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Member since:
2005-07-18
...I wonder what a quad-core CPU would do to compile times. Maybe it'll make installing apps almost as fast as a binary install, thereby making Gentoo more attractive to a larger user base...
We're running a quad core Xeon workstation with 4 gigs of RAM at work. (We do fMRI brain imaging analysis with the machine.) Gentoo is our primary OS for the workstation, and the stage1 install was not quick *at all.* =)
Compiling from source still takes a while no matter what powerhouse you've got... especially when you compile things like glibc and gcc more than once. And comparing binary install times with compile-install times on the same workstation will most likely always favor the binary (by leaps and bounds).
I still love Gentoo. Beyond the hype, it has a great community, excellent documentation, and it's empowering to users. I personally came for the optimizations, but I stayed for its package management system. Not only are dependencies not an issue, but I love that for each package you can selectively compile-in or opt-out of compiling-in support for other applications/frameworks. I don't know many other distros that make that so simple.
I love other distros, but gentoo definitely fills an important niche. And that niche, in many ways, is under appreciated. We're not all "ricers." To me, Gentoo makes freedom more accessible.