

I'm going to agree with that. The point is just willing to read. I wasn't (and I'm not) a guru when I installed Gentoo for the first time, and yet I was able to get it working without too much trouble. It's just a matter of following the instructions of the exellent documentation out there (particularly the handbook) and build the system at your pace, taking your time.i92guboj wrote:As long as you are the kind of user who can read a manual, you should be fine. The forum is here for any problem that you might have. Just pick the handbook for your architecture, and start reading it.
Intel Quad here. Took me 6 hours to reinstall with the following ->Aquiles wrote:I'm going to agree with that. The point is just willing to read. I wasn't (and I'm not) a guru when I installed Gentoo for the first time, and yet I was able to get it working without too much trouble. It's just a matter of following the instructions of the exellent documentation out there (particularly the handbook) and build the system at your pace, taking your time.i92guboj wrote:As long as you are the kind of user who can read a manual, you should be fine. The forum is here for any problem that you might have. Just pick the handbook for your architecture, and start reading it.
As someone already pointed out, it would be a good idea to keep Ubuntu alive and switch to Gentoo once you have everything working and you feel more confident.
Last time I installed Gentoo, on my new Intel Core 2 Quad, it took me just an afternoon to have a basic system with a simple window manager (IceWM) and a few utilities (web browser, mail reader and all this "first need" stuff). From there I could continue adding more packages, such as a fully featured desktop environment, and fine tuning the kernel and the system configuration without a rush, for I already had a basic system to do stuff.
Of course it will probably take you longer than an afternoon the first time, but you're going to learn a lot.

I have installed Gentoo on MANY machines with significantly worse hardware than that. My best machine is similar to that one, and compile times aren't bad at all. So, go for it, and if you need any help along the way we will be here.Jayjem wrote:Thank you very much.
Downloading Gentoo as I speak and will hopefully get it up and running tommorow.
EDIT: I have an Intel Core Duo 1.73GHz and 1GB RAM, is this sufficient enough for decent compile times?




Hahahaha, one of these days I'll have a better computer. And to think, a few years ago, my computer was WAYYYYYYY advanced compared to what most people were using. My how time changes computer hardware!d2_racing wrote:And it's a Thinkpad T60P, that's gonna hurt
Yes, but in defense of other distros, if you work with them, you can really strip down a lot of binary distros as well. For example, though Ubuntu and Fedora install by default with GNOME, there's no reason you can't convert them to KDE or even Fluxbox systems. The question has to do with the initial install. With distros like Gentoo or Arch, you start minimal and work up. With Ubuntu and Fedora, for example - and most binary distros - you pretty much "install heavy" and then pare down from there. I personally think it's easier to start minimal and build up than to try to play the "what can I remove from a base Fedora install without breaking it" game (I used to be a Fedora user).If I read correctly, Gentoo lets me choose what I need, correct? (what desktop manager I want, what drivers I need and what programs I want etc) I'm quite new to the Linux environment but I can learn, and I will. Is Gentoo quite easy to get the hang of and install (as far as I know Gentoo is quite an experience compared to Ubuntu for example).

That's why I used in the past Arch and now I use Gentoo for more then 3 years at home and at work I use Gentoo and FreeBSD.forkbomb wrote:The question has to do with the initial install. With distros like Gentoo or Arch, you start minimal and work up. With Ubuntu and Fedora, for example - and most binary distros - you pretty much "install heavy" and then pare down from there. I personally think it's easier to start minimal and build up than to try to play the "what can I remove from a base Fedora install without breaking it" game (I used to be a Fedora user).