[ale] Minimal but easily customizable linux distribution.

Van Loggins vanloggins at gmail.com
Fri Sep 17 09:56:22 EDT 2004


I agree with the guys who recommended slackware, gentoo is good if you
have the time to tinker with it, but for something that just works out
of the box with minimal BS and can be configured however you want it.

if you combine it with swaret http://swaret.sourceforge.net then it's
truly awesome.

right now i have mine set to pull from current instead of 10.0 and the
system I have this on is running great.

my favorite Distro is still Libranet, but slackware has definately won
a place on my top 3 list.


On Fri, 17 Sep 2004 09:18:13 -0400, Emil P. Man <mailinglists at synban.com> wrote:
> 
> 
> On Fri, 2004-09-17 at 00:25, Benjamin Scherrey wrote:
> >       I'm trying to setup a linux box that I can use as a video editing station. It needs to grab
> > firewire video and run the various other programs that provide video/audio editing and DVD
> > production. Lots of these programs have dependencies on apps that simply don't come with most
> > distributions and some even seem to require kernel mods (for firewire support). Getting all this going
> > under major distributions like RedHat or Mandrake is getting to be a huge PITA. Frankly - I don't
> > need or want 80% of the packages that most distributions come with and am very comfortable with
> > downloading .tar.gz source files and building from scratch. Indeed - this is often the only way to get
> > things to work at all when I want a feature that isn't compiled into a binary package. Its even more
> > frustrating when the distributions change locations and paths for files from what their defaults are in
> > source distributions so when I finally build/install from source - the result can be a lot of collisions
> > from the previous installation which didn't get cleaned completely when uninstalling the package.
> > Maybe I'm too bleeding edge but I don't really think so.
> >
> >       Soooo... I'd like a nice, up to date distribution that installs easily, doesn't do a lot of funky
> > custom stuff, and lets me build/install new apps as I need them without worrying about colliding with
> > a bunch of old dependencies. Gentoo might fit the bill except its install is still something far more
> > complex than it need be even at the easiest level. I'd appreciate any recommendations or
> > experiences people can pass along. Maybe I'm just missing some otherwise obvious solution?
> >
> >       thanx & later,
> >
> >               Ben Scherrey
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Ale mailing list
> > Ale at ale.org
> > http://www.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale
> > 
> Ben,
> I have heard good things about Gentoo when it comes with what you are
> describing above.
> 
> emil
> 
> 
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Ale mailing list
> Ale at ale.org
> http://www.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale
> 



-- 
Van Loggins
"Linux Geek In Training"
vanloggins at gmail.com


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