VMWare is a very good suggestion. Another option is to use VirtualBox
which is also free.

On 11 Gru, 19:22, Joe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> To make things easy, you could download VMware Server - run that on
> your windows box and install the prebuilt appliances. That'd make it
> easy to try out a few linux versions. VMware is free as are the
> appliances.
>
> I use ubuntu primarily.
>
> j
>
> On Dec 9, 9:57 am, Andreas Pfrengle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Hello,
>
> > till now I've been experimenting with Django (development version)
> > under Win2k. But Windows sucks. So I dare to make my first steps with
> > Linux. Most of you will surely say I won't regret this decision ;-).
> > But since I haven't any experience with Linux yet, I want to choose a
> > distribution that is best suited for someone coming from the Windows-
> > world AND suited to establish a Django development environment. Well,
> > I'm not even sure if there will be any great difference between
> > several distributions regarding these aspects. Any comment is welcome.
>
> > Regards,
> > Andreas
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