What would this esteemed forum's opinions suggest are the top 3 or 4 most stable (different) Linux distros for personal use (not as a server)? While it seems to have been almost universally the case that the hundreds of Linux distros are continually competing to be the latest and greatest, most advanced, cutting-edge systems -- continually being "updated" and made ever-more glitzy and fancy. However, are there any distros that strive instead to be rock-solid, stable, steady work-horses ... rarely (preferably never) requiring "updates" just to add in more and more of the latest new-fangled whatever? Personally, I have preferred distros based on Redhat rather than ubuntu (Mandrake/Mandriva and PCLinuxOS). I am interested *only* in a personal-use system mainly for work. And I have zero interest in games. I really liked the KDE 3.5 system, but I detest KDE 4+ with all of its nuisance "widgets" and clutter. And I don't care for Gnome. Ideally, I would like a system that is as concise and non-bloated as possible. Every time I have done an "update" on every system I have ever had, it has resulted in a lot of nuisance issues/problems that have wasted a lot of time trying to sort out all those issues so I could get back to work. While I realize that the usual reply to a question like this is that *every* system needs to be frequently "updated" for security reasons ... that seems to me to be a needless nuisance. I have several older systems that have run efficiently and reliably 24/7 for years and have *never* been updated ... and I have never had a problem with them. But they are now several years old and I would like to get something newer. What say you? --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss