<p dir="ltr">Slackware is a solid distribution. Look up slapt-get it will give you some of the apt get functionality you liked. </p>
<div class="gmail_quote">On Jan 7, 2013 7:24 PM, "Derek Trotter" <<a href="mailto:expat.arizonan@gmail.com">expat.arizonan@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br type="attribution"><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">
<div text="#000000" bgcolor="#FFFFFF">
<font face="Comic Sans MS">This happened often enough that I'm sure
the machine was locking up. Video playback stopped. So did
music. Any game I might have been playing stopped. It wouldn't
respond to pings. Ctrl+alt+delete did nothing. Ctrl+f1 did
nothing. Trust me. It locked up. Slackware just works. Even
though I have to compile some programs and this takes some time,
in the end, they work. I won't mess with the other distros. Also
the others had trouble identifying and configuring either the
audio, video or both. Kubuntu would ID the monitor and give me
1600x900, but I had to mess with the audio. Debian would get the
audio right, but it acted as if the monitor was 4x3. The others
had varying problems. Once I got the audio and video working, I'd
install vlc and there was trouble with it playing audio correctly
and resuming audio playback after pausing and unpausing. <br>
<br>
When I installed slackware and ran it the first time, the video
was correctly configures and so was the audio. When I installed
vlc, it played audio when resuming playback after pausing. I'll
stick with slackware as long as I have this machine. When I
eventually get another, I'll try the others again. I really liked
being able to type in apt-get install whatever and have it running
a minute or two later. But that doesn't do me much good if I
can't watch a Firefly episode all the way through.<br>
<br>
I'm sure slackware isn't for everybody, but I'm glad it's there.<br>
<br>
Derek<br>
<br>
<br>
</font>
<div>On 01/07/2013 05:57 PM, Brian Cluff
wrote:<br>
</div>
<blockquote type="cite">Just
curious; are you sure that it was actually locking up? It might
be that something was making the X server become unresponsive, but
the machine, as a whole, was just fine.
<br>
Recently my machine was "locking up" a lot, but it would only do
it when I was listing to music. It turned out that there is a bug
in Amarok that if it tries to play an MP3 file that has 0 size.
that it would crash, and it turns out that if it crashes after the
screen has blanked that things go bonkers and nothing responds.
<br>
<br>
...but it turns out that I could still ssh into my machine from
another computer and investigate what was broken. Turns out that
when I went to recover a bunch of MP3 files from some CDs that
were about 20 years old that when it couldn't recover the file it
just wrote out the name of the file with nothing in it.
<br>
<br>
In any case, I've found that Linux almost never locks up, it just
becomes unresponsive from the desktop, to the point that
CTRL+ALT+F1 won't ever do anything for you, but ssh/telnet will
almost always get you into the machine and let you identify and
kill what is causing the problem.
<br>
<br>
The only reason I mention this is that is you find that Slackware
won't do it for you in the long run, there may be hope in getting
one of your previous distros to work for you.
<br>
<br>
Brian Cluff
<br>
<br>
On 01/07/2013 02:42 PM, Derek Trotter wrote:
<br>
<blockquote type="cite">Some of you might remember of the last few
months me posting about my
<br>
system locking up running linux. This last Saturday marked my
system
<br>
running slackware for a whole week without locking up once.
Before this
<br>
I had tried Kubuntu, Mint, Debian, Fedora and Centos.
<br>
<br>
I'm guessing Slackware has something the other distros I've
tried don't
<br>
or the others have something Slackware doesn't. There has to be
some
<br>
difference. Any ideas what it is?
<br>
<br>
Thanks
<br>
Derek
<br>
<br>
--
<br>
"I get my copy of the daily paper, look at the obituaries page,
and if I’m not there, I carry on as usual."
<br>
<br>
Patrick Moore
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
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<pre cols="72">--
"I get my copy of the daily paper, look at the obituaries page, and if I’m not there, I carry on as usual."
Patrick Moore</pre>
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