thanx to all who responded. ^_^ i was actually planning to mv from redhat to another distro.. thanx, GOD bless!
JM Ibanez wrote:
Offhand, having worked with Debian and Slackware, here is how I'd characterize the two distros:
Slackware - Very barebones - Very stable - "Masochistic" - Very techie oriented (i.e. not very newbie-friendly)
Debian - Very flexible - Easy to upgrade/update - Very techie oriented, but can be newbie-friendly (with the exception of dselect...)
If you think you know Linux well enough to go by the shell most of the time, and you're installing on a barebones and/or old/low-end box, I'd go with Slackware if you know you're not expecting to update things often. However, caveat emptor: Slackware is painful to most people, and can be a hassle working with, especially installing or setting up software (without a precompiled Slackware package tarball, for example). There is no such thing as dependencies with a vanilla Slackware package tarball(*). You have been warned.
Debian, on the other hand, holds its weight pretty well. The precompiled packages available for the distro is huge-- often, makes you want to stop and think, just to figure out which ones you really need. apt-get is a life saver, especially when you have to install a package and don't know what's needed, as it automatically grabs dependencies. The large array of choices has its drawbacks-- you have to really stop and think, and not get overwhelmed.
If given the choice, I'd choose Debian though for production/live servers. Slackware is a personal choice, if on low-end boxen, and I run a Slackware 9.1 box at home.
(FWIW: I've had experience successfully installing Mandrake, Slackware, and Debian, in that order. RedHat comes close-- the last time I tried installing RedHat, the CD media I had was bad, and the installer couldn't read the glibc RPM)
-- "Having GOD in our lives doesn't mean we're sailing on a ship with no storms. It's simply sailing on a ship no storm can ever sink. Sail on!"
Glenn Remot Network Engr. - IT,Network Comm. Section, The Philippine Daily Inquirer 8978808 loc 351
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