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Other Distros

    • 15 posts
    August 15, 2011 6:35 PM PDT

    I ran Statler for a time, but it was too different for my taste, but I have seen others that absolutely love it. It is fast, but based on Debian, prone to breakage.


    This post was edited by Ron Gibbs at August 15, 2011 6:36 PM PDT
    • 5 posts
    August 15, 2011 6:42 PM PDT
    Ron Gibbs said:

    I ran Statler for a time, but it was too different for my taste, but I have seen others that absolutely love it. It is fast, but based on Debian, prone to breakage.



    Prone to breakage?  You're joking right?


    Statler is based on the Debian Stable release - rock solid!

    • 15 posts
    August 15, 2011 7:27 PM PDT
    60 kWh said:

    Ron Gibbs said:


    I ran Statler for a time, but it was too different for my taste, but I have seen others that absolutely love it. It is fast, but based on Debian, prone to breakage.






    Prone to breakage?  You're joking right?




    Statler is based on the Debian Stable release - rock solid!


    It may be so now, but when I ran it, updates caused all kinds of havoc. Different strokes for different folks though. If you enjoy it, more power to you.


    • 3 posts
    February 27, 2012 10:28 PM PST

    I like Debian and Gentoo.

    Gentoo isn't that hard to install and configure on a clean install. It appears that most emerge/ebuild failures are from old installs.

    But, for KDE, must add "extras" to the "USE=" variable or the Gentoo packaging system will give bull about a required portion being missing and terminate. It frusterates me that it gives me a fatal error over just not having "extras".

     

    Arch went fine for me when installed on my Acer Aspire M5630, which has Intel graphics, despite there's a "GRAPHICS BY ATi" sticker lol.

     

    But, pacman is messed up, the mirrors are messed up, some files appear to be missing from mirrors for no good reason, pacman frequently displays "Not found" for files pacman needs to fetch and terminates, for *many* files and I had to keep switching mirrors in the mirrorlist file, just to complete the installation of KDE!

     

    The errors from pacman are more likely a 404. I never had errors like that with apt and emerge.

     

    From my current experience, Arch has the most breakage.

     

    Pacman was worse on a system with Nvidia graphics:

    When I did pacman -S nvidia, pacman acted like malware, I saw error message "command not found" go by on the screen then on reboot, I got error message "ERROR: root fs cannot be detected".

     

    Pacman felt alpha-like when trying Arch.

    Looks like it messed up the initramfs portion. I cannot recommend Arch for PCs with Nvidia graphics at this time.


    This post was edited by Randy Anderson at February 27, 2012 11:14 PM PST
    • 27 posts
    April 19, 2012 6:52 PM PDT

    I have been using joliOS & though I no longer have my ebox I think it would run fine. It is a cloud OS & at first I didn't like it but gave it a second try. It is different & very geared toward smart phones & tablet use but I found I could drive it along pretty well with just keyboard commands. It is pretty much ubuntu underneath. I like to use the keyboard. I know how people have wailed away at unity but I love ubuntu & it is quite friendly with the keyboard.


    This post was edited by Harold Roberts at April 19, 2012 6:52 PM PDT
    • 133 posts
    April 19, 2012 10:25 PM PDT
    Peppermint's quite nice (Though I never actually have an installation that lasted more than a day). Solus is also quite good, and BlankOn is quite nice, though I can't seem to get a good installation. or you might try Icefeast (just DON"T try to update anything in it that has anything to do with plymouth, but maybe it's the same for most distros that are derivatives of a mainstream, I suppose), and, like Peppermint, it's based on Ubuntu 11.04, not 11.10, so Midori will be quite unstable. What about Mint? Lubuntu's quite nice, but I think wattOS betters it, except in terms of releases, in which it's schedule of that seems to be closer to Canonical's.
    • 133 posts
    April 25, 2012 8:32 AM PDT
    Among those, the best among the heavyweights are Solus....and I'm adding something else: Zorin, though in both distros I needed to add

    compiz --replace

    in the startup applications to make compiz work,and maybe also install NVIDIA drivers or simply leave it with metacity.
    • 151 posts
    April 25, 2012 4:50 PM PDT
    I like Zorin too. Great OS.
    • 133 posts
    May 6, 2012 1:30 AM PDT
    What about PCLinuxOS?
    • 151 posts
    May 6, 2012 6:25 AM PDT
    I have used PCLinuxOS. Also very nice. I was looking yesterday at an old version of it with enlightenment 17.
    I have installed enlightenment 17 on wattOS. WOW!!! It's even lighter. I am still learning to configure it. Next is a new background.
    • 133 posts
    May 6, 2012 7:17 AM PDT
    It's not a nightmare, certainly.
    Just tell me once you manage to make Synaptic and GParted use the gtk theme, and if you do, then Thank You very much.
    • 151 posts
    May 6, 2012 8:46 AM PDT
    I think there may be a clue somewhere...Like in AtlasX or Bodhi..
    • 27 posts
    May 10, 2012 10:22 AM PDT
    I gave Peppermint a look since you guys liked it, Much like JoliOS, it is very cloud oriented. I liked the Ice program a lot. JoliOS has a very similar Site Specific Browser app as well but I think Peppermint does a better job. The cloud is great & makes for a light OS but I do like to some stuff keep native.
    • 27 posts
    May 10, 2012 10:32 AM PDT
    I'm using lubuntu 12.04 & it's very good too. I like the new login. I'm guessing wattOS will have that too in the next edition. I loved the new software center. It was fast but that might have been my thinkpad, but what I liked best about it is that you can go through it adding lots of applications & then at the end, install them all at once. I hope elementaryOS uses it instead of mints software center.
    • 27 posts
    May 10, 2012 10:36 AM PDT
    Peppermint has one of the best & most useful/helpful websites.
    • 15 posts
    May 10, 2012 3:43 PM PDT
    Harold Roberts said:
    I gave Peppermint a look since you guys liked it, Much like JoliOS, it is very cloud oriented. I liked the Ice program a lot. JoliOS has a very similar Site Specific Browser app as well but I think Peppermint does a better job. The cloud is great & makes for a light OS but I do like to some stuff keep native.
    Peppermint Three is supposed to be released in ABOUT 3 weeks, give or take.
    • Moderator
    • 491 posts
    May 10, 2012 9:00 PM PDT
    I know Kendall Weaver of Peppermint, and he is a very smart guy. Has helped me out at times with things, so I think Peppermint is good, and the people behind it are good people also. I know he's getting close to release :)