On Tue, 2002-04-30 at 18:09, Ben Pitzer wrote: > John, > > Potato will do alright on older hardware, however I'm not sure how well > it will do on older /laptop/ hardware. Debian has never really been an > extremely laptop-friendly distro. > [...] > > In all, I'd say try it, but be prepared to run into some problems. > Especially on a 386 laptop. >
Debian gets a bad rap from statements like this, and it doesn't deserve them. Debian allows you to do anything from run a rock solid system from the stable branch to bleeding edge, it came out yesterday software in the sid branch. There is a large number of maintainers, so the packages are overall well taken care of. I know it installs emacs the best of *ANY* installer for any OS i have used, and the Perl folks say that Debian packages libraries correctly. It carries part of the free software ethos with it also, its where the definition for Open Source came from, and was helped in getting started by the Free Software Foundation. The "free speech" and community aspects are why I run Debian. I've run Debian since Redhat 6.0 disappointed me, and I have run it on 386 - P-III Laptops. Yes, dselect and the configure process never worked perfectly, but I've never had Red Hat configure well on the same hardware either. I've had to download a sample X config and tweak it myself, no matter what the distribution is. On the other hand, many of the laptop Debian installs I have seen, were laptops pressed into server duties, such as firewalls and WAPs. My current laptop runs Debian, and the only config issue I had with it was that the nVidia video didn't work well with XFree 4, so I had to fall back to version 3. I haven't used Mandrake in a while, but I can say with confidence that Debian is better for me on my hardware than RedHat has been. Almost any software I want is there in the archives somewhere, it handles dependencies, so I can just install the package, and it will fetch the libraries and other pieces I need. I don't mean to start a distro war, but Debian deserves a look. Potato is old and crusty, and Woody (soon to be Debian 3) still is carrying over some of the issues, but for people who are looking for more than "free beer" software, and an extremely strong community, Debian is worth some time. Peace. john -- John Beimler [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ TriLUG mailing list http://www.trilug.org/mailman/listinfo/trilug TriLUG Organizational FAQ: http://www.trilug.org/~lovelace/faq/TriLUG-faq.html