Definitive: Which Linux Distro? (2011)


Definitive: Which Linux Distro? (2011)  

348 members have voted

  1. 1. Your Choice?

    • Ubuntu (Kubuntu, Xubuntu, Edubuntu, Mythbuntu)
      165
    • Fedora (Fedora: BLAG Linux and GNU) / (Red Hat: CentOS)
      31
    • openSUSE (SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop/Server)
      12
    • Debian GNU/Linux (MEPIS Linux, sidux, Damn Small Linux)
      25
    • Mandriva Linux
      2
    • Linux Mint
      52
    • PCLinuxOS
      3
    • Slackware Linux
      4
    • Gentoo Linux
      8
    • CentOS
      5
    • Arch Linux
      37
    • Sabayon Linux
      1
    • Puppy Linux
      2
    • Chakra GNU/Linux
      1


Recommended Posts

Gnome or KDE?

Definately GNOME for me.. I absolutely hate KDE. It feels way to bloated and slow compared to GNOME.

I also just installed openSUSE 12.1 with Gnome 3.2.1 and its bloody amazing.. Love YaST2 and software management in openSUSE, also feels more stable. Think im going to make the switch from Fedora to openSUSE.

Can anyone point out the pro's and con's of openSUSE and Fedora?

  • 1 month later...

I'm amazed ANYONE uses that mandriva rubbish being quite honest.

Setup my arch server recently (I guess with arch being bleeding-edge, that's either going to be a very good choice with less security flaws than the current most-deployed versions, or ultra-stupid for instability and whatnot) :(.

I'm amazed ANYONE uses that mandriva rubbish being quite honest.

One of those votes was mine...lol At the beginning of the year I was using Mandriva. I have since switched. I want to like Mandriva, as it was the first one I tried, but sadly, they need to get back on the track they use to be on...

I've been using Ubuntu for the past couple of years at work on my primary machine. I just installed Linux Mint on my secondary machine because I've recently read some great reviews about it. Though I haven't used Mint enough to really form an opinion of it yet it seems good.

The problem nowdays with picking a linux distro is the pretty much "there is too much - too based on xxxx distro" problem.

Either you go for a Debian distro for the sake of having a rolling release, but in the other hand, can't really have the cutting edge experience or you'll end up having to go for unstable repositories and with a bigger chance of breaking up the system.

Or you go for a ubuntu based release, but isn't really the slickest experience due the eventual bloat you'll experience. In the other hand, perhaps you're better this way since it have all the compilers needed or un-needed. Then you have the source vs deb vs rpm thing (generalizing, without mentioning ports from bsd and gentoo systems).

The basic thing is what you're aiming to do with it. If it's a server, then aim for safety and stability (debian, slack, redhat), if you're using on laptop / desktop and don't have much concerns about it, then you can try ubuntu, mint, suse, etc... if you're willing to learn, arch, slackware, even debian has a slight learning curve, but not as much lately (been easier to use).

Well this post is about nothing and all, it's the problem these days, you have too much to pick from and you'll want to experience "everything", so you don't get stuck in one distro, you end up switching distro to distro after a few days.

The distro I tried and used it for a longer time was slackware. Not easy, but once it works, it works, but the lack of a update system made me gave up. However it was on slack where I learned to compile a kernel.

I have installed Mint, but too easy, almost no leaning curve unless you'll go play with it further. There's almost no middle ground.

Then you have gentoo, where you spend more time compiling and emerging than actually using the software itself.

Well, I don't know, I don't even know if having too much to choose is a good thing or a bad thing for linux to enter mainstream.

Either way, I still use it, because I like being diferent :b

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Audacity 3.7.8 by Razvan Serea Audacity is a free, open source digital audio editor and recording application. Edit your sounds using cut, copy, and paste features (with unlimited undo functionality), mix tracks, or apply effects to your recordings. The program also has a built-in amplitude-envelope editor, a customizable spectrogram mode, and a frequency-analysis window for audio-analysis applications. Built-in effects include bass boost, wah wah, and noise removal, and the program also supports VST plug-in effects. You can use Audacity to: Record live audio. Record computer playback on any Windows Vista or later machine. Convert tapes and records into digital recordings or CDs. Edit WAV, AIFF, FLAC, MP2, MP3 or Ogg Vorbis sound files. AC3, M4A/M4R (AAC), WMA and other formats supported using optional libraries. Cut, copy, splice or mix sounds together. Numerous effects including change the speed or pitch of a recording. Write your own plug-in effects with Nyquist. And more! See the complete list of features. Audacity 3.7.8 changelog: #10688 Fixed an exception thrown when pasting into a newly-created track (Thanks, David Bailes (@DavidBailes)!) #10870, #10884, #10775, #10629 Fixed tone generation, waveform-scale setting, SetClip Name parameter, and clip-boundary command names for scripting and macros (Thank you, David Bailes (@DavidBailes)!) #11106 Fixed the loading of presets for the Distortion effect (A million thanks, David Bailes (@DavidBailes)!) #10947 Fixed paste into an empty audio track not preserving the source sample rate (Thanks, Juan Gabriel Colonna (@juancolonna)!) #10776 Allowed AltGr modifier in label and clip name editing (Thanks, Davide Peressoni (@DPDmancul)!) #9938 Added options to choose where silence is truncated (start/middle/end) (Thanks, Noah Rosenfield (@nosenfield)!) #9935 Added Podcast 2.0 chapters JSON export for label tracks (Thanks, Noah Rosenfield (@nosenfield)!) #10103 Improve UI on HiDPI displays on Linux/wxGTK (Thanks, Ivan A. Melnikov (@iv-m)!) #10099 Fixed MixerBoard Mute and Solo button display (Thanks, Ivan A. Melnikov (@iv-m)!) #10681 Fixed multichannel FLAC import #10999 Fixed envelope being broken after joining clips Download: Audacity 64-bit | Standalone ~20.0 MB (Open Source) Download: Audacity 32-bit | Standalone Download: Audacity ARM64 | Standalone View: Audacity Home Page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • There really isn't anything magical about the low latency profile, other OS's do this as well. All they're doing is using your CPUs boost clock options in a more smarter way.
    • So we shouldn't have the option because of people using their laptops on battery? OK? LOL
    • If you hear that fans for a limited time the CPU spikes to open a app I don't think the problem is with the software. There shouldn't be enough time spent at the higher clocks to produce enough heat to peak the fans. Maybe it's time to crack those dell laptops open and clean them out?
    • ActivePresenter 10.5.1 by Razvan Serea ActivePresenter is a screen recording, video editing, and eLearning authoring tool with a range variety of powerful features, helping you to capture screen and edit captured videos in a matter of minutes. Create professional screencasts that contain stunning annotations and effects, high-resolution graphics, videos, and voiceovers. You can capture any application on your computer, customize it easily by adding background music, closed caption, zoom-n-pan, etc., and finally export it to popular outputs (video, document) that can run on any device or platform. ActivePresenter allows you to generate the presentations in many different output forms such as image, videos (MP4, MKV, and AVI), HTML SlideShows, HTML5 simulations, and documents. More importantly, ActivePresenter free version provides full access to all video editing features, and you can edit and export videos without time limit, watermarks, or ads. ActivePresenter Free Edition features: Advanced recording features: Full Motion Recording, Smart Capture Video editing: Cut, Crop, Join, Change Volume, Speed Up, Slow Down, Blur Multiple Audio/Video Layers Rich annotations: Shapes, Image, Zoom-n-Pan, Closed Caption, Cursor Path, Audio/Video Overlays Automatic Smart Annotation Export to: MP4, FLV, AVI, WMV, WebM, MKV No Watermark and No Time Limit Clean & Safe: No adware, No Annoying Ads ActivePresenter 10.5.1 fixes: [Import PowerPoint]: Only the first slide is imported from some Canva-generated PowerPoint presentations. [Import PowerPoint]: Some Chinese theme fonts are resolved incorrectly. Embedded YouTube videos cannot generate preview thumbnails in the editor or play in HTML5 preview. [macOS]: Resources could be inserted into the current slide unintentionally when clicking or dragging in the Resources pane. [Publish uPresenter]: "Failed to process the presentation" error sometimes appears when publishing projects to uPresenter. [SCORM]: User responses are not reported to the LMS for Mouse Click and Key Stroke interactions. Custom hotkeys are reset or incorrectly remapped after updating from version 10.1.2 or earlier. Download: ActivePresenter 10.5.1 | 176.0 MB (Free, paid upgrade available) Download: ActivePresenter 10.5.1 for macOS | 227.0 MB Links: ActivePresenter Website | Demos | Tutorials | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      Star Processing earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Star Processing earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      Star Processing earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      FBSPL earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      Jim Dugan earned a badge
      One Year In
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      495
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      198
    3. 3
      +Edouard
      155
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      84
    5. 5
      ATLien_0
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!