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Beginner's Guide to Linux Distros

Martin writes "TipMonkies has a nice overview of various Linux distros for those of you with little time to research each distro yourself. The article also discusses some of the advantages/disadvantages of each distro." From the article: "SUSE- The 'U' is hard and the 'E' is soft. Almost like the word sue with an S on the end. SUSE is the other big commercial distro. It was when it was still it's own company in Germany, and now even bigger since being purchased by Novell."

3 of 409 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Slackware by Pros_n_Cons · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Learn to do things without pretty GUIs . That's the best way to learn

    I'm still learning when using a GUI, I'm just learning how to do a task without reading a manpage.

    --

    -- "of course thats just my opinion, I could be wrong." --Dennis Miller
  2. Re:finally... by rmm4pi8 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do "newbs" know what HAL or curses are or even necessarily the differences between KDE and GNOME? His use of terminology would be baffling if I didn't know a fair amount about Linux.

    --
    U.S. War Crimes blog. Email for free Mandriva support.
  3. Re:Slackware by barc0001 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not all people need servers either...

    If you RTFM, it sounds like this is more geared towards people using it on a desktop.

    And it's that kind of zealotry that puts people off trying linux. You may be thinking you're helping, but what the average non-tech geek hears from a statement is this:

    "Learn to do it without a GUI. Only stupid people need GUIs"

    Now, like I say, that's not what you mean to say, but that's how "Learn to do things without pretty GUIs. That's the best way to learn." will be interpreted by a fair percentage of non tech people.