I can't take anymore comments like "Debian/Gentoo/OpenBSD/etc. are not good/user-friendly because they lack a graphical installer." Searching the web, I couldn't find a comprehensive site describing the good and the bad about graphical installers for various OSes throughout the years, so in this article I hope to debunk a few of the myths on the basis of my own personal and professional experience.
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Even tough Gentoo has a very elitish feel to it, it is more simple than, say, red hat. The only stuff I had to learn was how to configure pppd, XFree and which gcc flag does what, when I first installed gentoo. Add compiling kernel to the mix (which I had known about before) and "things you have to know for installing gentoo" list is complete. Rest is blindly following install document. Once the installation is complete, using and updating it is easier than all distros I've ever tried. emerge 'just works(tm)'
Even tough Gentoo has a very elitish feel to it, it is more simple than, say, red hat. The only stuff I had to learn was how to configure pppd, XFree and which gcc flag does what, when I first installed gentoo. Add compiling kernel to the mix (which I had known about before) and "things you have to know for installing gentoo" list is complete. Rest is blindly following install document. Once the installation is complete, using and updating it is easier than all distros I've ever tried. emerge 'just works(tm)'