What flavor of Linux do you use and why

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    Swordsman
    • Jun 2010
    • 324

    #16
    I use Slackware because one of those "which distribution should I choose" websites told me to and I haven't found a pressing need to switch.
    If beauty is in the eye of the beholder, then why are beholders so freaking ugly?

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    • Narvius
      Knight
      • Dec 2007
      • 589

      #17
      I use Mint (on a VM, but nevermind). It's neat, supposedly pretty user-friendly, and it has everything I need in a linux VM (a C compiler, apt-get, make and emacs. Though I probably installed the latter myself).
      If you can convincingly pretend you're crazy, you probably are.

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      • bonzo
        Scout
        • Sep 2007
        • 43

        #18
        I have 4 older/slower machines: 2 run Arch, 1 runs Fedora 11, and I recently installed Fedora 16 on the last one. Most just sit and run grid computing projects.
        NPP(0.5.0-BETA6) D "Daith" KoRo L:36 DL:50 A+ R+ Sp w:The Two-Handed Sword of Cutur (3d6) (+18,+16) (+2)
        En/NPP(Un/Cr/Do) L H- D c-- f PV+ !s d P++ M+
        C-- S- I-- !So B-- ac GHB- SQ+ RQ V

        The Angband Code

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        • Gorbad
          Apprentice
          • Sep 2008
          • 74

          #19
          Fedora Core 13 and Ubuntu Natty for work, Mint 11 and Gentoo at home. (Not mentioning the various Debians on anything I can install it on, like NAS's or the like)

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          • zaimoni
            Knight
            • Apr 2007
            • 590

            #20
            Only by booting from LiveCD, so far.

            It sounds like I should burn a set of Fedora 16 LiveCDs (I have Fedora 12, 13, and 15).
            Zaiband: end the "I shouldn't have survived that" experience. V3.0.6 fork on Hg.
            Zaiband 3.0.10 ETA Mar. 7 2011 (Yes, schedule slipped. Latest testing indicates not enough assert() calls to allow release.)
            Z.C++: pre-alpha C/C++ compiler system (usable preprocessor). Also on Hg. Z.C++ 0.0.10 ETA December 31 2011

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            • Frood
              Rookie
              • Dec 2007
              • 24

              #21
              Right now I'm running Arch on my old laptop. Its nice if you want to do anything less standard than Gnome(or Unity nowadays). I like the customizability and that it forces you to learn about the system.

              I would recommend it for someone who likes to tinker a lot with their system and wants get their hands dirty. The Arch forums and wiki are really good so there is help to get when something doesn't work.

              If you just want a linux desktop out of the box then ubuntu has always worked quite well. I do think that the new Unity interface needs a bit more polish before it is ready though.

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              • Whelk
                Adept
                • Jun 2007
                • 211

                #22
                My recent kick is Arch, and I'll likely be staying a while. I did it to teach myself a little more after using Ubuntu and Crunchbang for a bit (which are both excellent and I'd highly recommend, though I haven't used Ubuntu in a few years now and hear bad things about Unity) - I was ready for less hand-holding and wanted more control over just what was happening on my system. The pacman and AUR repos are great, and the wiki and forums are amazing. It's nice and lightweight, and you can customize it just how you want it. I use Openbox for my window manager. Anything else just seems superfluous.

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                • xibalba
                  Rookie
                  • Feb 2012
                  • 7

                  #23
                  Linux Mint 10, 32-bit, Gnome.

                  Works fine. Though I wish I had a backup, so I could switch to a better distro, like Mint 11 or 12. Especially the xfce one, since I occasionally have some problems with Gnome.

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                  • runequester
                    Apprentice
                    • Mar 2012
                    • 54

                    #24
                    Been on Kubuntu for a bit over a year now. Was on Ubuntu previously.
                    Was always interested in KDE and eventually managed to screw up my install, so it seemed like a perfect time to switch

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                    • Cold_Heart
                      Adept
                      • Mar 2012
                      • 141

                      #25
                      Debian sid with XFCE on 2 PCs, Debian Stable on servers, Archlinux with LXDE on laptop.

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                      • Nick
                        Vanilla maintainer
                        • Apr 2007
                        • 9634

                        #26
                        I've now switched from Ubuntu (Unity got just too irritating) to OpenSUSE with KDE - which is great so far. You have to work a little harder to get everything you want installed than Ubuntu, but apart from that it just works.
                        One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
                        In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.

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                        • AnonymousHero
                          Veteran
                          • Jun 2007
                          • 1393

                          #27
                          I too did a switcheroo, first to Kubuntu (the Precise alphas and beta, which actually were surprisingly stable -- probably due to Precise being an LTS release) and now to Arch Linux. Arch takes a little more setting up since it doesn't just install "everything" by default, but it seems to be working out pretty well -- seems quite a bit snappier than Kubuntu, but maybe that's just my imagination .

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                          • Mikko Lehtinen
                            Veteran
                            • Sep 2010
                            • 1246

                            #28
                            Knoppix is a really good live-CD. I use it a lot.

                            It would be easy to prepare a Knoppix disk image with Angband and lots of variants playable straight from the CD. I believe variants compiled for Ubuntu or Debian will also run on Knoppix without alterations.

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