Hi,

> Date: Tue, 1 May 2012 11:36:28 +0100
> From: Ant?nio M. Rodrigues <amcrgrodrig...@gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: [Qgis-user] qgis on linuxmint?
> To: qgis-user@lists.osgeo.org
> Message-ID:
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> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> A quick question concerning QGIS (and other software - GRASS, R ...) on
> Linux.
> 
> I have a MAC but at work I am thinking a getting a new machine, running
> Linux. After browsing the net for optional distributions, I came across
> ArchLinux. It immediately caught my attention with the phrase "A simple,
> lightweight distribution".

Why get a new machine? -  you could use a real operating system on that Mac ;)
 
> The question is: the fact that it is "so lightweight", does it mean it will
> be painstakingly hard to get every bits together in order to have all
> frameworks, all dependencies, etc, working in order to have a fully working
> GIS workstation (QGIS, GRASS, R, ...)?
> 
> Thanks.
> Regards,
> Ant?nio

I use Arch at home because I want a distribution which is minimalistic and a 
true rolling release.

Installing packages generally: unless a package is obscure enough that no one 
maintains an Archbuild, it should be easy to install, although if it is only 
available in the AUR you will have to wait for it to compile from source (the 
AUR only provides build scripts, not binary packages).

Installing QGIS: was not at all difficult (and I was surprised by how quickly 
it compiled on my computer which was obsolete a decate ago, compared to on the 
quad core Windows machine at my work :) )

Configuration: with Arch you need to be aware that, as Wikipedia says: "The 
design approach of the development team focuses on simplicity from a 
developer's standpoint rather than a user's standpoint - elegance, code 
correctness, and minimalism".  So "simple" does not mean "it just works; put 
the disk in the computer, boot it up and you will have a full desktop with 
every application most people could need; no configuration necessary", as is 
the aim of a distro like Puppy or Ubuntu.  With Arch you need to install all 
the packages you want (window manager, filer, browser, etc) and do a reasonable 
amount of configuration (which means you need to read the instructions!).  Arch 
doesn't automatically install a graphical desktop environment.  It doesn't have 
a gui package manager.  etc.

Having said that, there may be unofficial versions of Arch which provide you 
with a full functional desktop 'out of the box' (I think Archbang was one of 
these, although I have a feeling it is a fully independent distro now).  And I 
guess if you installed Arch, did the basic configuration and installed a 
desktop environment, particularly a major one like KDE or Gnome (I guess most 
people would want one of the forks of Gnome2, rather than Gnome 3), then most 
things would "just work".  But personally I like to use a lot of more obscure, 
lightweight packages :)

FWIW if I was happy with a mainstream desktop environment I think I would try 
Linux Mint Debian Edition.

Alister_______________________________________________
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