CentOS vs Unbuntu desktop

Tom Buskey tom at buskey.name
Fri Sep 9 13:18:55 EDT 2016


I've tended to use CentOS for the server; at work they want RHEL and
support.  With CentOS 5 and 6, I've found the desktop widgets to be
lagging.  With Ubuntu (and Mint and other derivatives) there tend to be
more desktop tools and they're kept up to date.  Everything is an apt-get
install away.

On my desktop, I want to play videos, music, talk to a sound card, graphics
card, office suites, IDEs.  I don't need that on my servers and it's ok if
things are a bit behind.

I'd check out Mint as an alternative to Ubuntu before going to a CentOS
desktop.

On Fri, Sep 9, 2016 at 12:06 PM, Richard Kolb II <richard.kolb at gmail.com>
wrote:

> Not exactly related, but I just switched from windows 7 on my primary
> machine to Ubuntu 16.x LTS. I found it horribly slow, which surprised me
> considering it's a faster machine, more ram, and an SSD, over my 14.x LTS
> machine. I then tried Ubuntu Mate and I may just jump over to Centos.
>
> Maybe I need to poke at what services I have running first.
>
>
> Richard Kolb II
>
> On Fri, Sep 9, 2016 at 11:44 AM, Tom Buskey <tom at buskey.name> wrote:
>
>> I've been working with CentOS 6/7 based Openstack but have some Ubuntu.
>>
>> FWIW, I prefer the 16.x Ubuntu with SystemD to Upstart.  I've found it
>> easier to learn with CentOS man pages than Ubuntu.
>>
>> I end up using service and chkconfig to start/stop and enable/disable.
>>
>> I've found initctl for Upstart vs systemctl for systemd.
>>
>>
>> On Thu, Sep 8, 2016 at 9:18 AM, Ken D'Ambrosio <ken at jots.org> wrote:
>>
>>> I believe Ubuntu is perhaps one of the lesser-used distros in GNHLUG
>>> land, but I'm hoping someone here might be able to offer some insight.
>>>
>>> I've got an Openstack install on Ubuntu 14.04 host systems, and after a
>>> hurricane-induced power outage over the weekend, one of our hosts won't
>>> boot -- it fails (seemingly) at loading an Openstack Neutron service.
>>> So, I figure I'll go into /etc/init.d/ and just chmod -x all the suspect
>>> services, see if it boots, and then manually load services.  Not so
>>> much; that had zero apparent impact on the services loading.
>>>
>>> So then I did some reading up on Upstart, and found a whole bunch of
>>> places that the services *might* be loading from... none of which seemed
>>> to impact stuff.  I currently have the host booted by some serious
>>> cheating (I pulled a disk, went to "manual repair mode" when it whined
>>> about not being able to mount devices, and loaded services from there --
>>> it completely fails to boot single-user), but how in blazes do I:
>>>
>>> * See what services want to be loaded?
>>> * See *where* they get loaded?
>>> * Load them individually?
>>>
>>> I've found some of the services mentioned in /etc/init/, /etc/init.d/,
>>> /etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/, /lib/systemd/system/,
>>> /var/lib/systemd/deb-systemd-helper-enabled/ and
>>> /var/lib/systemd/deb-systemd-helper-enabled/multi-user.target.wants/ .
>>> I tried playing around with most (all?) of those locations, to no avail.
>>>   Any insight into what I'm doing wrong would truly be most appreciated.
>>>
>>> Thanks!
>>>
>>> -Ken
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> gnhlug-discuss mailing list
>>> gnhlug-discuss at mail.gnhlug.org
>>> http://mail.gnhlug.org/mailman/listinfo/gnhlug-discuss/
>>>
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> gnhlug-discuss mailing list
>> gnhlug-discuss at mail.gnhlug.org
>> http://mail.gnhlug.org/mailman/listinfo/gnhlug-discuss/
>>
>>
>
> _______________________________________________
> gnhlug-discuss mailing list
> gnhlug-discuss at mail.gnhlug.org
> http://mail.gnhlug.org/mailman/listinfo/gnhlug-discuss/
>
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mail.gnhlug.org/pipermail/gnhlug-discuss/attachments/20160909/b0145304/attachment.html 


More information about the gnhlug-discuss mailing list