On Mon, Dec 08, 2014 at 01:20:14PM -0600, Richard Owlett wrote: > /context > I am trying to move away from Windows. > I was originally pointed to Ubuntu. Its primary failure was > trying to reach the same audience as the latest/greatest > Microsoft offering. Both suffer from "vendor knows best" syndrome > > The short form of my personal goal is: > 1. bring back *PERSONAL* to personal computing. > Primary implication - shall not be capable of being a > network server. > Secondary implication - only one person will ever be the > operator. > 2. understand Linux internals > 3. minimal number of modules, secondarily minimize size of > footprint > > Things influencing my outlook > I predate CPM-80 > Reading about "Linux from Scratch" and Slackware > Some of the live CDs did a lot with small footprint [To no surprise of some] I suggest you, at the least, give Arch Linux a look.
The first three paragraphs from "The Arch Way" https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Special:SpecialPages Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication. — Leonardo da Vinci Simplicity is absolutely the principal objective behind Arch development. Many GNU/Linux distributions define themselves as "simple." However, simplicity itself has many definitions. Arch Linux defines simplicity as without unnecessary additions, modifications, or complications, and provides a lightweight UNIX-like base structure that allows an individual user to shape the system according to their own needs. In short: an elegant, minimalist approach. A lightweight base structure built with high programming standards will tend to have lower system resource demands. The base system is devoid of all clutter that may obscure important parts of the system, or make access to them difficult or convoluted. It has a streamlined set of succinctly commented, clean configuration files that are arranged for quick access and editing, with no cumbersome graphical configuration tools to hide possibilities from the user. An Arch Linux system is therefore readily configurable to the very last detail. That, if I may say so, sounds like a paraphrasing of your described goal. -- Michael Rasmussen, Portland Oregon Be Appropriate && Follow Your Curiosity London's a great city to cycle in if you relish the smugness that comes from being by far the fasted mode of transport, even for longer trips. ~ Norman Carri _______________________________________________ PLUG mailing list [email protected] http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
