On Mon, 22 Aug 2005, Barry L. Kline wrote: > Timothy wrote: > > Like has been mentioned before on this list centos is really geared toward > > the server market (stability) and when you load all these multimedia apps > > you give up some of that because of > > I wouldn't say it's geared to toward the server market as much as it's geared > to the business desktop or server market. I use my desktops for development > and moved from Fedora to CentOS just so I wouldn't have to keep upgrading the > OS just to keep current with patches. But you are right -- you can easily > install many of the "bleeding edge" packages if you so desire. The only > difference is that you then take on the responsibility of keeping them updated > yourself. I want to add to this, that adding multimedia apps do not impact the stability of the system in se. The applications themselves may not be that well tested, but they should not cause additional instability to the system itself. If they do, there's bug that has been there before that got triggered, and might get triggered in similar circumstances. The responsibility of updating software of course is your own, much like when you use tarballs or unsupported distributions. BTW Stability is as important in the desktop world as it is in the server world, the only difference is that in the desktop world you can trade it for eye-candy, if you crave that. Kind regards, -- dag wieers, dag at wieers.com, http://dag.wieers.com/ -- [all I want is a warm bed and a kind word and unlimited power]