Thanks very much for your replies - luckily there hasn't been the 
10,000-post war that someone commented on :)

Well it seems Slackware is the more 'unix-like' of the two - I've read 
several reviews (how accurate they were I'm not sure) and they seems 
pretty consistent in the view that Slackware does not provide regular 
updates? Also, much time needs to be spent actually looking for existing 
updates because there is no 'automatic' updater. Lazy, I know, but 
useful nevertheless.

One final distribution I'd like to try is Mandrake. I've heard good 
things about it - I gather it's more similar to Redhat than Slackware? 
What main differences are there? At the moment I'm downloading a 680MB 
Mandrake 8.2 .iso on my 56k connection :( 35 hours to go :D

Thanks again.

Thomas Madhavan

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

>Hi,
>
>>I've read differing opinions about the ease of use of Slackware - what
>>are your personal opinions? Is Slackware more secure 'out of the box'?
>>
>
>Yes. A better configuration by default, and only tested and approved 
>version of all packages instead of the very last version of each.
>
>> From what I gather Slackware is a little harder to learn than Redhat,
>>but a little more... configurable?
>>
>
>But a very more instructive ! Once you will know Slackware, you will 
>be able to manage any Unix system. You will learn the filesystem, 
>what is set up where, the syntax of each config files and so on.
>In Red Hat, Linuxconf or some others tools do it for you, so you do 
>not learn so much.
>
>One time, I received a Unixware computer. I even did not know about 
>the OS before this moment. But re-using my knowledge of Slackware was 
>enough to operate and re-configure this exotic Unix.
>
>Some other time, I debug Solaris with my books and man pages from 
>Salckware : the most Unix-like Linux distribution.
>
>>Am I right? 
>>
>
>Half right : more configurable ? No : all you can do in Salckware, 
>you can do it in Red Hat. But Red Hat hides you so much with its 
>automated tools, doing his own configuration by hand, like in 
>Slackware is much more powerful.
>
>>I have no problems with
>>using the console and learning anything the hard way :D
>>
>
>So do it : once done, you will masterize all Unixes and understand 
>much more about computer in general.
>
>>What advantages/disadvanages does Slackware 8.0 have over Redhat 7.0?
>>
>
>the possibility to lets you learn about Unix. Did you re-compile a 
>kernel in red hat ? A good chance you will have to do it in Slackware.
>Do you know which information are used in the X main configuration 
>file ? You will learn about that and much more with Slackware.
>
>Jacques Bourdeau
>



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