I use Ubuntu (now version 7.04) because it is the only distro that
works with the Realtek 8187 Wireless on my Neo laptop. All other
distros require me to build from source (rtl-wifi.sourceforge.net),
and oftentimes, the build fails (on most distros). On the other hand,
it is already pre-built into Ubuntu, and supports WEP, WEP-less, and WPA.
I don't like Ubuntu (I am forced to use it), because like Debian (its
parent), it does not have very good support for program development.
In Fedora, all that one has to do is check the box for "Development"
during installation, and everything that the programmer needs for most
of his development work is auto-pulled into the installation. On the
other hand, for Ubuntu/Debian, one has to manually know and check in
"synaptic" all those utilities like: g++, fortran95 (for gmp),
autoconf, automake, gettext, bison, flex, tetex, xdvi, glade, tcl, tk,
and several dozen other packages that I am sure I have forgotten (like
kernel headers), that one needs for programming in
C/C++/Java/Apache-MySQL-Perl.
On my laptop, I have Ubuntu. On the desktop at home, I have Fedora 7.
PManalastas
*/"David R. Meyer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>/* wrote:
All,
I am writing this because I am thoroughly confused by something. I
have
tried Ubuntu each release since v5. I have to tell you, when it comes
to distros, I do not care for it. Let me be clearer...I can't stand
it. With so many distros already out there, why Ubuntu? Fedora,
OpenSUSE, Mandriva and Debian all have excellent desktop and server
apps. Why Ubuntu? I don't understand this cult-like following, but am
willing to listen.
Would anyone be willing to help me understand what makes this
distro so
popular?
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