Caldera -> Red Hat -> Debian -> Slackware -> FreeBSD -> NetBSD -> Gentoo -> Slackware -> LFS -> CentOS
I tried many more distributions but cannot remember which ones. The only distribution I used and still use constantly is Slackware. After Slackware, NetBSD is my second favorite OS and I am looking forward to the 6.0 release.
My last Debian installation was Woody, but because of the outdated packages i switched to Slackware. Slackware is a "one man" distribution and manages to be pretty much up to date, so wath's wrong with the Debian guys?!
ACK. Slackware is really nice and it comes with BSD-Style init scripts.
I tested a lot of the Linux distributions but I always came back to Slackware. At home I run Slackware and an LFS box.
I also used Gentoo for a while but it never really convinced me! I prefere LFS when it comes to source based distributions.
Caldera -> Red Hat -> Debian -> Slackware -> FreeBSD -> NetBSD -> Gentoo -> Slackware -> LFS -> CentOS
I tried many more distributions but cannot remember which ones. The only distribution I used and still use constantly is Slackware. After Slackware, NetBSD is my second favorite OS and I am looking forward to the 6.0 release.
I really like the Slackware pkgtools. But there are also other tools like 'swaret' wich ist pretty handy.
My last Debian installation was Woody, but because of the outdated packages i switched to Slackware. Slackware is a "one man" distribution and manages to be pretty much up to date, so wath's wrong with the Debian guys?!
Slackware rules!
ACK. Slackware is really nice and it comes with BSD-Style init scripts. I tested a lot of the Linux distributions but I always came back to Slackware. At home I run Slackware and an LFS box. I also used Gentoo for a while but it never really convinced me! I prefere LFS when it comes to source based distributions.