While Apple indeed announced to move its propriety hardware platform to the x86 processor, there was better news today, and that is (yes, yes) the official Debian Sarge release. It’s the first major release since Woody (2002).
The first time I actually had a real Debian running was when Alfons made his second visit to Canada (that same year I think) and brought in both Woody and the Unstable branch. Before that I ran Caldera OpenDesktop, which I happily got rid of after getting familiar with Debian. A year after he dropped off Fedora Core 2, something I happily got rid of afterwards too: it was too cumbersome and (worst of it) slow. It could have been that particular version, but I’ve never bothered looking back.
A couple of thoughts about Debian (a 2004-July release, which I admit, needs to be updated) because I was just in the process of installing yet another Debian server for work:
- Apt-get rocks. There’s no other package manager that is as good as apt-get. There isn’t. Check my links here
- It’s installation is literally flawless, even when you select your packages individually: Many times I had ‘scrappy computers’ with hardware problems. During an install on a computer I barely managed to install a base install of Debian after the computer’s secondary IDE slot started to act funny (DMA errors), therefore not refusing to read the rest of the Debian CDs. No problem: change the sources.list in /etc/apt to the right http or ftp mirror (instead of CD) and go.
- I don’t like to use KDE or GNOME for any Linux server. While deselecting those packages associated with those graphical interfaces, apt takes care of the right dependencies.
Why would you want an Apple?
Gefeliciteerd trouwens
Yeah. I know. Thanks. You too.