Danielm7 wrote: » Maybe a dumb question, but which install am I looking for? I used a livecd/dvd at home, looks like it boots into the GUI just fine but is that really an install? I downloaded the full dvd 1 at work, running it in VirtualBox and after installing that I'm only at the command line. I tried starting the gui with startx but it doesn't recognize the command.
Corndork2 wrote: » +1 to CentOS and Debian. You could also look into Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Its a free distro. They charge for support. I'd recommend RHEL and Debian for the Linux+ if you intend on moving on to Red Hat Certs in the future.
JeanM wrote: » That was just ONE example . I guess it depends if you just want to pass the test or learn more than just on the test ? My point was, if you use a distro that auto detects everything for you, you miss out on many things that you won't learn otherwise.
W Stewart wrote: » Yeah, I work in a web hosting company and manually setting up linux to detect hardware just isn't something that we do. It may have been necessary for the linux enthusiast at one point but it's not an efficient way of doing things when you need to be able to image hundreds of servers. I think Xorg alone has really evolved beyond that and nowadays linux enthusiasts just want a minimal system compiled for their specific hardware but that's still something outside of the realm of what you would do in most enterprises running something like redhat. Also udev auto-detects hardware for you. If you're somehow avoiding udev to make things unnecessarily difficult for yourself then you're missing out on the point of technology and why it evolves so rapidly.