Linux and data storage?

Gregory Nowak greg at romuald.net.eu.org
Mon Sep 27 22:41:20 EDT 2004


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If you have access to a spell checker, then may I nicely suggest that
you use it? At the very least, take the time to proof read what you've
written, cleaner posts make for easier listening.

Greg


On Mon, Sep 27, 2004 at 06:50:01PM -0700, Sean M McMahon wrote:
> I don't know of any site which compares distrobutions.  The thing to 
> remember is  distrobutions are a method of collecting and packaging 
> programs.  The main difference you see is where things are located on your 
> system, how your system handles upgrades, what comes with a "standard" 
> system.  Some are very large in size while others are not.  Most of the 
> programms are the same.  when you get a functioning system using info and 
> man will tell you the options for that program.  I can really only speak 
> with limited authority on two distrobutions, fedora(formerly redhat) and 
> debian.  Both have pre-compiled speakup kernels with speakup available. 
> That means that you can boot speakup and linux with speach if you have a 
> hardware synthesiser.  All distrobutions use the same keywords for the 
> name of your synthesiser because that is controlled by speakup and that 
> information is available in a few places on the speakup website.  Both 
> distrobutions have a ystem for organizing, managing software.  Debian's 
> system is more advanced I think then rpm because if you install a package 
> which needs another package, you should get that package as well whithout 
> having to specify you need that package.  Debian clasifies their versions 
> as either stable, testing or unstable.  Stable is what they determine as a 
> production system, it's disadvantage is that it may lack some features or 
> software you need.  Testing will have a few more buggs but  more features 
> and unstable continues this trend.  The standard Fedora distrobution with 
> speakup will be more recent interms of what it offers for software, how 
> well it detects your hardware like usb and cd berners then the standard 
> speakup debian distrobution.  To install debian you can get or bern  cd 
> images of all the cds or do an installation which starts with floppies 
> and/or cd images and install the rest as you need it over a internet 
> connection.  The standard fedora distrobution is better suited for berning 
> cd immages and installing.  Fedora has a better howto for installing 
> itwith speakup, but debian also has great documentation explaining the 
> general installation procedure.  Keep in mind these are just two 
> distrobutions to choose from there are several others, slackware, gintu, 
> etc.  Because this is linux, you don't have to stick to one distrobution's 
> philosophy or even use a packaged distrobution at all.  You could start 
> with one distrobution and install everything else from source not using a 
> package manager.  I chose Debian because I like it's package manager, it 
> was easy for me to setup as a command-line or console system, I could 
> install what I needed over a network and I have a co-worker who is 
> familear with Debian.  I can't say one distrobution is better then another 
> or that speakup runns better on one or another because everything is so 
> customizable.  Some may need more tweeking to make everything work the way 
> you want.  I hope that answers some of your questions, that I haven't 
> confused you and that I haven't said anything incorrect here.
> 
> _______________________________________________
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> 
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> 

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