



Only thing I'm still unsure of is what will be avail in the repo's for these Debian releases.



casey972oo wrote:
I tried already to install the new version from ' Debian ' ... 6.o.1a (Squeeze) ! ...
of course I prefer a ' stable ' version ! ... that's why I quit with ' Windows ' ... with all those ' update ' all the time .. and any moment ! ...
casey972oo
.


Beardedragon wrote:casey972oo wrote:
I tried already to install the new version from ' Debian ' ... 6.o.1a (Squeeze) ! ...
of course I prefer a ' stable ' version ! ... that's why I quit with ' Windows ' ... with all those ' update ' all the time .. and any moment ! ...
casey972oo
.
For a "Stable" Xfce in Squeeze, try Saline OS
http://www.salineos.com/



apsrn wrote:I must say that I am impressed by Mint 9 XFCE. It has been fast, reliable and fairly easy to learn. I love that it takes only 50 to 52 seconds from pressing the power button to get to a fully-functional desktop. I am in awe of the developers of Linux..

aljoriz wrote:apsrn wrote:I must say that I am impressed by Mint 9 XFCE. It has been fast, reliable and fairly easy to learn. I love that it takes only 50 to 52 seconds from pressing the power button to get to a fully-functional desktop. I am in awe of the developers of Linux..
I agree to this. LXDE (mint xfce debian) is slower on my system too thus I had to go back to mint9 xfce.
Debian has its draw backs too its not very stable (Kernel updates may end up borking your system).


aljoriz wrote:I think one of the reason why LMDX is booting slow (when compared to mint 9xfce) is due to grub loader. LMDX boots as fast as CrunchBang.





ibm450 wrote:aljoriz wrote:I think one of the reason why LMDX is booting slow (when compared to mint 9xfce) is due to grub loader. LMDX boots as fast as CrunchBang.
i wasn't at all impressed with the speed of the mint deb OS (lxde, xfce, lmde) and the general load-up times of any of the deb distros of mint.
the VERY strange thing i found is that all the deb mint distros run So much faster from livecd / live unetbooting of the hard-drive opposed to full install. i know ive commented about this in a earlier post, but it seems that afew more people are seeing and experiencing, well, should i say, average performance speeds of the deb distros?
and to be honest, the resource difference between the ubuntu and debian based mint os's are far and between, hardly any difference between the two, perhaps maybe 150mb between the 2 on my laptop?

aljoriz wrote:The live usb of LMDX is indeed super fast.
I'm just pointing an observation that Mint based on ubuntu uses a splash screen so it would 'hide' the grub. I noticed in LMDX the grub would allow users to select the kernels in 4secs otherwise it will use the default kernels. If there was some way to hide the grub and let it use the latest kernel w/o waiting to the user's input it might improve the boot-up speed.
but all of these are just conjecture on my part as I am not a expert linux user.



DrHu wrote:One thing I never found that appealing about xfce was the desk-bar in the bottom middle of the screen, and I believe you can get it further MAC like by having the expanding icons appear when mousing over the selectionsAdmittedly that is just an appearance thingy, but since I already used LXDE as the desktop, I might not switch hit on this one
Although that is one of the desktop environments I had considered using, as well as Rox desktop/Rox filer..
--different way of looking a the the system, probably due to the Applications directory, and the option of zeroinstall (internet based installations)http://www.xfce.org/
http://lxde.org/
http://roscidus.com/desktop/
http://0install.net/- http://www.linux.com/archive/feature/114230


Beardedragon wrote:If the LMDE Xfce is the only system, you can improve time by autologgin. There may be a way just to hide Grub, but, if you have more than one system then how would you loggin to the other systems?

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