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I mean really roll up your sleeves sit down and learn how to use Linux. It does not hold your hand, and you may need to read some guides, and go to Linux Questions, but if you keep with Slackware it will be very rewarding. I don't recommend using the stable release, at least maybe until 15 finally gets released.
Slackware Current is the way to go. It is rolling and updates almost daily, but is extremely stable and well tested. Then i install slackpkgplus and enable multilib and enable some other repositories and features. Once you get it how you like it there is very little you have to worry about. Slackware is what you make it, you decide weather you use the binary repositories, weather you compile the software yourself, use slackbuilds and the sbo's, or a mix of it all.
You will have to understand your config files, and be able use the shell. It gives you all the tools you need. Slackware is built by the excellent community that develop it, and the dedicated people who use it.
Slackware fails only if you fail, and it works because you make it work. I have been through may Linux distros and I come back to Slackware, because I miss something that Slackware did just a little bit better, or a little bit different. Somehow, and It may just be me, but Slackware has a "personality" or a "soul" all it's own. Version: current Rating: 10 Date: Votes: 9. Infinitely stable and flexible. It leaves the user in control, that's a big word these days!
Pros: Slackware Cons: there is nothing for me Slackware. Just Do It. Copyright C - Atea Ataroa Limited. From the ChangeLog. I will do my best to update the multilib repository ASAP, I have multilib versions of the rebuilt gcc and upgraded glibc packages ready but occupied with other stuff at the moment.
Thanks for the multilib support! Just a thought. Thank you for your updates. I get them via email and your email list is one of the few I am never tempted to unsubscribe from. As for upgrading, I will allow you and the other adventurous Slackers hit those landmines. I can wait for the release of Slackware 15, but until it happens, I will stay in the safety of my No issue upgrading here. Started the upgrade using a synced local repo as mirror for slackpkg, restarted slackpg upgrade-all after upgrade of slackpk itself.
Great news for slackware! No sweat this upgrade. Thank you again for your several years work with Ktown to get us to this place. I used to install liveslak to HD from scratch via setup2hd in some of my home boxes. After a very long update process, slackpkg was upgraded to slackpkg I installed the new version successfully.
I assume ktown is not necessary as kde is now in slackware mainstream, but not clear about the other mirrors,. What mirros or config should I keep in that configuration file to maintain my system updated against slackware 15 alpha and alienbob mirrors? Please advice. I appreciate yur comments and hints. As a newcomer to Slackware I decided to work and update my installs from liveslak releases rich in packages and functionalities I appreciate.
Time to time I reinstall from one of yuour new releases while I learn more complex slackware internals. A word of explanation regarding version tagging in Slackware: In that moment when Alpha1 was announced, there was no difference between slackware-current and Slackware All this transient tagging is mostly meant to enthuse the crowd that is eagerly waiting for The most recent update to kernel 5.
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