Paolo, I started with linux 6 years ago after being a confirmed microsoftie my entire career, this is the experience I can offer:

Ubuntu: What Windows wants to be, what the Mac is w/o the $$$$ and with more control. I just replaced a hard drive in a dell machine. A generic windows CD (the customer did not have the specific recovery CD for that box) could not install drivers for the network, the video, or the sound. Ubuntu did all of them. Ubuntu however is a desktop OS. Great graphics, great package management. However, it is still Linux and you still have to do some Googling here and there to find a HOWTO. Perhaps the most annoying problem is lack of support for widescreen monitors, you have to type tech data into an X config to get that working. Also, IMHO stay away from 7.04, I've tried it on two machines and had troubles on both, to the extent of wiping one and starting over at 6.10. Stay with 6.10.

Suse: going for the same space as Ubuntu. I tried it first, 6 years ago. It was ok at the time but can't tell you about the modern stuff. I don't trust Novell to get it right though, just a personal feeling.

Fedora I don't use but as I understand there is a large body of people with a lot of cultural knowledge about how it works. So when you go Fedora you join the club as it were and do things their way. I tried Red Hat back when it was Red Hat some 9 years ago and again 6 years ago and I always found myself stuck on some detail that I could not find an answer to. Now if you want a hardcore distro to learn everything about linux, go with gentoo. There are no binary packages (at least not that I use or can easily find), but you end up knowing *everything* about how Linux works. Very active community. I used this as a desktop for 3 years as a sort of long-term boot camp. It did make me very comfortable with all things linux.

Conclusion: I use gentoo on my servers and Ubuntu on my desktops. Except for the virus ^H^H^H^^H gaming machine that I have for the kids running XP.

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,

I bought a Dell server and I am going to use it for installing PostgrSQL
8.2.4. I always used Windows so far and I would like now to install a
Linux distribution on the new server. Any suggestion on which distribution
? Fedora, Ubuntu server, Suse or others?

Thanks in advance,
Paolo Saudin



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