do you mean specifially 3.4?
They've definitely got some nice ideas with their extensions, I was thinking that some distributions would modify it in some ways and the Mint developers seem to make some good decisions in staying relevant.
And of course disabling the extensions and going fully vanilla Gnome should be trivial.
Pctx said:yeah I knew it was ... It just adds more fuel to the fire of Ubuntu users jumping ship to Mint over Ubuntu. Course for me, it comes down to whatever seems to work which GNOME does work quite well for a desktop UI.
What's up with SUSE? Why does it seem like the distro use to be a big deal in the Linux community, but now it feels like nobody cares?
it's relatively big in Europe still. or used to. who knows where it goes now after Novell went tits up.What's up with SUSE? Why does it seem like the distro use to be a big deal in the Linux community, but now it feels like nobody cares?
we use SUSE at work...
and.......?
Just responding to the "nobody cares" about SUSE comment.
It feels like it might be more popular for non-personal computers?
Well Intel used to run SuSe for a long time but have since switched over to Red Hat and Fedora for its development junk.
I never had any ill will towards SuSe other than its Novel past.
Actually, I work at Intel and the computer I VNC into still uses SUSE (at least, I'm pretty sure it does...)
Well, big company, I'm sure there's lots of different OS's used.
You by chance working on Legacy stuff? Only reason I ask is because I know the guys out at Jones Farm are running hardcore RHL development servers.