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19th September 2004, 05:45 AM
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Alternatives to Fedora
After using SuSE 8.0 for almost two years, I decided to switch to Fedora. Currently using FC2 (pretty happy with it BTW). However, there is one thing that I do not like about Fedora. It seems like if you want to remain up-to-date with the latest and greatest GNOME or KDE, you have to keep reinstalling the entire OS every 6 months---since updates to GNOME or any other core packages are not provided (I have seen posts here that recommend waiting for FC3 for xorg and GNOME 2.8) For FC2 users that leaves no choice but to wait for FC3 and do a complete reinstall.
Back when I was using SuSE and KDE, I remember updating KDE a few times (went from 3.0 to 3.1.1). Then after about 12 months that I had bought SuSE 8.0 Professional, updates to KDE were no longer provided (updates were only available for version 8.1 and above for the latest KDE). Thus again, for SuSE you have to keep reinstalling the entire OS about every 12 or so months.
I am looking for a distribution of Linux that does not have a Core version #. I mean there should not be anything like Mandrake 9.0, 9.1, 10.0, or FC1, FC2, FC3 and so forth. What I am looking for is something that installs easily and then all you have to do is to use the distribution's specific repository to keep updating the system and be using the latest and the greatest core packages---I should be able to upgrade to any newer version of gcc, any version of GNOME, any version of glibc etc etc. indefinitely.
Does such a distribution exist? I looked at Gentoo's website and it seems like it is such a distribution, but sorry....I don't want to take a complete month to install it---neither am I willing to learn all the command line tools and learn everything about Linux down to every souce line of code to operate it.
I am looking for the polishes look'n feel and ease of install of Fedora but a never ending update support---6 months isn't really that impressive.
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19th September 2004, 05:50 AM
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Join Date: Feb 2004
Age: 44
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mandrake and slackware apply in this case, you can also visit www.distrowatch.com for more distros
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19th September 2004, 07:38 AM
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Maybe not Slackware. I've heard it's tough to work with because of it's lack of GUI tools. And he seems to be looking for a fairly basic, easy to use distro.
__________________
Communist Penguins shall enslave us all!
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19th September 2004, 07:56 AM
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Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: New Zealand
Age: 34
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Maybe Debian would be the way to go, or perhaps one of the countless "Debian-based" distros
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19th September 2004, 08:15 AM
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I think gentoo would do aswell. That is if you're not looking for an easy distro. Even though gentoo isn't that hard either, the tinkering just takes time.
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19th September 2004, 08:18 AM
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by inha
I think gentoo would do aswell. That is if you're not looking for an easy distro. Even though gentoo isn't that hard either, the tinkering just takes time.
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no kidding.....everything is done by command.
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19th September 2004, 09:10 AM
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: France
Age: 34
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maybe yopper , linspire or xandros ??
deuch
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19th September 2004, 11:13 AM
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Age: 58
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I have been using Fedora for about 8 months (my first linux distribution BTW) and I think in a very similar way as you: I don't want to have to reinstall (I know you can do an upgrade via CDs or YUM/APT but I experienced problems doing that last time, because of the switch from OSS to ALSA among other issues) every 4 months. I simply want to get updates and that's it. This is why I switched to WhiteBox Enterprise Linux 3 ( http://whiteboxlinux.org/) some week ago - it's a "clone" (i.e. it is based on the sources) of RedHat's Enterprise Linux 3 and the project will provide updates until October 2008 (!), so no reinstall needed until then! Installation is almost exactly the same as Fedora, hardware detection is great, you have the choice between "desktop/notebook", "workstation" (same thing but with developer packages included), "server" or "custom". For your work you can use the same config tools as with Fedora, there is Gnome as well as KDE, you get the same applications as with Fedora (OpenOffice, Evolution, Mozilla, GAIM, etc.), even the desktop looks very similar.
Another thing I don't like with Fedora is that there sometimes are real alpha and beta packages in the repositories - only a few weeks ago my cd burning drive suddenly stopped working because of an unsupported cdrecord package that made it into the repositories - and I never used "at-testing" or "at-bleeding", only "at-stable" and "at-good", mind you. With WhiteBox, you will get only very thouroughly tested, reliable packages. That can as well be a disadvantage if you must always have the latest features, of course, but I don't mind, personally.
BTW, I'm not going to say I don't like Fedora or anything, in fact I like it very much it's just the two things above that made me switch to WhiteBox. That's because I'm not a developer or a technology enthusiast, I'm only a user who wants his work done properly and so I can't have packages so "up to date" that they mess up my system.
Just my two cents  .
kilrex
Last edited by kilrex; 19th September 2004 at 11:16 AM.
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19th September 2004, 11:34 AM
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Kilrex,
if you are using K3B with fedora, there is a bug with the 2.6.8.1 kernel with K3B ... you cant' use your cd burner with tis kernel (ic have the same problem with a debian).
K3B is a "front-end" for cdrecord and consor ...
I d'ont know the whitebox, thanks for the link, i will take a eyes on it :-)
deuch
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19th September 2004, 11:59 AM
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by deuch
Kilrex,
if you are using K3B with fedora, there is a bug with the 2.6.8.1 kernel with K3B ... you cant' use your cd burner with tis kernel (ic have the same problem with a debian).
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I know, but this is not the problem. I was using 2.6.7 (Vanilla) then - it was a "broken" package (it even said to me upon startup that it was an experimental edition), I have to know for I'm not using a front-end to burn cd's...
Quote:
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Originally Posted by deuch
K3B is a "front-end" for cdrecord and consor ...
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Yes, see above  .
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Originally Posted by deuch
I d'ont know the whitebox, thanks for the link, i will take a eyes on it :-)
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Okay, maybe you could really like it  .
kilrex
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19th September 2004, 01:28 PM
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Location: Warsaw, Poland
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yes you need to upgrade entire system - what problem is that? it takes like 15 min. you don't need to reinstall it - you upgrade it. you can do upgrade and work on the system in the same time.
fedora is meant to be like bleeding edge distro. the main focus with fedora is on developement on new cool features. developers want to develop not to maintain software to work on old versions (since fedora is free you can always install a new version and it is quite straight forward to upgrade). I think it is good aproach.
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19th September 2004, 01:57 PM
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by kosmosik
yes you need to upgrade entire system - what problem is that? it takes like 15 min. you don't need to reinstall it - you upgrade it. you can do upgrade and work on the system in the same time.
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Maybe you can upgrade your system in 15 min. using the CDs, that's right - but then you can't work on it. But that's not the point: Upgrading often means problems AFTER the installation; I read many people had problems getting their soundcards to work after having upgraded from FC1 to FC2 e.g. I agree with you that it normally is no big deal but in my opinion it's likely that you will have to fix a few things - and if I can avoid that, I will  .
Quote:
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Originally Posted by kosmosik
fedora is meant to be like bleeding edge distro. the main focus with fedora is on developement on new cool features. developers want to develop not to maintain software to work on old versions (since fedora is free you can always install a new version and it is quite straight forward to upgrade). I think it is good aproach.
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That's right - if you want to be bleeding edge, take Fedora. Of course, I agree that it can be an advantage always to have the new, cool features - but there is (in my opinion) a trade-off between stability/reliability and those new, cool features; if you want to have them you will have to pay some reliability for it.
But as I said already - I don't want to criticize Fedora in any way! WhiteBox / RHEL just takes a different approach and for me (tm) the second one is better, because I value reliability higher than new features.
kilrex
who didn't want to start a "distro war"
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19th September 2004, 02:19 PM
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by kilrex
Maybe you can upgrade your system in 15 min. using the CDs, that's right - but then you can't work on it. But that's not the point: Upgrading often means problems AFTER the installation; I read many people had problems getting their soundcards to work after having upgraded from FC1 to FC2 e.g. I agree with you that it normally is no big deal but in my opinion it's likely that you will have to fix a few things - and if I can avoid that, I will  .
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you can upgrade with yum or apt - you don't need cds. problems with FC1 -> FC2 occured due to kernel version change. but usually such problems could be fixed by simply running configuration utility (or just editing files as I would do). I think it is not as dramatic as you say - if you do upgrade with apt or yum after upgrade you will get an output from entire process informing you about changed files (f.e.config) - you just have to examine those files... it is not like everything will break. maybe some little thing but it can be fixed.
fedora is so good also because developers focus on developing not on maintainig - it is main issue with that. if developers were wasting time on tweaking everything in FC1 they won't have time for FC3 - also maintianig something for older versions is problematical since to certain degree you must modify entire system (or desktop -> f.e. gtk2.2 vs gtk2.4) write sophisticated build trees, maintain build envirements and so on. time - all about time and human resources which are lacking ;\
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19th September 2004, 03:47 PM
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I visited the whitebox site. Browsing quickly thru the downloads section, it seems like WhiteBox will not provide upgrade to GNOME 2.8. Maybe my original question was a bit wrong----keeping up-to-date all the time with something like GNOME means that by definition you want a bleeding-edge type distribution like Fedora.
As suggested atleast by one---Mandrake---I don't want to use because Mandrake has had a history of ugly font support. All fonts in Fedora look really good. But then again last time I tried Mandrake was 8.0 before XFT stuff.
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19th September 2004, 04:31 PM
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by salmankhilji
I visited the whitebox site. Browsing quickly thru the downloads section, it seems like WhiteBox will not provide upgrade to GNOME 2.8. Maybe my original question was a bit wrong----keeping up-to-date all the time with something like GNOME means that by definition you want a bleeding-edge type distribution like Fedora.
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I got you wrong then, I'm sorry  . If you want bleeding-edge, WhiteBox is certainly not right for you - it'll be a long time until Gnome 2.8 or even kernel 2.6 make it into WBEL / RHEL.
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Originally Posted by kosmosik
you can upgrade with yum or apt - you don't need cds. problems with FC1 -> FC2 occured due to kernel version change. but usually such problems could be fixed by simply running configuration utility (or just editing files as I would do). I think it is not as dramatic as you say - if you do upgrade with apt or yum after upgrade you will get an output from entire process informing you about changed files (f.e.config) - you just have to examine those files... it is not like everything will break. maybe some little thing but it can be fixed.
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Yes, I know. I didn't intend to say it is "dramatic" either, I only said there are some issues with upgrading. Personally, I don't mind too much either, but if I can avoid them, I will.
Quote:
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Originally Posted by kosmosik
fedora is so good also because developers focus on developing not on maintainig - it is main issue with that. if developers were wasting time on tweaking everything in FC1 they won't have time for FC3 - also maintianig something for older versions is problematical since to certain degree you must modify entire system (or desktop -> f.e. gtk2.2 vs gtk2.4) write sophisticated build trees, maintain build envirements and so on. time - all about time and human resources which are lacking ;\
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That's a question of what you expect from a distribution, again. But that's exactely what I like on Linux in general - you have got the choice  .
kilrex
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