I'd like to chime in on this.
Being techy. nothing really bugs me as I think its all POS.
However I do think the Linux desktop is not so good in general.
I've been a big fan of Irix and used to maintain it when it was the golden child of the Unix desktop.
I've been following the 5dwm project for a while;
http://www.maxxdesktop.com/site/
Anyways, check it out, hope ppl find it use full. Eric Masson was brilliant for getting this project up and running.
On Sep 28, 2009, at 4:57 PM, Robert Heller wrote:
At Mon, 28 Sep 2009 16:29:12 -0500 CentOS mailing list <centos@centos.org
wrote:
I'm thinking of giving CentOS to a non-tech user for her new desktop. He needs are small. She has been used to Mozilla for both mail and browsing, so equivalents there are not a problem. She needs grip and lame, for her mp3s - again no problem.
Desktop, non-techie - use Ubuntu instead.
I'm a big CentOS fan, I joined even the Facebook group (lol), but its
Thats my thought as well. Ubuntu desktop and CentOS for servers. Just wandering if anyone is using the 'Ubuntu Server Edition's'? They seem appealing but CentOS is what I am used too on servers now. Thought about loading it up on a box to just try though.
I use CentOS on my desktop and my Laptop.
It is also the version I set up at the local library(1), which *used* to have Ubuntu. There where two main problems with Ubuntu:
- Ubuntu really needs more frequent total updates (it is not a
long-term stable release). The Ubuntu system that was on the local library's server was unable to get updates (apt-get would fail -- I ended up manually downloading packages and installing by hand (using raw dpkg commands -- ala using raw rpm instead of yum).
- Ubuntu generally sucked as a server O/S -- it was trying to be way
too clever about some things -- drove me up the wall (doing *stupid* things like constantly automounting the USB connected backup disk whenever someone logged in and swaping the ethernet cards around, seemingly at random).
CentOS as a desktop system (or laptop) is perfectly fine, *even for non-techies*, which would most of the users at the local library. I guess the only issue would be in terms of support for really new hardware (which is not an issue at the local library, since the hardware not this years model). One can get the 'missing' multimedia goodies from RPMForge or EPel (or even from Adobe's repo [flash and acroread]).
(1) http://www.deepsoft.com/2009/08/setting-up-thin-clients-at-the-wendell-free-...
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-- Robert Heller -- 978-544-6933 Deepwoods Software -- Download the Model Railroad System http://www.deepsoft.com/ -- Binaries for Linux and MS-Windows heller@deepsoft.com -- http://www.deepsoft.com/ModelRailroadSystem/
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