[Tfug] Thinking linux

christopher floess skeptikos at gmail.com
Sun Feb 4 12:43:26 MST 2007


Interesting. Yeah, I was thinking LFS too. It could teach me a lot of
things. If slackware is "source(ish)", what's with all the discs involved w/
the distro? FreeBSD only uses one disc for the install, and you only need
the second if you what to install any binary packages. Sources and stuff are
on the install disc. Is gentoo based on an established distro like ubuntu is
based on debian? Is anyone familiar with LFS?

On 2/4/07, Jeremy D Rogers <jdrogers at northwestern.edu> wrote:
>
> I may be wrong, but from the point of view of someone very familiar
> with another free unix, I would say the main difference in distro's
> will just come down to package management. Since you are the type who
> will be comfortable under the hood, the variation in fluff won't
> matter much, so you can pretty much just choose between:
> *.rpm based (ughh!!.. trust me, just stay away.)
> *.deb based (debian, ubuntu, etc, etc.)
> source(ish) based (slack, gentoo, linux from scratch)
>
> You would probably learn the most from LFS, but getting started might
> take a while. Gentoo has pretty stellar documentation. The network
> installers for debian or ubuntu are great (dowload 20-50MB iso, burn,
> boot, and install everything you need from the net). I'm guessing
> gentoo has something similar.
>
> On 2/4/07, christopher floess <skeptikos at gmail.com> wrote:
> > Ok, I have an extra computer at home, and would like to run linux on it.
> I
> > know this could turn into a long thread, so let me narrow the scope of
> > discourse by giving you some background. Noob-friendly isn't really an
> issue
> > for me b/c I've been on FreeBSD for four years now. I basically want the
> > best for getting to know the ins and outs of the linux environment. That
> > having been said, I would think that the Ubuntu variants might not be
> the
> > best way to go because I don't want to spend a bunch of time trying to
> > dismantle the user friendly veneer, just to get at the guts. I don't
> know
> > the distro that well, so maybe it's not such a big deal. Let me know. I
> had
> > a friend who was fond of slackware, but that was some years ago, and
> > considering how many cd's it takes for the install, I think that the
> > slackware of old might have had a different intended audience. Again,
> this
> > is simply speculation, so chime in. Is it worth it to pay for the
> slackware
> > dvd set? I've pretty much avoided the freebsd package system, and prefer
> > something that has a good porting system. Doesn't debian fall into this
> > category? Any way, the only reason I'm even looking is b/c I've enjoyed
> my
> > time w/ freebsd, and would like to expand my  horizons. That's it. fire
> away
> > with your opinions, everyone.... oh, one more thing. I would like the
> two
> > systems  to be networked, and after the install, the linux box will
> probably
> > have to funtion as a headless system.
> >
> > --
> > I worry about viruses like I worry about terrorists
> > _______________________________________________
> > Tucson Free Unix Group - tfug at tfug.org
> > Subscription Options:
> > http://www.tfug.org/mailman/listinfo/tfug_tfug.org
> >
>
> _______________________________________________
> Tucson Free Unix Group - tfug at tfug.org
> Subscription Options:
> http://www.tfug.org/mailman/listinfo/tfug_tfug.org
>



-- 
I worry about viruses like I worry about terrorists



More information about the tfug mailing list