Paul D. Anderson Wrote:

> I'm going to add Linux to my PC to get a dual-boot configuration. (I'm tired 
> of sloooow start ups and want to tap into the great tools available.) The 
> tutorial I'm looking at suggests Ubuntu. Is there a significant difference in 
> Linux implementations? Is Ubuntu one of the better ones? Does it make a 
> difference for running D2?
> 
> Thanks in advance for your hellp.
> 
> Paul
> 


As pointed out, package management and available packages tend to be the only 
differences from each distro. Ubuntu, Suse, and Fedora tend to have the most 
auto-configuration/GUI.

I personally use Debian but it really doesn't matter if you intend to learn 
Linux you can expect to be reinstalling and you may as well try another distro 
when you do.

The most important tip, create a separate partition for /home.

As for space requirements. Others may have other input but these are the rules 
I find reasonable for minimum space.

Main partition, /, will not likely exceed 10GiB
Swap can be 1GiB
/home depends on if Linux becomes your primary OS. 100MiB is probably the 
minimum, but then you'd just get annoyed :) want to share files with Windows 
you can make /home 2GiB and mount a Windows partition which you can symbolic 
link in /home ($ ln -s /mnt/win /home/user/files)

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