Things I like about Slackware

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If you've been reading this blog for awhile (or spent a few hours back in the archives), you know that I run Debian, Ubuntu, Puppy, OpenBSD and Damn Small Linux a lot.

I have had a Slackware box in the past, but I didn't stick with it. Still, one of my very favorite distributions is Wolvix, which is based on Slackware 11.

While I'm generally a GNOME fan, especially on faster boxes, and not a big user of KDE, even on faster boxes, there's a lot of software in the full Slackware installation. Since I'm OK using KWord (and not OpenOffice Writer or Abiword) for the few times I need to kick out a .doc file, I don't feel the need at this very moment to install one of the GNOME add-on projects for Slackware.

If I could, I would install Dropline GNOME, but since the box I'm using is NOT i686 compatible, I can't do that. GNOME Slackbuild looks like it will work, and I might install it, but since the default Slackware installation is working so well, I'm loathe to mess up a good thing.

Here's what I like about Slackware:

In the default installation, just about everything works

Easy-to-use console utilities make managing the box relatively easy. I'm talking about:

xwmconfig
netconfig
mouseconfig
pkgtool (surprisingly helpful when adding or removing packages)

A bunch of window managers, easily selectable before starting X with the xwmconfig utility. It may not have GNOME, but a full Slackware installation does have:

KDE
XFCE
Fluxbox
Blackbox
WindowMaker
Fvwm2
Twm

On occasion, I do use Fvwm2, which I grew to like from OpenBSD, where it's the default WM. Things really speed up on slow boxes when you use Xfce, Fluxbox or any of the window managers that are not KDE.

Other things I like about Slackware:

Long-term support. The Slackware team keeps the security patches coming for many of its releases. I still see updates for Slackware 8.1, which was released in 2002. Six years is pretty impressive. It's up there with the "enterprise" releases from Red Hat and SUSE.

Slapt-get. After using Wolvix and now Slackware itself with slapt-get, I'm a total believer. It makes maintaining a Slackware box much, much easier. Get it here.

Lots of editors. Slackware may not include my favorite (Geany) but nonetheless has tons of editors built in:

Vi
Vim
Gvim
Nano
Xedit
Kwrite
Kate
Kedit
Emacs
Jed
Joe
Mousepad
(and some I probably missed)

Three major Web browsers:

Firefox
Seamonkey (which also features a mail client and HTML-generating app)
Konqueror

I've grown fond of Seamonkey, which is the main browser in Puppy Linux. I usually use Firefox, but it's nice to have Seamonkey there in case I need the Composer app to do some HTML, or to use the mail client (even though I'm pretty much accustomed to Thunderbird).

I like a lot of choices, and while I'd really like Slackware to include Abiword and maybe even OpenOffice, I can add these packages later if I decide I really need them. But I probably don't and won't.

I haven't made the leap to Slackbuilds yet, but I have had success with Robby Workman's precompiled packages.

Great projects derived from Slackware:

Wolvix
ZenWalk
Vector
Slax

I'm VERY partial to Wolvix. If I need to set up a box quickly with all the software I want/need, Wolvix Hunter is the way to do it. Wolvix has one of the best, most flexible installers I've ever seen. You can run Wolvix as a live CD, or in a "frugal" or full hard-drive installation. All are easy to do.

Default fonts in Slackware look better than default fonts in Debian

I like to gave good-looking fonts right out of the gate. Slackware is as good as any modern distribution in this regard. Debian fonts look OK on an LCD screen, horrible on a CRT. I've gotten used to them, and I no longer change them, but I still prefer nice, smooth fonts.

If you're going to run KDE, Slackware's the fastest way to do it

SimplyMepis with KDE is simply unusable on this 2002-era box. It's too slow by far. Slackware makes KDE usable on this old PC.

Granted, KDE is just as fast in Debian, so that's another good choice for the KDE fan who wants to use their favorite window manager on an old box.

A little advice: If you use KDE in Debian, save yourself a lot of trouble and use Aptitude or apt; Kpackage didn't work for me. And conversely, in Slackware use pkgtool/installpkg/upgradepkg or slapt-get/Gslapt, not Kpackage. Maybe some of you have had a better experience with Kpackage. For whatever reason, I don't like it.

Coming soon: Things I don't like about Slackware

2 Comments

Having used it on Wolvix, I have become partial to Medit. It is a very pleasant editor (Ogg Theora video at http://syntaktisk.dk/downloads/medit.ogv ).
I used to be a Gnome user myself, but since I used very few of the integrating features of Gnome, but still very much liked the GTK2 look of it all, I have settled into Xfce.

There's a whole lot to love in Wolvix, to be sure. I should try again to run it on my Compaq Armada 7770dmt. That's a machine that could really benefit from Wolvix Cub.

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This page contains a single entry by Steven Rosenberg published on June 16, 2008 3:00 AM.

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