On Sunday 04 December 2005 01:28, Mark Knecht was like:
1) If I want *exactly* what Fernando provides on the
Planet site, no
more and no less, then PlanetCCRMA is the best I know of. It's well
supported in the audio area by a great guy. It has a good mailing list
with helpful people. (Of which I hope I'm one once in awhile anyway.)
Overall very positive, but it has two downsides:
a) If you need ANYTHING that's not part of the Planet apt system then
be prepared for RPM hell. At least that's my experience. Email, DVD
stuff, etc.
b) Pick your Fedora version and be prepared to upgrade, upgrade,
upgrade. Every release of FC# is an opportunity to rebuild your system
from scratch. I know some folks report that they just do an upgrade
and it works for them but I'm sure that not a single one ever worked
for me.
That's an interesting appraisal. Rather than wave my DebPomPoms, I'd like to
offer this by way of comparison:
1) If your hardware is useable with the drivers available under Debian's
strict definition of 'free' then AGNULA/DeMuDi is a good all round solution.
If you're happy to use the softwares and versions that Free selects to be
included in the distro, which gives you a fairly wide choice of useful
applications, then you'll enjoy not having to worry about fiddling around in
order to make things work. Other positives similar to CCRMA.
a) If you need anything that's not included in DeMuDi itself, you can get it
straight from the Debian repositories.
b) It usually upgrades reasonably smoothly.
The catch? Well, I've been using it 3 years and never looked back. If I had
time, I'd build a Gentoo system, based largely on reports from this list. I
run on recycled tower systems, so I can afford to be a bit gung-ho about it.
c) Some hardware either isn't supported or can be a complete PITA to get
working. If you fall into that category, you may suffer as much pain and
hardship as someone using any other system. Fortunately it shouldn't take
weeks to figure out whether it's likely to work or not.
d) Debian is notorious for always being slightly out of date, this has
improved a bit since the release of 'sarge'. However, if you want to run the
latest or CVS versions of, for example, Ardour, Rosegarden or some of the
wonderful new applications discussed on this list you're going to have to get
your hands dirty doing some real compiling. It's at this point you have to
decide whether you actively like the way Debian does things (very
command-line oriented, GUIs are often optional extras and are expected to
behave themselves, for example). I can imagine there is a point where you
might as well be running Gentoo. I just haven't reached that yet. ;)
--
cheers,
tim hall
http://glastonburymusic.org.uk/tim