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Best Linux?

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  • H Hans Dietrich

    I want to install Linux in a VM. What is the current best Linux? I have heard good things about Ubuntu.

    Best wishes, Hans


    [CodeProject Forum Guidelines] [How To Ask A Question] [My Articles]

    F Offline
    F Offline
    francoisdotnet
    wrote on last edited by
    #23

    Ubuntu or Kubuntu. Mark Shuttleworth seems to be throwing the money made with Thawte and had left over after his self-funded space trip into the development of Ubuntu. They have really tried and make it a easy and generally complete package for the desktop. (I'm not saying they have developed a Windows equivalent ;P!) I see they also working on a server edition now...

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    • H Hans Dietrich

      I want to install Linux in a VM. What is the current best Linux? I have heard good things about Ubuntu.

      Best wishes, Hans


      [CodeProject Forum Guidelines] [How To Ask A Question] [My Articles]

      S Offline
      S Offline
      si618
      wrote on last edited by
      #24

      SuSE is slick, Ubuntu is nice and easy to use, although with 7.04 I had problems with installing it on my notebooks second IDE drive (tri-boot with XP and BackTrack2). Plenty of linux VM images good to go...just depends on what you're into. If you want to experiment with security/penetration testing/networking/etc, you can't go past BackTrack (Slax distro). I've been playing with version 2 since it got released and it's way cool. I used it to see how good our companies wi-fi security was...5 minutes of passive sniffing to gather data using kismet and...I shit you not...less than 1 second of cracking with aircrack-ng to break the 128bit WEP key. Yeah, I know, we should be using WPA-TKIP or WPA-CCMP.

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      • H Hans Dietrich

        I want to install Linux in a VM. What is the current best Linux? I have heard good things about Ubuntu.

        Best wishes, Hans


        [CodeProject Forum Guidelines] [How To Ask A Question] [My Articles]

        R Offline
        R Offline
        ravindu_d
        wrote on last edited by
        #25

        SUSE Linux 10.2 and Ubuntu I reckon

        Zitizon X

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        • V Virtual Coder

          Kevin McFarlane wrote:

          Interesting the number of Linux versions listed in this thread that I've never heard of! Perhaps that explains why Desktop Linux will never take off.

          The best Linux for you is Windows 98 SE.

          L Offline
          L Offline
          LucianPopescu
          wrote on last edited by
          #26

          I use Slackware and i think that is the BEST could be.. it's professional, compact, and anything you want or need, but you first need to learn it for use in it's full power :D http://www.slackware.com/ enjoy ;): Lucian (a.k.a aSterX)

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          • H Hans Dietrich

            I want to install Linux in a VM. What is the current best Linux? I have heard good things about Ubuntu.

            Best wishes, Hans


            [CodeProject Forum Guidelines] [How To Ask A Question] [My Articles]

            D Offline
            D Offline
            dothebart
            wrote on last edited by
            #27

            why bother to install it? Just take one of the ready built images over at the vmware appliance market place and boot it up like described here for the citadel groupware apliance: http://www.citadel.org/doku.php/installation:appliance

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            • D David Crow

              Hans Dietrich wrote:

              I have heard good things about Ubuntu.

              Just for grins, I installed it on a machine, but could not figure out how to get it connected to our network. I was ultimately wanting to be able to print from it, but since our printers are networked, it first must be able to see the network. Oh well...


              "A good athlete is the result of a good and worthy opponent." - David Crow

              "To have a respect for ourselves guides our morals; to have deference for others governs our manners." - Laurence Sterne

              T Offline
              T Offline
              The_Great_Gonzo
              wrote on last edited by
              #28

              Hey Google is your friend. If you spare about 10 minutes you will easily get yuor linux pc on your network and printing. You don't mention with distro your using??

              Oh, uh, good question. Now technically speaking, uhh, let's say, put me down as a... 'Whatever'?

              D 1 Reply Last reply
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              • E Ernest Laurentin

                Ubuntu definitely - RedHat, Mandrake - for power user God bless, Ernest Laurentin

                L Offline
                L Offline
                Lost User
                wrote on last edited by
                #29

                Ernest Laurentin wrote:

                Mandrake - for power user

                It's been a few years, but last time I saw Mandrake it was most definitely not aimed at power users, it was the Ubuntu of about 3 years ago... Have they had a paradigm shift?

                Paul

                Pauliastan in The Code Project, password: byalmightybob
                How much time is left?[^]

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                • H Hans Dietrich

                  I want to install Linux in a VM. What is the current best Linux? I have heard good things about Ubuntu.

                  Best wishes, Hans


                  [CodeProject Forum Guidelines] [How To Ask A Question] [My Articles]

                  L Offline
                  L Offline
                  Lost User
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #30

                  Recently I have become a fan of Debian. I used Ubuntu for nearly a year, but decided to try Debian, seeing that's what Ubuntu's based on. Wasn't disappointed :)

                  Paul

                  Pauliastan in The Code Project, password: byalmightybob
                  How much time is left?[^]

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                  • H Hans Dietrich

                    I want to install Linux in a VM. What is the current best Linux? I have heard good things about Ubuntu.

                    Best wishes, Hans


                    [CodeProject Forum Guidelines] [How To Ask A Question] [My Articles]

                    E Offline
                    E Offline
                    Eric Georgiades
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #31

                    i love Suse for so many reasons. it's like fedora and debian put together. funny, after reading the replies above, i heard Ubuntu (like 10 times) and none for Fedora. (red hat excluded). best reasons i love suse : it's Novell. it's got oh so many drivers ready. it's got YaST it supports Red Hat packages (.rpm) it supports Debian packackes (.deb) it can work YUM and aptitude it just works love the new kde gui (start menu is fantastic - sry vista) i like lizards. i've used Fedora alot, started off with debian though. in the end, it's Suse (10.2) for me.

                    Ericos Georgiades

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                    • H Hans Dietrich

                      I want to install Linux in a VM. What is the current best Linux? I have heard good things about Ubuntu.

                      Best wishes, Hans


                      [CodeProject Forum Guidelines] [How To Ask A Question] [My Articles]

                      O Offline
                      O Offline
                      Owen Lawrence
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #32

                      I'd like to install Linux on a 466MHz 96MB RAM class machine. What Linux would be good for that? - Owen -

                      C 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • V Vikram A Punathambekar

                        It's been many years since I went down Linux country, but Ubuntu seems to be the 'in' thing.

                        Cheers, Vıkram.


                        Déjà moo - The feeling that you've seen this bull before. Join the CP group at NationStates. Password: byalmightybob

                        L Offline
                        L Offline
                        Lampros Giampouras
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #33

                        I vote for Ubuntu too. It's the one I use

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                        • T The_Great_Gonzo

                          Hey Google is your friend. If you spare about 10 minutes you will easily get yuor linux pc on your network and printing. You don't mention with distro your using??

                          Oh, uh, good question. Now technically speaking, uhh, let's say, put me down as a... 'Whatever'?

                          D Offline
                          D Offline
                          David Crow
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #34

                          The_Great_Gonzo wrote:

                          If you spare about 10 minutes you will easily get yuor linux pc on your network and printing.

                          Maybe that's the problem. I spent several hours searching. I found lots of information, but nothing trivial. Even so, Google is only as good as the question that gets asked.

                          The_Great_Gonzo wrote:

                          You don't mention with distro your using??

                          Would that seriously make a difference? In any case, it was v5.10.


                          "A good athlete is the result of a good and worthy opponent." - David Crow

                          "To have a respect for ourselves guides our morals; to have deference for others governs our manners." - Laurence Sterne

                          T 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • H Hans Dietrich

                            I want to install Linux in a VM. What is the current best Linux? I have heard good things about Ubuntu.

                            Best wishes, Hans


                            [CodeProject Forum Guidelines] [How To Ask A Question] [My Articles]

                            J Offline
                            J Offline
                            jerome5136
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #35

                            I think it depends on if you want it to be a server or a desktop. Slackware for server, Ubuntu as desktop.

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                            • H Hans Dietrich

                              I want to install Linux in a VM. What is the current best Linux? I have heard good things about Ubuntu.

                              Best wishes, Hans


                              [CodeProject Forum Guidelines] [How To Ask A Question] [My Articles]

                              B Offline
                              B Offline
                              briane23
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #36

                              I have tried OpenSUSE 10.2, Fedora 5 and Ubuntu 6.06LTS and 7.04, all of them on dual boot machines with XP Pro and Server 2003. Using M$ VM was not worth it, very slow and sometimes did not even install certain distros. If you want to run in VM go with Parallels or VMWare. All were pretty easy to install along side XP/Server 2003, with Ubuntu being the easiest. OpenSuse had a nice feature that it allowed you to use your Windows Domain login. Fedora was ok, but I think still needs a lot of pollishing. Ubuntu would have to be my hands down favorite. Easy to configure, with WiFi, the interface and printing. Had most of the commonly used apps installed. Ubuntu also offered a really easy to use software installer and keeps all the packages up to date. It automatically recognized all my hardware on standard PC and an IBM T40 notebook, including all networking. I was able to use the internet, all network peripherals and shared folders, within 10 minutes after the full installation. Ubuntu also allows you to boot from the CD, without installing just to make sure your machine is compatable, well worth it. Brian

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                              • H Hans Dietrich

                                I want to install Linux in a VM. What is the current best Linux? I have heard good things about Ubuntu.

                                Best wishes, Hans


                                [CodeProject Forum Guidelines] [How To Ask A Question] [My Articles]

                                P Offline
                                P Offline
                                Peter Condosta
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #37

                                If you like configuring linux and figuring out how it works, I'd recommend slackware. After install, it drops you into the shell and lets you have all the fun you can handle :) But seriously, Slackware is a great linux learning tool. It lets you install as little or as much as you want. It's rock solid. And, it doesn't use any wacky package management system, you can use tgz "packages" or compile straight from source. Yea, it can be a bitch with dependacies, but at least you know exactly what you are installing.

                                B 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • P Peter Condosta

                                  If you like configuring linux and figuring out how it works, I'd recommend slackware. After install, it drops you into the shell and lets you have all the fun you can handle :) But seriously, Slackware is a great linux learning tool. It lets you install as little or as much as you want. It's rock solid. And, it doesn't use any wacky package management system, you can use tgz "packages" or compile straight from source. Yea, it can be a bitch with dependacies, but at least you know exactly what you are installing.

                                  B Offline
                                  B Offline
                                  bje990
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #38

                                  I too would recommend slackware. It's very fast and very powerful. IF you are uncomfortable with compiling packages from source and have trouble finding all the dependencies (it can be a pain ), i would recommend a distribution of Linux with a nice package manager. Ubuntu is a good distro if you are fairly new to linux but it's not as fast as slackware. Overall I found Arch linux to be great. I came across this distro about a year ago and fell inlove with it... It's fast, easy to use and has a great package manager. The documentation is pretty good too. Anyhoo.. good luck

                                  Keep Coding

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                                  • H Hans Dietrich

                                    I want to install Linux in a VM. What is the current best Linux? I have heard good things about Ubuntu.

                                    Best wishes, Hans


                                    [CodeProject Forum Guidelines] [How To Ask A Question] [My Articles]

                                    T Offline
                                    T Offline
                                    Tom Delany
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #39

                                    Although I am by no means a Linux Guru, I have played around with several different distributions: 1) Debian GNU Linux - this is the one that I cut my teeth on. Sometimes, looking back, it is a wonder that I even kept at it. I could have started with a lot more "newbie-friendly" version! The install process was not as slick as some of the others that I have looked at, but I have not looked at their latest releases in a while. The newer ones may be better. Sometimes it was challenging for me to get all my hardware working (probably more of a lack of knowledge on my part at the time, than anything else). They had/have packages for everything (including the kitchen sink). Once I got it up and running, I found it to be very stable. Most problems I had were cause by yours truly. 2) OpenSuse 10.2 - This is the one that I have ended up using day to day on my desktop at home. Install, etc. is very slick. I think Suse was the first Linux distro that I installed where things like the sound just worked without my having to twiddle something. It is handy that it uses RPMs for its packages, in that it makes finding packages for things that you would like to install easier. All in all, I find it to be stable, and easy to use. 3) Ubuntu/Kubuntu - I had read all the buzz about Ubuntu, so I cleaned off one of the Hard Disks that I had used for testing (Goodbye Vista RC :)), and gave it a try. I installed the Kubuntu variety, since I prefer KDE (Ubuntu uses the Gnome desktop; Kubuntu KDE). I found that it lived up to the hype. Everything just worked, the install was slick and plainless. It definitely looked like a good choice for a desktop system. Since Ubuntu is based upon the Debian distro, everything seemed very familiar to me. 4) Gentoo - This was one I decided to experiment with for the fun of it. This was one different puppy! Rather than installing pre-compiled packages, they download the source-code to your PC, apply any pertinent patches, and compile and install it. I learned a lot about where things were, config files, etc. I complained to a friend about the manual install, and he said, "Didn't you just boot the disk and follow the automated install?" I said, "What automated install? I found a document online that said it was the quick-install guide that had me doing all this stuff manually!" :doh: I got it working with KDE after a fashion, but never did get sound working for some reason. This is definitely a geek version of Linux. Well, that's my two-cents / experience. Hope

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                                    • D David Crow

                                      The_Great_Gonzo wrote:

                                      If you spare about 10 minutes you will easily get yuor linux pc on your network and printing.

                                      Maybe that's the problem. I spent several hours searching. I found lots of information, but nothing trivial. Even so, Google is only as good as the question that gets asked.

                                      The_Great_Gonzo wrote:

                                      You don't mention with distro your using??

                                      Would that seriously make a difference? In any case, it was v5.10.


                                      "A good athlete is the result of a good and worthy opponent." - David Crow

                                      "To have a respect for ourselves guides our morals; to have deference for others governs our manners." - Laurence Sterne

                                      T Offline
                                      T Offline
                                      The_Great_Gonzo
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #40

                                      Yes it would make a difference and from your reply I assume your talking about Ubuntu or one of it's siblings?? Did you post to the excellent forums at the Ubuntu site? I'm sure from the reputation they have you would have an answer in no time. Or possibly www.linuxquestion.org?

                                      Oh, uh, good question. Now technically speaking, uhh, let's say, put me down as a... 'Whatever'?

                                      C 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • T The_Great_Gonzo

                                        Yes it would make a difference and from your reply I assume your talking about Ubuntu or one of it's siblings?? Did you post to the excellent forums at the Ubuntu site? I'm sure from the reputation they have you would have an answer in no time. Or possibly www.linuxquestion.org?

                                        Oh, uh, good question. Now technically speaking, uhh, let's say, put me down as a... 'Whatever'?

                                        C Offline
                                        C Offline
                                        Chris Kaiser
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #41

                                        No need to assume. He mentioned it in the original post. :laugh: I see you're search abilities are impeccable.

                                        This statement was never false.

                                        T 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • O Owen Lawrence

                                          I'd like to install Linux on a 466MHz 96MB RAM class machine. What Linux would be good for that? - Owen -

                                          C Offline
                                          C Offline
                                          Chris Kaiser
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #42

                                          Do a search for Puppy Linux, Pretty Damn Small Linux, and I think Slackware works well for the lower end machines. Debian probably would as well.

                                          This statement was never false.

                                          O 1 Reply Last reply
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