Patrick Rady wrote:
> I've been working with LTSP for about a year and a half now. Specifically, 
> LTSP on Ubuntu.
> 
> We put LTSP-based thin client networks into nonprofits, I think that the open 
> source world is a good fit for the nonprofit world and doing this we can free 
> them from a lot of the expense of closed source.
> 
> But- without making too many value judgments here, I'm starting to wonder if 
> we might be better off with another distro.
> 
> I don't want to start a Holy War here or anything, but I am interested in 
> opinions...
> 
> Specifically, which distros support LTSP and are suited to a desktop/office 
> environment. I want stability and environment for non-computer oriented 
> people to have a desktop that just works- especially things like the 
> multimedia web surfing experience and basic to intermediate office tasks- 
> mail merge, etc. For the most part I am not as interested in the educational 
> side of things- but more in creating an environment that will cater to those 
> migrating from Microsoft Windows in an small office setting.
> 
I'm currently using:

LTSP 4.2 on Debian Etch
K12LTSP 5.0EL (LTSP 4.2 on CentOS 5)

These have proven to be very dependable.  I can't say for sure that all
multimedia works perfectly, because I don't use stuff like YouTube all
that much.  Sound definitely works for things like playing music.
Overall I've been very happy with these systems.

I've tested:

LTSP 5 on Ubuntu Hardy
LTSP 5 on Debian Lenny

I didn't have much luck with Hardy.  That was partially due to my
specific thin clients, I think.  Debian Lenny performed much better for
me.  In fact, that's probably what I'll be switching to shortly.

If you find that you regularly need the latest and greatest, you could
consider using Debian Testing.  Lenny is "testing" right now, and will
be the next stable release.  But you can stay with "testing"
permanently, and it will be like a rolling release.  You'll have
frequent updates available.  I find that I get about the same volume of
updates with Testing as I do with Ubuntu 7.10 or 8.04.  But the Debian
Testing updates give you new versions, unlike Ubuntu.

However, with updates comes the risk that something may break.  I've
been using Debian Testing for the past 6 months or so on a laptop,
updating regularly, and haven't experienced any breakage.  But 6 months
isn't a really long time, so you might want to hear from some more
long-term users of Testing.

-Rob
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