
Actually I don't have a laptop right now. Just an older desktop that was a hand me down. The most I am looking to spend on a laptop for next year is $600. I hope I can get a good reliable brand at that price.d2_racing wrote:Hi, what kind of laptop do you use ?
I have a thinkpad T61 and it's working pretty good with Gentoo.
I used Arch linux a long time ago, but I prefer Gentoo because of the idea of choice. I can build what I want with Gentoo and I didn't had that with Arch.

yngwin wrote:While I've never left Gentoo since I started using it, I have from time to time given Arch a go, especially on a laptop. But I've given up and returned to using Gentoo every time. In terms of stability it is like ~arch on Gentoo. Sometimes things break. The problem with Arch is that there is no straightforward way to downgrade, and certainly not anything officially supported. They don't have multiple versions of a package in their repositories like we have on Gentoo.
Then there is also the issue of no useflags, which is one of Gentoo's power features, and a lower number of packages available. Yes, AUR is useful, but the build tool is considerably slower than portage. And if I end up compiling multiple packages from source anyway, I might as well use Gentoo...
If you are looking for a binary distro (because it's quicker to update), I suggest you give Sabayon a try.

hal, dbus, opengl, acpi, injectionslonocode wrote: Which useflags do you find useful on a laptop and I am assuming you use it for normal graphical use?
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qt3support -cleartype X kde dbus dvdcss css hal mmx sse sse2 ssse3 svg alsa acpi offensive branding win32codecs firefox -ipv6 jpeg flag ogg vorbis wxwidgets libnotify a52 aac dvd dts flac libv4l2 matroska mp3 mpeg nsplugin ogg png rtsp stream svg v4l v4l2 vorbis x264 skins truetype nonfsv4 lvm2 opengl injection lame twolame ffmpeg mad
In fact, some binary distros like Ubuntu is 0 maintenance.david_e wrote:In any case I don't see any reason to prefer Arch over Gentoo: the only downside of Gentoo is that it can be really time-consuming, but Arch is not really much better from this point of view. So if maintenance time is a concern I would go for something else like Fedora (I am using it on my new laptop and I am quite happy with that, but will stick with Gentoo for my desktop).
Nope, I just prefer Gentoo's reasonably clean and usable default environment. You asked what gain may come from leaving out support for foo, I gave one.slonocode wrote:So when you are using a binary distro the slower linking makes you miss use flags and causes you to come back to gentoo?
juniper wrote:you experience political reality dilation when travelling at american political speeds. it's in einstein's formulas. it's not their fault.
AidanJT wrote:Nope, I just prefer Gentoo's reasonably clean and usable default environment. You asked what gain may come from leaving out support for foo, I gave one.slonocode wrote:So when you are using a binary distro the slower linking makes you miss use flags and causes you to come back to gentoo?

In fact, once installed, Gentoo can run without any updates if you want too, but Gentoo is like a race car, we always want to tweak it to gain extra something, it's the Geek wayArmorSuit wrote:Compile times? Yeah, it's a pain installing on new machine, especially on an older one, but once installed, the updates can compile in the background, you don't ever notice them (set proper NICENESS, a fast mirror, portage download speed, etc... for best results).