On Tue, May 10, 2011 at 13:51, Roy <[email protected]> wrote:
> Yes, but you do not need a GUI for a server which is what RHEL is for. It
> all depends on what he is using it for.
>
> Roy

Agreed, but RHEL installs a GUI by default in any case.  Of the big
three, AFAIK, only Ubuntu Server installs what you and I would
consider a "proper" server (e.g. no GUI).  You can, of course, change
the default runlevels and such to prevent RHEL from booting into a
GUI, but by default it'll be there.  IIRC, they removed the ability to
do a custom package set in the installer some time in RHEL 5, and made
it more difficult to do a text based install...

I could be wrong on that last bit, it's been a couple years since I
last touched RHEL in any real depth, but that's the way my addled mind
remembers it being...


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