i suggest you to install same distros in machine, else you will have to do double learning + hardwork.Ok...im thinking of starting with suse and mint as of now...
i hav two PCs wid these configs:
1. AMD X2 5600+ (2.8 GHZ), ASUS M2N-VM DV, 2GB RAM 800MHZ, 160 GB HDD
2. INTEL P4 2.4 GHZ, 512 MB RAM, 80GB HDD.
m gonna install mint on one pc and suse on the other one,,which Config should
i choose to install mint and suse respectively??...
Agreed!anything ecept SuSE gives you a good starting point.
Agreed!personal opinion though!(novell cheated FOSS by signing patent deal with M$)
I have tried Fedora 8.This distro is hell lot better than what it used to before.
I recommend Fedora for a n00b GNU/Linux user.
else,
Ubuntu GNU/Linux 7.10,for package management and easy access to "super powers"(sudo)
Those who have enough of distro shuffling,go,permanent for Debian Lenny(testing) -the father and mother of Ubuntu and other Debian based distros
*en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Debian-based_distributions
/etc/sudoers has both options - either user permissions or group based.^I said by default,sudo is enabled in Ubuntu,not in Fedora afaik.I know it can be done by visudo the file /etc/sudoers.but do u think any new user by first itself will set sudo in fedora?
You are right prakash, I use Fedora 8 , sudo was not available to me when installed. I had to edit /etc/sudoers to get it working.^I said by default,sudo is enabled in Ubuntu,not in Fedora afaik.I know it can be done by visudo the file /etc/sudoers.but do u think any new user by first itself will set sudo in fedora?
use SSH for much more powerActually i never liked sudo much.. I just used to su and login as root. Felt more powerful that way.i know it sounds foolish..
anything ecept SuSE gives you a good starting point.