Les R a écrit :
Hi Nasser,

I would install something easy to maintain. A good package management
system is one based on Debian apt-get. This includes both Debian and
Ubuntu distributions.

However, any version _will_ work fine, it's just a matter of simple
installation and long term stability and usability.

I agree (I run Debian Lenny myself), Debian has much improved it's ease of installation.

The critical point is the need of a good partition of the disk, with
good separation of the various system and user directories.
It is possible to just have one system partition and one user partition, but I found myself better with a set of partitions respectful of the OS's structure (/, /boot, /usr, /var, /tmp) and of the user's structure (as a practical single user, I have /home, /ext -- what is downloaded from non-OS sites --, /audio, /video, /images.

As fas as Debian is concerned, the development model is conservative: the stable version is published after extensive testing and packaging can be late with respect to development: e.g. TexLive in Lenny (the current stable version) is texLive 2007, and 2009 has been published last November (its is quite easy to install thes last version from tug.org).

A more up-to-date version is testing (code name Squeeze), which will be the next stable version, but maintaining testing up-to-date needs a much higher traffic than maintaining stable, not to speak of possible uncorrected bugs.

Another option to get more recent versions of packages (e.g. LyX) when using stable is to inspect the backport repository.

--
Jean-Pierre
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