Hello Brian, > Hello group,
> LTSP looks great, and we have successfully tested it on a Red Hat 9.0 > system. We are looking to deploy LTSP to clients, and want to provide them > with a good user experience (anti-aliased fonts, Gnome 2.2, etc.), but not > have to do a major OS upgrade for at least 3 years. > Questions to the group: > What server OS do you use for your LTSP clients? Debian 3.0r1 - at home as well as in "my" school. It does not deliver you the newest software but - in my experience - it works fine. "apt-get update" and "apt-get upgrade" could help you updating with only few keystrokes. I managed a SuSE server in another school, but did not like all that trouble with software that ran other-than-stable. YMMV. They stayed with SuSE (one teacher only knew yast and insisted in staying), I later left that project as they told me "LTSP is rubbish"* and re-installed a local Linux on their 486-50 boxes... *which of course is just contrary to my opinion, for sure! :-) Best regards, Anselm Martin Hoffmeister Stockholm Projekt Computer-Service <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email sponsored by: Free pre-built ASP.NET sites including Data Reports, E-commerce, Portals, and Forums are available now. Download today and enter to win an XBOX or Visual Studio .NET. http://aspnet.click-url.com/go/psa00100006ave/direct;at.asp_061203_01/01 _____________________________________________________________________ Ltsp-discuss mailing list. To un-subscribe, or change prefs, goto: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ltsp-discuss For additional LTSP help, try #ltsp channel on irc.freenode.net
