On Feb 25, 2012 10:06 AM, "John" <irgu...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> Hi folks,
>
>  I've been using linux for about 12 years now, but only used DE's. I've
got ADD in the
> extreme and have poor memory retention so trying to learn things 'UNIX'
(command line and
> such) is just too difficult for me. I can do some command line stuff but
nothing more than
> getting time from someplace to make my clock be correct, heh.
>
>  I've been using SuSE/openSUSE now for all those 12 years but I'm
becoming somewhat
> disgruntled with the direction I feel it's going (don't ask, it'll just
get me started
> rantin' and ravin'). I've looked at Slackware, but the package management
looks just a
> little bit more than I can try to handle at first without getting
frustrated and scrubbing
> it off my hard drive.
>
>  I've looked at a *LOT* of other distro's and too many use Gnome (I can't
stand it,
> that's my opinion so don't try to argue with me to change), some are a
bit too
> minimalistic and others too much like openSUSE is now - huge.
>
>  I finally came upon Gentoo and for the past few days I've been reading
and looking at
> things and so far it seems to be what I'm wanting to switch to, but
here's my quandary:
>
>  I'm dirt-poor and have only a dial-up connection. The Portage package
management seems
> extremely nice, but will it be a problem for me to upgrade say just one
package/app at a
> time? Will I be able to find a tarball of an app I want to try out and be
able to build it
> like I would with rpmbuild (will it be as relatively easy as that)? Is
there a
> 'repository' of apps anywhere that I can go to to look and see if the app
I normally use
> for something is there?
>
>  There's probably more questions, but I best keep this short for now,
lol. Thanks for any
> replies and help with these things and I hope I made enough sense for
everyone to
> understand what I'm trying to get at.
>
>  JB
>

Have a look at Sabayon. It's Gentoo-based, but it comes with binary
repository (although you can easily use portage if you want).

It offers 'out of the box' support for KDE4, xfce, or gnome3. Others are
available but you have to compile them yourself (via portage).

Rgds,

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