Hello everyone! Allow me to introduce myself. I started using linux a few years ago, first as a second OS and now there is only Linux OS on my Dell Inspiron 1501. I started with Ubuntu (my first love) and tried Open Suse, a few live CD distros... A few months ago, I discovered and installed CrunchBang and I am delighted by it.Best wishes to all of you.Cheers!
Hello!I am new to Crunchbang, and wish I had used it sooner. It is definitely the distro for me. I've distro hopped for the past 3 years. I've used Ubuntu, Debian, zenwalk, PClinuxOS, and a slew of other distros.
as of the last couple months i have been on a linux kick, getting quite bored with my Windows 7 builds. So i started in the only place i knew, Ubuntu. From there i branched like a virus testing every distro i could get my hands on (linux mint, freeBSD, netBSD, Fedora, CentOS, Ubuntu, KUbuntu, EdUbuntu, XUbuntu... well you get the idea.
Hey thereI have been using linux for a little over a year now and I am getting an extra laptop ready to solely run a lightweight distro of linux and decided to go with crunchbang.
hello corenominal & all of you crunchbangers,i'm using crunchbang for more than a year now and i think it's time for me to let you know how grateful i am:THANK YOU VERY MUCH FOR THIS LOVELY OS!and THANKS TO ALL OF YOU WHO HELP PEOPLE TO ADJUST THEIR MACHINES WITH CRUNCHBANG!about me & my crunchbang:i (used Windows 98/2K/xp for 15 years) started looking around for linux almost 2 y
Hey, I have used #! for about 2 years on my Asus EEE PC 701 netbook. Started with hearing about cruncheee. Searched it, installed it and got used to using crunchbang. Crunchbang is nothing short but a work of art.
Holla :DI just found out about crunchbang. I like that its Debian based.I'm been using Debian for the past 2 years, really liked it, I recently installed Ubuntu 10.10 on a new laptop as Debian Lenny was getting a bit old, and I wanted to try out Ubuntu.
I have tested several linux distros these last four years and I wanted to post my experiences and what just downright urks me.
Minded me as I only had a limited amount of time to test distros and only the ones I tested are included.
A big one that needs to be addressed first is the size. Linux used to be a really small OS. Heck it used to be able to fit on a floppy disk.
Dear Ubuntu Community!
3 years ago I bought a Toshiba Qosmio X500-10V PQX33E Laptop as I wanted to have a desktop replacement. I am doing a lot of photo and video editing on it (on Windows).
Now a new situation came up: I had to install a Linux distribution on this system. Just to mention it: I already have some Linux knowledge and a working Debian system at home.