Originally posted by: drag
Originally posted by: Gamingphreek
Oh was Feisty actually released? Interesting
I am definitely going to grab a Live CD and have it downloading (Torrenting) while I am at my other 3 classes today.
Don't use Feisty. It's not released yet.
I tried the x64 version on my desktop a few months ago and driver support for Linux just wasn't as stable. I had to continually rewrite/modify the Xorg.conf to get it to recognize my card and what not. Not only that some applications simply don't see the X64 binaries and what not, so I have to apt-get those every time I tried to install an app. Granted Edgy Eft, and Feisty are probably much better and more refined.[/quote]
My experiance with 64bit Linux is strictly limited to Debian. Debian tends to have much more mature releases then what you typically see with other distributions, the unfortunate trade off is that you require a bit more expertise to run.
The only serious usability issue I seen with Debian is 32bit application support. It's not a incompatability issue, but a usability one since your going to end up using the command line to work with it.
To have full 32bit compatability for everything you'd want to run in 64bit versions Debian Etch what you want to do is setup what is called a 'chroot' environment. There you pretty much install 32bit Debian and when you need some sort of 32bit propriatory application then you use the schroot command.
So it goes like this:
schroot -p firefox
And that will run the 32bit firefox version.
Not newbie-friendly at all, but it is very effective and I haven't experianced any incompatabilities. Details on how to set it up are aviable at
<a target=_blank class=ftalternatingbarlinklarge href="https://alioth.debian.org/docman/view.php/30192/21/debian-amd64-howto.html#id292486">https://alioth.debian.org/docman/vie......1/debian-amd64-howto.html#id292486</a>
But like I said before there isn't any real point to running 64bit except of you have 4gigs of RAM or more...[/quote]
Oh I completely understand what you mean. So when you want to run a 32bit version, it grabs the 32bit binaries to run it.
Looking over the procedures, I don't think I would have too much of a problem doing that. In fact that could be pretty fun
My Tablet has 1 Gig DDR2 533 memory and my Desktop has 2 Gig DDR 400 memory. So well under the 32bit constraints.
In the interest of learning more, I was wondering about FreeBSD, CentOS, and Solaris. Would it be advantageous (outside of being fun) to load these and explore them. Do any of those have Live CD's that I can try out?
-Kevin