I used to have to use UNIX a lot, and a few years ago I messed around with Mandrake/Debian/SUSE a little, but I never really got into the whole Linux thing. I just never liked the feel of Gnome or KDE.
Now I've been looking around and fluxbox & xfce both look like window managers I'd like to play around with. Are there any noob-friendly distros that would be easy to get going with them? Ubuntu is supposed to be really good and easy, but how hard would it be to get something better looking than Gnome on it?
I really don't have much of a clue about how this stuff works. I'm certainly not keen on spending the afternoon cutting/pasting things into a terminal window to get it working. Mandrake was just about my speed -- not a lot of monkeying around. I just didn't like the interface.
I thought apps were complied for your specific window manager. I know there's stuff for Gnome that isn't available for KDE and vice versa. So how's that work? Firefox, for example, only has one Linux download available. Does that work on every window manager? How do they do that? What about Thunderbird and Open Office?
I'm looking for something that can run basic mail/web/office apps, and I'd like to be able to use the same distro on my PC as I run on a few old machines (down to about a P2-300), possibly a laptop, and I need my Orinoco Wi-Fi card to work.
Now I've been looking around and fluxbox & xfce both look like window managers I'd like to play around with. Are there any noob-friendly distros that would be easy to get going with them? Ubuntu is supposed to be really good and easy, but how hard would it be to get something better looking than Gnome on it?
I really don't have much of a clue about how this stuff works. I'm certainly not keen on spending the afternoon cutting/pasting things into a terminal window to get it working. Mandrake was just about my speed -- not a lot of monkeying around. I just didn't like the interface.
I thought apps were complied for your specific window manager. I know there's stuff for Gnome that isn't available for KDE and vice versa. So how's that work? Firefox, for example, only has one Linux download available. Does that work on every window manager? How do they do that? What about Thunderbird and Open Office?
I'm looking for something that can run basic mail/web/office apps, and I'd like to be able to use the same distro on my PC as I run on a few old machines (down to about a P2-300), possibly a laptop, and I need my Orinoco Wi-Fi card to work.