John,
>>Nearly all my Linux use has been using bash on boxes used as servers
>>or for machine control. I used X ages ago on solaris and rs6000
>>boxes. Now I have a Celeron 433 box available with 512 RAM that I
>>want to set up as a Linux desktop to really and truly begin my walk
>>down the yellow brick road away from the M$ desktop. My questions
>>are: 1) does this 433 celeron have enough horsepower for GNOME or KDE?
>>and 2) which of the two is better suited for a new Linux GUI user? I
>>have RH 7.2.
A C433 has more than enough horsepower for X-Win. My secondary desktop
machine is a K6-233 running Gnome 1.4 and I haven't had any real speed
issues. The real concern isn't X or Gnome, but other media programs
under X such as Video players or harddisk access delays.
>>Also, 3) are there any good open source development environments
>>available (replacement for visual studio or codewrite)? (yes, vi is
>>an option, but I've become addicted to the color-coded keywords)
<UNDERWARE TYPE="asbestos" STATUS="on">
Personally, I prefer Gnome. Both KDE and Gnome are supported equally
well under RedHat. I started using Gnome under Debian when there were
licensing issues with KDE and QT. I've stuck with Gnome because the
developers at Ximian/Helix Code/Gnome.org have spent much more time
writing a solid backend instead of releasing a good enough version. KDE
does have it's strenghts, but I feel that Gnome will become the dominant
Desktop in the near future.
</UNDERWARE>
--
Chris Lewis
shadow@digitalnirvana.com
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If it compiles, it is good, if it boots up it is perfect.
- Linus Torvalds
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