Linked by Howard Fosdick on Fri 13th Apr 2012 02:48 UTC
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I can live with a distro not being a rolling one like arch, gentoo or SUSE tumbleweed, but FOSS changes a a dramatic pace, I need to stay some what current with developments.
Slackware is traditionally a KDE distribution. It would seem that a good KDE distribution is increasingly being sought after by users:
http://www.muktware.com/articles/3518/kde-voted-most-popular-deskto...
If you want the latest KDE desktop within a distro based on Slackware:
http://www.slackel.gr/slackelmulti/xoops20171/htdocs/modules/pico4/...
http://distrowatch.com/?newsid=07200
This features the newly-released Calligra Suite 2.4.
It seems to have better tools for package management, as a bonus:
The graphical Salix system tools are present too, making administrative tasks easy for everyone. Package management, as always, is done using slapt-get and its graphical frontend Gslapt. Sourcery (from salix), a new graphical tool for managing and installing packages from SlackBuilds is included. This is a graphical frontend to slapt-src and complements gslapt, the default graphical package manager.
Edited 2012-04-13 08:55 UTC




Member since:
2006-07-14
I can live with a distro not being a rolling one like arch, gentoo or SUSE tumbleweed, but FOSS changes a a dramatic pace, I need to stay some what current with developments.
So, what's the average time between releases?
How drastic of a change in software do they have?
How good are they at keeping up with security updates?
What is special about the non free versions, what justifies the cost?