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Conectiva Linux 9 Review

JigSaw writes "Here's an english review of a popular Linux distro in the Latin American countries: Conectiva Linux 9. Jason Prince investigates its installation, the desktop usage, the package manager (synaptic) and some of the problems he met on the way."

8 of 124 comments (clear)

  1. A bit late though... by keeboo · · Score: 5, Informative

    Conectiva Linux 9 is already rather old...
    The 10th release is arriving soon.

  2. Conectiva by Kurt+Russell · · Score: 5, Informative

    They were the first with apt-get for rpms. Pretty cool distro.

  3. The new Conectiva CL 10 is entering in RC stage... by helioc · · Score: 5, Informative

    Was really nice see this review of Conectiva 9 even now near release of next one. For everyone interested in help with next release development, go to https://moin.conectiva.com.br/TechnologyPreview ( English link ) and see download directions to latest test release.

  4. Re:Yet another KDE based distribution... by FrYGuY101 · · Score: 3, Informative

    I believe UserLinux is GNOME only...

    --
    "If we let things terrify us, life will not be worth living."

    - Seneca
  5. Good review but... by mvdwege · · Score: 4, Informative

    How can I trust it when he is overlooking something so obvious as the 'Find' option in Synaptic?

    I quote: it won't let you search the apt catalogues using natural language queries. For example, searching for 'word processor' returns no results; a more experienced user would know that they had to search for 'OpenOffice' or 'Abiword' to display the packages they were seeking. It would be great if Synaptic could search the package descriptions, as well as the title.

    Now, in my Synaptic install (Debian unstable) I see the following: in the right top corner is a search box that does an incremental search on package name only. In the Package menu I find an option named Find (shortcut Ctrl-F, as a Windows/IE user would expect it) which allows me to search on all fields of the package. By default the search dialog that comes up searches on both package name and description.

    Otherwise I would say, Synaptic rocks! It is the nicest package manager I have ever used. I still do apt-get install for individual packages, but for finding packages and just browsing the tree, I use Synaptic. The daunting aspect the reviewer notes is due to the sheer amount of packages available, some 5500 on Conectiva, and some 14000 on Debian.

    Just try it. Get synaptic (and if you're on an rpmbased system, apt4rpm) and give it a whirl. You won't go back.

    Mart
    --
    "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
  6. really? by SignificantBit · · Score: 3, Informative
    "Conectiva Linux, developed by Brazilian vendor Conectiva S.A., is the most popular distribution in South America,.."

    As a south american geek i have to say that i have never meet someone who use Conectiva. I've use Linux for.. i dont know... 6 years, and in my personal experience RedHat and Debian are the most common distributions- at least in Chile.
    Conectiva is well-known -as in TurboLinux well-known-but-not-much-used.
  7. Re:Penguins in South America by jas79 · · Score: 4, Informative
  8. this is not the brazilian Linux to watch by Knights+who+say+'INT · · Score: 3, Informative

    Conectiva is just bad, and that's pretty much a consensus in the brazilian Linux community. If that wasn't enough, their solutions are overpriced, and they're pulling political levers to get government contracts instead of Microsoft - even though their product is _more_ expensive than what Microsoft produces.

    Just a few months ago, they got the current left-leaning party to push for a change in public contractor law that put a "priority for Free Software solutions" above other criteria in public contracts.

    I mean, they're just out to leech out taxpayer money with some lame nationalistic excuse.

    My attempts to get this on the frontpage keep getting rejected, but the brazilian distro to watch is Kurumin, a noppix variant that fits on a mini-CD and includes just SO MUCH fucking software in 180 megs, and so much functionality.

    This might seem overstated in bandwidth-abundant America, but it's way easier to download 200-odd megs to try out this new-fangled kool linux thang than the 4x600Mb downloads the new distros have been requiring.

    Disclaimer: I'm in no way affiliated with Carlos Morimoto or the Kurumin crowd. Yes, I'm a brazilian taxpayer.