Aurox Linux 10.0.1 Beta Reviewed
sarumont writes "Here's another lesser-known distro trying to make a splash on the big scene. Aurox Linux is a Fedora-based distro mainly developed in Poland. Even in its tenth release cycle, it is still a young distro and as such: small. Could it be the next big thing? Even gentoo was small and "lesser-known" once. Check out this review, hot off the presses at LinuxForumsDOTorg."
I for one resent the fact that the amount of linux distros is still growing. Why? There are many answers I could give, but consider that one of the following is usually true:
1) It is based on an existing major distribution, contains little useful innovation, and as such does nothing but add pointless name clutter and minor incompatibilities.
2) It is sufficiently different enough from the current major distributions to be considered innovative, but that innovation would (in the majority of cases) be better spent imporoving existing distros, particularly in the areas of package management, modularity, convenient installation, and general ease-of-use.
Now I understand that having the "right to fork" is an essential part of OSS and I would defend that right to the death (ok so maybe I'm exagerating a wee bit, but less than you would think). Choice is awesome, I like choice. But who has time to try 100's of distros? It is of some consolation that their are review sites to give us the scoop, but reading them is tedious too, and not guaranteed to be helpful or relevant.
Bottom line: New distros have their place, but we need fewer of them. Far fewer. Development time (or should I say "repackaging time"?) would be better spent improving existing deployment tools, e.g. Portage and Catalyst.
The unofficial
Pros
-Strong Multimedia Foundation
-Runs very smoothly
-Great Package Selection
-Very Fast
So, looks like what we have here is a Fedora with lower minimum requirements. Good! GNU/linux destros desperately need a speed boost.
Vector, Yoper and now Aurox. Seems there is a lot of interest in a fast desktop. I wonder when mandrake or fedora will notice.
If people spent half the time improving what is there as they do creating new distros Linux would far surpass Windows and OS X on the desktop.
In case you haven't noticed, most of these distros aren't aimed at the desktop.
You think Gentoo is thinking about grandmothers?
They're not.
Red Hat? Nope! Debian? No way. Slackware? No.
The desktop isn't the holy grail. There's no need to launch a crusade to obtain it. If we can put out a few fires like the DMCA and keep up the pressure for people to use open standards, it won't matter.
LK
"Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano