I started using Unix professionally in 1993 and discovered Linux in 1994. My first distribution was CD-based and came with an X11 desktop. It came with plenty of documentation from the Linux Documentation Project. It was exactly the right information at the right time in my career to help me really learn Unix.
Over the years I've had the fortune of installing and using many great distributions. Of special note are these distributions:
Yggdrasil_Linux - plug-and-play, first live CD distro, being sold at shareware shops
Slackware - widely-available through book publishers
SuSE - fantastic installer, YaST management tool, CD/DVD-based distribution model
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Debian - apt-get and dpkg tools, online repository, support of many architectures
Mepis - big advances in desktop usability, based on debian
Knoppix - great for troubleshooting and debugging, based on debian
Gentoo - build-from-source mindset, ebuild tools, online source code repository
RedHat - RPM package manager, efforts to 'go corporate' with Linux
Ubuntu - installer, usability, desktop maturity, based on debian
/home/cfreyer/public_html/data/attic/technology/linux/home.1268077027.txt.gz · Last modified: 2010/03/08 14:37 by Chris Freyer · [
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