Benjamin Flaming <lau@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >Rick Taylor <ricktaylor@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> Slackware's really tough and it's not going to get a lot easier. It's made >for> folk that *really* know linux/unix, etc... {and masochists}. My suggestion >would> be to either buy or download Redhat, set it up and save the configs for >the rest > >For the sake of offering an alternative view, I've found Slackware to be a >*much* better distro for a hands-on learner like me. I never really got into >Linux very deeply until I switched over to Slackware. Believe it or not, I I used Slackware, minilinux, minix and a few alternative Unices when I first started with linux. To be fair to Slackware I've not used it since. Debian turned out to offer me exactly what I wanted. >think you have to know *more* in order to use Redhat or Debian for audio. The >simple reason is that the other distros introduce so many non-standard >behaviors, that I could rarely even complete a simple HOWTO without some >cryptic error message popping up. Now that I've switched to Slackware, OTOH, :} Most distributions have their own docs. Debian adheres pretty closely to the standards. >things generally work right from the start. Even Cinelerra, which (according >to the web site) is supposed to be difficult to build from source, compiled >without complaint and runs without a hitch. Your milage may vary, of course ;) I've not gotten it to compile on anything. I've managed to get the binaries to work on everything. I need the Canopus codec for several reasons. I'm stuck in windows to do editing. I use linux for other than editing at the moment. Eventually, I'll move everything to linux. At the moment I'm not willing to do both.