Ditto about Mandrake. I started with Red Hat because it was an easy GUI installation, and Mandrake has changed a lot since then, too. If you're looking for a very easy way to install / configure everything, Mandrake is definately the way to go.

That's why I use Gentoo. :)

Steve

Bryan Murdock wrote:
I like Mandrake.  They have put a lot of work into making it easy to
use, there are a lot of packages available and they have a nice utility
for downloading and installing rpms called urpmi.  It has a nice gui
frontend too, if you like.  They have the mandrake control center that
makes it very easy to install printers, change your monitor resolution,
configure your firewall, set up "internet connection sharing" (making
your box into a router), etc.  I've been able to get more done with
linux using Mandrake than I ever was able to with RedHat.  It's not that
redhat doesn't have the capabilities, it's jut that Mandrake makes it
easier to get at those capabilites, and then you can still dig deeper
and get into tweaking configuration files or firewall rules or whatever
it might be later.

Cons? As a company Mandrake seems to be in some financial trouble. What does that mean for the future of Mandrake? Who knows, but for now
they have a very nice distribution that is progressing rapidly. If they
die, it's not like you will be left up a creek with a bunch of files in
their proprietary format, or you'll have to go learn a whole new
operating system or something. Some Linux distro will still be out
there for you to use. Debian will still be chugging along, right? :)


Bryan

On Fri, 2003-11-14 at 09:37, Ammon J Christiansen wrote:

I want to know what distros I could try out and what would work for me.

People throw the terms around slackware, debian, mandrake, netbsd and freebsd. If you could inform me on your experience and how you think these would work for me, I would appreciate it. also let me know if the club has the cds for these distros. I know mandrake and redhat are in iso form on the uug site and I imagine they're all available via ftp from somewhere.

I know everyone has their own opinions about what is best. I was wondering if you could let me know some of the pros and cons of different distros and specifically how hard they would be for me to start out with. I've been using Redhat for about a year. I like ease of new package installation and a good gui interface with email, ftp, web browser clients and also ssh, ftp, web, php serverside stuff.

Thanks for your input
Ammon



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