Dear GNU/Linux Users Anonymous,
Let me confess it. I am a distro junkie.
I change distros nearly every month.
I really like distro X, which I'm sending this on. Yet I'll end up installing something else a couple of months later.
Productivity hasn't suffered, because I do writing/translation for a living, and OpenOffice is there on anything these days, but I suppose this installmania is a worrying symptom?
Would appreciate your advice [comments also, if witty and inoffensive].
Regards, Quavering Hopper
On Tue, Aug 18, 2009 at 8:37 AM, Suhit Kelkarsuhitkelkar@gmail.com wrote:
Dear GNU/Linux Users Anonymous,
Let me confess it. I am a distro junkie.
I change distros nearly every month.
I really like distro X, which I'm sending this on. Yet I'll end up installing something else a couple of months later.
Productivity hasn't suffered, because I do writing/translation for a living, and OpenOffice is there on anything these days, but I suppose this installmania is a worrying symptom?
If productivity hasn't suffered why are you worried? Anyway, at some point you will get tired of this and stick to one distro.
On Tuesday 18 Aug 2009 8:58:53 am Mehul Ved wrote:
Productivity hasn't suffered, because I do writing/translation for a living, and OpenOffice is there on anything these days, but I suppose this installmania is a worrying symptom?
If productivity hasn't suffered why are you worried? Anyway, at some point you will get tired of this and stick to one distro.
this disease is incurable - the next stage is to see how many distros can fit on one machine
On Tue, Aug 18, 2009 at 08:37:00AM +0530, Suhit Kelkar wrote:
Dear GNU/Linux Users Anonymous,
Let me confess it. I am a distro junkie.
I change distros nearly every month.
I really like distro X, which I'm sending this on. Yet I'll end up installing something else a couple of months later.
My guess would be that, while you would have a great taste of every flavour or every distribution you have worked with, and you are likely to feel comfortable working on any of them fairly quickly, you might not have used most of them long enough to notice the best tricks (or the biggest quirks) in them, beyond the basic install stage. Would this be correct?
Anyway, do keep trying to know the best of each!
Kumar
Dear Quavering Hopper,
On 08/18/2009 08:37 AM, Suhit Kelkar wrote:
Dear GNU/Linux Users Anonymous,
Let me confess it. I am a distro junkie.
I change distros nearly every month.
I really like distro X, which I'm sending this on. Yet I'll end up installing something else a couple of months later.
Productivity hasn't suffered, because I do writing/translation for a living, and OpenOffice is there on anything these days, but I suppose this installmania is a worrying symptom?
Although changing distros nearly every month might seem like fun in the beginning, such a promiscuous lifestyle has its consequences. It is a natural primal instinct to install as many distros as one can to ensure longevity of one's skills, but history has proven that polydistomy leads to problems in the long run.
It is quite common for someone in your line of work to be attracted to any distro that offers what you need (ie: OpenOffice) but soon you may find that you'll drift to the point that you feel that there is nothing wrong with paying for what you need -- that's when you'll install windows.
We are your friends and are here to support you. Yes, i know that "works out-of-the-box installs" are fariy tales and it takes time to find the right distro, the 'one' that'll make you happy, but believe me, distro hopping every month is not the way to find it.
You might feel like your productivity hasn't suffered but what about all the time and effort you spend making such-and-such distro happy ?
It might be that you are worried about commitment, which is natural. However, if you take time to understand each distro, know what makes it click, dig deeper, look for more than OpenOffice you'll realize, distros have much more to offer. You'll be ready to make a commitment to a single distro, when you find one that satisfies all your needs and when you feel that there is too much to lose and only the fleeting, temporary trill of being with something different, in moving to a different distro.
All that said, if you feel like this impulse in install has gone out of control, I suggest that you get some professional help. Someone who can guide you through figuring out what it is that you actually need, what it is that you are seeking out for -- perhaps the roots lie in your childhood experiences, perhaps you had to endure data loss when upgrading from windows 95 to 98 ...whatever the case be, remember that it really is up to you to take the first step.
You can choose right now to seek out and find that one distro that makes you happy or just keep on installing distro's every other month and then one day when you are old, wake up wondering where your actual ~ is.
cheers, - steve
2009/8/18 steve steve@lonetwin.net:
Although changing distros nearly every month might seem like fun in the beginning, such a promiscuous lifestyle has its consequences. It is a natural primal instinct to install as many distros as one can to ensure longevity of
[snip]
You can choose right now to seek out and find that one distro that makes you happy or just keep on installing distro's every other month and then one day when you are old, wake up wondering where your actual ~ is.
phew! were you a marriage counselor in prior life? ;-)
Anurag
On Tue, Aug 18, 2009 at 10:33 AM, stevesteve@lonetwin.net wrote:
Dear Quavering Hopper,
Best.Mail.Ever.
On Tue, Aug 18, 2009 at 10:33 AM, stevesteve@lonetwin.net wrote:
Dear Quavering Hopper,
Best.Mail.Ever.
+1
2009/8/18 steve steve@lonetwin.net:
Dear Quavering Hopper,
Although changing distros nearly every month might seem like fun in the beginning, such a promiscuous lifestyle has its consequences. It is a natural primal instinct to install as many distros as one can to ensure longevity of one's skills, but history has proven that polydistomy leads to problems in the long run.
<SNIP>
You can choose right now to seek out and find that one distro that makes you happy or just keep on installing distro's every other month and then one day when you are old, wake up wondering where your actual ~ is.
cheers,
- steve
Post of the Year!!
Sarfaraz
On Tue, Aug 18, 2009 at 10:33 AM, stevesteve@lonetwin.net wrote:
Dear Quavering Hopper,
<snip>
You can choose right now to seek out and find that one distro that makes you happy or just keep on installing distro's every other month and then one day when you are old, wake up wondering where your actual ~ is.
cheers,
- steve
Very much go with Steve, a quite sensible ans to your quiery. Even I would suggest you to stick to one or two distro at the max. all the distors give you more or less the same functionality.
Try to figure out what are you exactly looking for out of these different distros, I'm sure installation is not, as for most of them the installation process is almost similar.
Stick to one disto of your choise and direct your energy for something else which can give you much better results than this and do it *now*
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sameer Shinde. M:- +91 98204 61580 Millions saw the apple fall, but Newton was the one who asked why.
On Tue, Aug 18, 2009 at 8:37 AM, Suhit Kelkar suhitkelkar@gmail.com wrote:
Dear GNU/Linux Users Anonymous,
Let me confess it. I am a distro junkie.
I change distros nearly every month.
Few suggestions :
* Try GoboLinux if you havenot * Try Making your own Distro * Document weak and strong points
On Tuesday 18 August 2009, Suhit Kelkar wrote:
Dear GNU/Linux Users Anonymous,
Let me confess it. I am a distro junkie.
I change distros nearly every month.
I really like distro X, which I'm sending this on. Yet I'll end up installing something else a couple of months later.
Productivity hasn't suffered, because I do writing/translation for a living, and OpenOffice is there on anything these days, but I suppose this installmania is a worrying symptom?
Would appreciate your advice [comments also, if witty and inoffensive].
Do LFS. Sure shot cure.
On Tue, Aug 18, 2009 at 8:37 AM, Suhit Kelkarsuhitkelkar@gmail.com wrote:
Productivity hasn't suffered, because I do writing/translation for a living, and OpenOffice is there on anything these days, but I suppose this installmania is a worrying symptom?
It is known that every newbie starts like this and ends up with Debian (http://www.debian.org) after seeing their productivity suffers at some point of time.
Best Luck!
On Tue, Aug 18, 2009 at 12:22:18PM +0530, Kartik Mistry wrote:
It is known that every newbie starts like this and ends up with Debian (http://www.debian.org) after seeing their productivity suffers at some point of time.
I thought newbies ended up using either vi or emacs. Oh, and Perl.
Devdas Bhagat
Devdas Bhagat wrote:
On Tue, Aug 18, 2009 at 12:22:18PM +0530, Kartik Mistry wrote:
It is known that every newbie starts like this and ends up with Debian (http://www.debian.org) after seeing their productivity suffers at some point of time.
I thought newbies ended up using either vi or emacs. Oh, and Perl.
I'm addicted to vi.