It basically depends on how well you know Linux.
My preferred distro has (yet again) swayed back to Slackware.  It's 
small, it's robust and the 1 ISO you need to install contains everything 
you need and then some (In 2007, it's strange to actually be 
de-selecting packages from the first installer ISO of a Linux distro, 
then not have to download anything else).

We use CentOS on a couple servers at work, it's a good little operating 
system, but what I like the best about Slack is how it stays out of my way.

If you decide BSD, remember how they break down: FreeBSD is for people 
who want speed, OpenBSD is for people who want security and NetBSD is 
for people who want UNIX on their toaster.

Jason

Donnacha wrote:
> If you had to pick one OS for a Red5 server, which of the following
> would it be ...  and why?
>
> CentOS
> RHE
> Debian Stable
> Fedora Core
> Ubuntu Server Edition
>
> ... or might one of the BSDs be a better option:
>
> FreeBSD
> OpenBSD
> NetBSD
>
>
> Very curious to hear your answers!
>
> Donnacha
>
> _______________________________________________
> Red5 mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://osflash.org/mailman/listinfo/red5_osflash.org
>   


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