I'm curious. What is your old reliable?
I agree with bloat. Seems Linux just keeps on growing. I had not pondered this much, except recently when I replace a Fedora Core 2 server with CentOS 6. I ran the Fedora box for 5 years as a local LAMP dev box.
I wonder if there is a "thin" Linux. Of course right out of the box. I have no time to optimize Linux or M$.
I have to upgrade occasionally since I am building apps that run on a relatively recent release.
I sometime think of the good old days when Linux fit on a handful of 1.44MB micro floppies. It now comes on a handful of CD's or a DVD.
------------------------
Keith Smith
--- On Tue, 3/6/12,
joe@actionline.com <
joe@actionline.com> wrote:
From:
joe@actionline.com <
joe@actionline.com>
Subject: Re: Seeking a concise Linux installation checklist
To: "Main PLUG discussion list" <
plug-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us>
Date: Tuesday, March 6, 2012, 10:13 AM
Eric Shubes wrote, in part:
> ok to ... dual boot XP/Linux, running VBox on Linux
> Then you introduced dual booting multiple linux distros along with XP.
> Not a good idea in this day and age.
> I think your objective should be to get to the point of having a single
> linux boot, with VBox running whatever other OSs you want from there,
> including XP. Forget about dual booting unless it's absolutely necessary
> to get from here to there.
[snipped]
Thanks Eric. I certainly do always trust your counsel.
Since I need to be unavailable much of the time until May, I'll have to
come back to this later. But I just wanted to explain why I had proposed
the multiple boot scenario.
I really do detest xp and everything M$ and I rarely use it; however,
since it is on the system and I have way more HD space than I need, I
thought I might just leave it there and make the proposed triple boot to
be able to access two different Linux installations for this reason:
Every time I have ever "updated" a Linux distro, it has caused problems,
and it seems to me that the newer Linux distros have become more bloatware
and a whole lot less reliable than my "old reliable" system which I
*never* update and which *never* fails to perform flawlessly (although it
does have some obvious limitations). Therefore, I would like to install
that "old reliable" system as one of two Linux options.
In the second Linux installation, I hope to install VirtualBox with xp as
a virtual option. But it is because I am apprehensive because of my
universal and uniform past experience with newer distros that I would like
to keep that "fall-back" option of "old reliable." Thus the triple-boot
notion.
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