SCO Caldera (before they morphed into the new (now thankfully deceased) SCO abomination) until the proprietary desktop lapsed. I was doing my MCSE at the time and one of my fellow students mentioned at one stage that if you really want to know about PC's, you should install linux. Since I was already becoming disillusioned with Microsoft, I decided to give it a whirl.
Next was Mandrake, followed by Mandriva, then Mageia (1 and now 2).
I also played with Mint, SUSE, Fedora, Ubuntu, Kubuntu, ArchOS and maybe one or two others, but the Ma***'s suits me best. Gnome was the dealbreaker for me (or: KDE floats my boat).
On servers it was Mandrake, Ubuntu (for a short while) and then Debian.
Take a photo of your living room, with one or two people. Position this photo so that the camera will see the photo in stead of the room. Job done.
SCO Caldera (before they morphed into the new (now thankfully deceased) SCO abomination) until the proprietary desktop lapsed. I was doing my MCSE at the time and one of my fellow students mentioned at one stage that if you really want to know about PC's, you should install linux. Since I was already becoming disillusioned with Microsoft, I decided to give it a whirl. Next was Mandrake, followed by Mandriva, then Mageia (1 and now 2). I also played with Mint, SUSE, Fedora, Ubuntu, Kubuntu, ArchOS and maybe one or two others, but the Ma***'s suits me best. Gnome was the dealbreaker for me (or: KDE floats my boat). On servers it was Mandrake, Ubuntu (for a short while) and then Debian.