On mar, 2014-08-26 at 23:26 +0200, David Adler wrote:
  On Tue, Aug 26, 2014 at 09:24:39PM +0100, Will Godfrey
wrote:
  As this will be a clean install, I'm
wondering what people might suggest as
 for best distro to make full use of it - all my other machines have had a
 progression of debian upgrades so are probably full of crud. 
 Use Arch. It might sound counter-intuitive but despite (or because
 of(?)) the rolling release model it requires very little maintenance.
 The regular glimpse on the homepage's news feed is recommended but
 it's been a long time since anything popped up there that actually
 required manual intervention. If this happens, the instructions have
 proven to be adequate. Other than that, occasionally configuration files
 suffixed *.pacnew/*.pacsave need to be merged and voilà, you have a
 crud-free up-to-date system that won't send you to dependency hell when
 attempting to install recent software.
 The above might sound a bit like over-optimistic marketing speak but it
 reflects my experience and from what I've heard it's not just me.
 That said, Debian testing didn't exactly give me headaches -- it'd be my
 second choice for audio -- but my experiences with Arch (quite a few
 years now, no re-installation) are plainly positive.
 
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Arch_Linux_system_maintenance
 greetz,
  -d
  
    in the same vein, and for similar reasons, i can heartily recommend
Gentoo, or better yet Sabayon (no compiling, binary packages).  along
with the excellent Pro Audio Overlay
http://proaudio.tuxfamily.org/wiki/index.php?title=Main_Page i have been
happily making music with Gentoo/Sabayon for 6+ years.  the big win is
the avoidance of major upgrades with the rolling release.
    also, your message on Arch has me thinking i should check it out as
well ;)
peace, w