On Wed, 2005-06-22 at 18:34 +0000, Paul Biggar wrote:
> On 6/22/05, Braun Brelin <bbrelin at openapp.biz> wrote:
> > Anyone have a good suggestion for a 64 bit Linux distro?
> > I'm looking for a distro that has good support for multimedia apps...
>> The thread seems to have wandered off topic, so I'll just answer the
> question with my short story of the search for the same.
>> Starting with the rule 'not fedora', and 'not anything else rpm
> related', there was the choice between debian and gentoo (I didn't
> notice there was an ubuntu x86_64). I wasn't considering BSDs either.
>> Debian x86_64 wasn't an official release, so I didn't think I could
> expect the full support that I thought I'd get with gentoo, and which
> I'm happy to say, I have gotten with gentoo. Some high points and
> low-points:
>> High:
> - Very good documentation. Really really good.
> - Most of portage (that I've used) has been available for ~amd64,
> though a lot of it is masked (ie testing).
> - They treat amd64 as a first class architecture, unlike debian.
Wow, some good point, its amazing.
> Low points:
> - Some codecs don't work in 64 bit.
> - Portage is source based, as I'm sure you're aware. So you don't get
> to use a package when you need it. You have to wait 3 hours.
> - Not everything works. You'll occasionally (ie more than you'd like
> to) update or install a new package only for ebuild to fail. I've
> never seen this happen in debian (i386)
What! I've been using Gentoo for the last 4 plus year and the only time
it fucked up was when my HD fail,I've never had an ebuild failer,bar
running out of space for compiling OpenOffice (what can i say) :)
> - The initial install is not simple, and it is long (though it is well
> documented).
It's to weed out the idiots :) (Darwin Awards comes to mind)
> - Use flags suck ass. They're inconsistant across ebuilds; flags that
> you think would be supported by some packages aren't; and there aren't
> any decent tools to play with them (ufed? kill me)
Different packages use different USE flags. you can't expect apache to
compile with gnome dependency, can you ?
> You can get around some of these problems by running a debian chroot.
> But that's twice the install, and you need to use debootstrap, which
> is also not trivial.
What ?
> Is there a speed difference? Maybe, but I don't notice it. Anyhow, you
> spend so long installing packages in the background that your system
> will probably run slower, on average.
All my updates compile in the background, most 99% are emerged within a
few hours.
> All in all, when debian etch comes out, and has full amd64 support, I
> will probably switch.
Good, hope it works out.
> Hope this helps,
> Paul
>>> --
> Paul Biggar
>paul.biggar at gmail.com
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