On Mon, May 29, 2006 at 11:16:34AM +0200, Tshepang Lekhonkhobe wrote: > On 5/24/06, Roberto C. Sanchez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >Tshepang Lekhonkhobe wrote: > >> By the way is there a distro out there considered as stable as > >> Debian's Stable. This is not a question of which is a better distro > >> (too many variables involved there), but just a question of, "which > >> distro breaks less?" > >> > > > >Again, that is not really a fair or accurate question. I would assert > >that distros specifically targeted at certain segments of the market > >would do better in that respect. If you have a distro that is targeted > >at firewall applications, it won't be affected by things like the > >problems that occur with X, Gnome, and KDE. OTOH, anything target at > >the desktop/workstation market would include a great many more packages > >and probably have more security issues. Even those statements are very > >broad and I'm sure you could find exceptions. > > I should have specified that I meant general purpose OSes...
What do you mean by 'general purpose OS'? Do you mean a desktop distro that can also do firewalling and has an MTA, etc? Do you mean a firewall/router distro that can also do X? Do you a file/mail server that can act as a desktop/router/firewall? Each OS I'm aware of has certain things they prioritize. Look at what's in Debian Important, Standard, Optional, and Extra. Debian devels invest a lot of time into each field, and Debian can be made to do (almost) anything--but the distinctions aren't there for no reason. Look at what Ubuntu installs by default: GNOME, OO.o, the GIMP, no MTA, no console-mode mail apps--it's also clear what their priorities are. -- Christopher Nelson -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- QOTD: "What do you mean, you had the dog fixed? Just what made you think he was broken!" -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]