DEFINITIVE: Which Linux Distro? (poll for 2006)


  

869 members have voted

  1. 1. Which distro do you use or recommend?

    • Ubuntu/Kubuntu
      415
    • Fedora Core (or Redhat, or RHEL)
      102
    • Novell/SUSE Linux
      96
    • Gentoo (or derivatives)
      85
    • Debian
      50
    • Other Debian Derivative (Mepis, Kanotix, etc)
      17
    • Mandriva
      32
    • Slackware (or derivatives)
      29
    • Linspire
      16
    • Arch
      27
  2. 2. Which desktop environment / window manager?

    • GNOME
      429
    • KDE
      251
    • Xfce
      34
    • fluxbox/openbox/blackbox
      43
    • Enlightenment
      12
    • IceVM
      4
    • TWM or something equally basic
      2
    • GUI? pft. CLI or die!
      10
    • other
      5
    • whatever my distro came with. Is there a choice?
      38


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  • 2 weeks later...

Still a die hard gentoo/kde fan here ;)

I recommend ubuntu/kubuntu for anyone who's not so familiar with linux, but otherwise, compile or shoo.

I could not be happy with my current XGL desktop and application integration. Can't wait until I have some time to conjure up another video

SUSE just plain rocks, and if you have the proper yast sources anything is available that you may want to install (just as with apt) and if you must, apt and yum is easily installed. I have tried just about all there is out there except gentoo and I can tell you SUSE has the best hardware detection out there especialy when it comes to sata drives with simple partitions. Suse is also very easy to upgrade software via yast. i always have the lattest kde.

Gnome as a desktop just doesn't cut it for me even Linus and Klass Knopper will tell you of kde's superior attributes, I have gnome installed but just because I use some of it's apps and they seem to work better with all of gnome. However ubuntu is gaining ground, if they would just get rid of that silly sudo thing before it becomes a serious security risk for the rest of us Linux users. :cool:

Also some might want to give Super SUSE a try.

Edited by betamaxman
  • 2 weeks later...

I recently tried to do a fresh install of the latest ubunto.. didn't work.. i got a screen after install as if my video card died, billions of color's.... weird... something go wrong? I have Asus A8N-SLi Premium, etc. video card is a GeForce 6800GS......Any ideas?? I'm gonna try again tonight on a partition... see if that helps....

Same thing happened to me when i tried the kubuntu/ubuntu live cd, im also on an nvidia geforce, not sure what causes it but when i tried the suse 10.0 live cd it all worked really smoothly, kinda makes me scared to try to install kubuntu on Thursday when i dual-boot...

UBUNTU

GNOME

ubuntu is just a fantastic distrubution, i love it, it works with all my hardware, and is very easy to set up and all.....

gnome is great, so simple, and very customizable, i like how it is not cluttered.

but lately, i have started to use xfce and i like it a lot to, so it might become my default desktop

  • 2 weeks later...

I'm using Ubuntu.

I've used Red Hat, Suse, and Mandrake before, as well as a Mepis Live CD, but Ubuntu has been the first time that Linux has felt fairly usable, although some features still have a way to go, like printer support (since Canon is mute on their HW) and multiple monitor support is lacking - I can't see why there couldn't be a GUI applet for Nvidia Twinview/xorg.conf in Linux that works as in Windows; a couple of clicks and you're done).

I like apt-get and Synaptic once you understand how to use them, beats Windows Update by a mile and makes finding and installing applications a snap. Nautilus is faster than Windows Explorer for me, but missing all of Explorer's features, so it's a bit of a wash.

I would have voted gentoo like a month ago. But, I like ubuntu now. It's clean and well kept. I like all the things they are doing with the system. I have always prefered the *box environments. I switched from fluxbox to openbox and I am pretty happy with it.

--Alex

I love Linux, I really do. But I run BSD when I can for a lot of reasons.

As to the poll - if it's Linux and just for me it would be Ubuntu and IceVM or xfce or just CLI. For commercial work it's SuSe headless, so who cares about an interface. Hay, at least it's not those money-grubbing chicken chokers at Red Hate, uh, I mean Red Hat.

-Will (WillCodeForFood)

I installed Xandros and Ubuntu. Xandros seems to work the best for me, very stable and easy to use for someone used to Windows. I seem to play with Ubuntu and like it but I boot up Xandros for my primary OS and I really prefer KDE. Any way Linux has made my computer fun again.

  • 4 weeks later...

I'm using Ubuntu.

I've used Red Hat, Suse, and Mandrake before, as well as a Mepis Live CD, but Ubuntu has been the first time that Linux has felt fairly usable, although some features still have a way to go, like printer support (since Canon is mute on their HW) and multiple monitor support is lacking - I can't see why there couldn't be a GUI applet for Nvidia Twinview/xorg.conf in Linux that works as in Windows; a couple of clicks and you're done).

I like apt-get and Synaptic once you understand how to use them, beats Windows Update by a mile and makes finding and installing applications a snap. Nautilus is faster than Windows Explorer for me, but missing all of Explorer's features, so it's a bit of a wash.

I think you are confusing linux with vendor support problems.

Can you just imagine how useless windows or osx would be if cannon and all other vendors stopped writing drivers for them?

same thing for nvidia, the nvidia driver is has it is, because of nvidia, not linux. If vendors and software providers who port to linux wanted to they could create installers that would work no differently than windows, I recall the quake 3 installer, almost identical in function and appearance to installing on windows.

The ability is certainly for linux to provide the same functionality has windows, but has i said it is all about support. The good news is things are getting better.

I suggest you take Klaus Knopper's advice, and if your hardware doesn't jive with your distro, return it to where you bought it. Or you could also purchase turbo print.

Mine is definitely Ubuntu with GNOME for now. I don't mind KDE apps, but for some reason synaptic forced me to install games, etc. that I didn't want when I decided to install the KDE WM. Oh well. I also like Xfce and fluxbox when I need to wear down my PC with terminals for installation purposes.

My favourite is Kubuntu (i prefer KDE, but sometimes i use GNOME too :)), because it is simple to use, upgrade and i didn't have any problems with my hardware :D

Before Kubuntu i was using Suse and Debian. Suse was okay, but i didn't like RPM packages. Debian was really great (mostly because of APT packaging system), i just missed more support websites and forums. Then i heard about Ubuntu and i have tried it. Now i'm satisfied Kubuntu user :)

betamaxman, i didn't like Yast in Suse and Yum (or how is this called) in Fedora, because I had to download many additional packages from different websites.

In Kubuntu i simply add extra repositories and then: apt-get update and apt-get install program. This is more simple for me.

I hope you understand :)

betamaxman, i didn't like Yast in Suse and Yum (or how is this called) in Fedora, because I had to download many additional packages from different websites.

In Kubuntu i simply add extra repositories and then: apt-get update and apt-get install program. This is more simple for me.

I hope you understand :)

What you are saying then is you like apt. Yes I understand, but this has nothing at all to do with .deb or rpm. Apt and synaptic are available for both packaging methodes. So you can "apt-get update & apt-get dist-upgrade" or use synaptic in SUSE, Fedora, or just about any other distro that is rpm based. It has nothing to do with .deb over .rpm or .rpm over .deb, neither is any better or worse than the other. I hope you understand :)

Anyway, agreed apt and synaptic do indeed rock.

Basicaly I simply wish people could get over this distro thing and accept the fact that linux is linux. Beyond a slightly differnt look and feel and added or excluded apps and linux kernel modules and installation methods there isn't really much difference from one to the other. :cool:

Edited by betamaxman
  • 2 weeks later...
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