Originally posted by: nitromullet
If you are intrigued by gentoo, but are a bit afraid of the install process, try vida linux.
http://gentoo.vidalinux.com/
It uses the Anaconda installer that RedHat/Fedora use, so it's easy to do, but you get a gentoo box when you're done. Plus, the packages are binaries, so you don't have to compile from the source to get up and running.
I have a few questions for some of the previous posters... I'm not trying to flame, I am honestly curious as to why you made the recommendations you did.
Stay away from gentoo if your computers are old.
Go with Fedora Core 3, or SuSe.
Why? So far, in my dealings with Linux, Gentoo has offered some of the best hardware support of any distro. Additonally, Gentoo compiles all of your programs from source, and allows (requires) you to tweak your kernel for your specific machine. This tends to make the system run smoother if done properly, which is certainly a benefit when running old hardware. Then again, the compilation may take a long time on an older machine.
Why? What does it offer that other distros don't. It appears to just be a front end for Debian, which is an excellent distro in itself, why not just go with Debian?
Again, I'm not trying to flame anyone here, but I think that our opinions can be more valuable to OP if we offere some support to back up our suggestions. Personally, I like Gentoo, but I have run a number of other distros and they all have had their merits. I feel that Gentoo's package manager portage is second to none. Previoulsy, I would have given that distinction to apt-get (Debian), but portage has proven to be outstanding. I'm not sure what the state of rpm based package management is currently, since it has been a few years since I really dealt with them. However, from my experiences, they were lacking in resolving dependencies, and I found myself having use the --force flag during install far more often than I should have.