I have to agree with Shaun on this. I run both Windows and Linux based grids 
and find neither has a significant advantage over the other. Linux (mono) may 
not be asa memory efficient as Windows running C#, but unless you are 
attempting to run a large system on the minimum hardware you can get away with, 
most people would never see the difference.

I have run Centos, OpenSuSE, and Ubuntu, Mac OS X 10.0 through 10.10,  Windows 
7 32/64 bit and Windows 8/64 and have had few issues that were not rooted in my 
own learning curve when I tried to a new distribution or version of OS. (I also 
played with a installation on Raspberry PI just for kicks for a while).

Personally, I prefer Linux for the flexibility of customizing the server to my 
own desires and of course to the less expensive options available online when 
renting servers to run OpenSim on.

Frank

> On Oct 10, 2014, at 9:10 AM, Shaun T. Erickson <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Linux is not one thing. It's many different distros, put together by people 
> who decide what goes into them. The fact that some distro maintainers choose 
> package sets that make it difficult for someone to compile Mono is not the 
> fault of Linux. That would be like saying all of OpenSim is bad because you 
> don't like something about how the Diva Distro or Sim-on-a-stick or another 
> distro worked. If the distro doesn't do what you need, switch to one that 
> does. At least with Linux, unlike, say, Windows, you have that choice. When 
> all else fails, you have the tools available to you to build, compile and 
> install any dependency needed.
> 
> Some people are fond of saying that RHEL/CentOS is terrible for compiling 
> Mono on, yet I've been doing it trivially, for years now. I just compiled 
> libgdiplus 3.8 and mono 3.10.0 on CentOS 6.5 last night, with no trouble.
> 
> -ste
> 
> On 10/10/14, 8:52 AM, R.Gunther wrote:
>> Oh, i really know about what im talking. and it simple sucks.
>> 
>> On 2014-10-10 14:43, Shaun T. Erickson wrote:
>>> Sorry to say, but *my* only conclusion is you don't know what you're 
>>> talking about. Linux and OpenSim go together great.
>>> 
>>> -ste
>>> 
>>> On 10/10/14, 7:55 AM, R.Gunther wrote:
>>>> Sorry to say, but my only conclusion.
>>>> Linux is terrible with opensim, in the years it got worse and worse to get 
>>>> ,ono correctly compiled.
>>>> Then linux did not support the hardware right or mono got nuts on the 
>>>> hardware, never figured out why.
>>>> But with opensim you can better not use linux.
> 
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