Personally I don't mind if crunbang ditches ubuntu because I've been using
crunch bang for a little more than a year now, and it means I will be able
to get a little more familiar with how debian works. I know it's basically
the same a ubuntu, but I can get familiar with the features of debian, and
with how they do things. This makes for an easy transition. The things I
like most about crunchbang are the pcman with root powers, the VLC player
that you don't have to install all the codecs from medubuntu (it plays
everything out of the box) and the performance. It's not loaded with
everything but the kitchen sink out of the box. Ubuntu has a thousand apps
that I will never even look at, like evolution embedded into it.

Some day maybe I'll get into arch, and then maybe gentoo, and work my way
down to linux from scratch.

Philip Newborough has announced the development release (Alpha 1) version of
CrunchBang Linux 10 code-named "Statler" just moments after the release of
Ubuntu 10.04 "Lucid Lynx" Beta 1. For the first time ever, the distro is
being built using Debian sources, instead of Ubuntu.

As some of you may know, CrunchBang Linux has become one of the most popular
flavors of Ubuntu by featuring out of the box light-weight Openbox window
manager and GTK+ applications on top of a minimal Ubuntu system. It is also
considered as one of the simplest and refined Ubuntu-based distributions out
there.

CrunchBang Linux 10 "Alpha 1" is now available in two main versions: Openbox
and Xfce. Both editions have the same line-up of applications, and the
recently added Xfce edition has had its session set-up similar to that of
previous CrunchBang Openbox sessions. From the release notes, here are some
of the other changes:

* Now uses a customised Debian text installer, available from the LiveCD
boot menu.
* Now available with either a default Openbox or Xfce4 session. The new Xfce
offering has been designed to mimic the original CrunchBang Openbox
experience, i.e. a minimal desktop with right-click system menu and
predefined shortcut keys for popular applications and commands.
* Available for 32 bit and 64 bit architectures, with the 32 bit offering
available in i486 and i686 optimised kernel flavours.
* Now includes a minimal set of pre-installed applications. The application
line-up will be revised over future releases.
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