On Wednesday 05 October 2005 03:39 pm Micah DesJardins kindly wrote: > As much as we keep talking about the differences, the reality is > (for me at least) that there really aren't that many big > differences: > > Basically you're looking at .deb distros, .rpm distros, or source > distros. Beyond that it's all about the distro philosophy, the > relative "speed" of the project's distribution cycle, > community/third party support and what it is you're looking for in > a distribution. > > Anybody else feel the same? (or differently?) > > Micah There's also a difference in init systems- how the system launches it's applications and services. Slackware and it's derivatives use the BSD-style init system. Most other Linuxes use the SysV-init. I started with Mandrake 8.0. Tried a lot of different distros because I wanted to learn. It wasn't until my second try of Slackware that I really started learning much. Slack uses the BSD-style init system. I find it much simpler to understand than SysV. I've tried and tried to understand how to turn something on or off in a SysV system, and people in this list have tried to help me, but I just don't get it. I don't know if I like Slack's setup because it was the first one I learned, or I learned it because it's just simpler than SysV. Being able to understand and tweak the init system can be an important thing to consider. Siri Amrit --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss