So true, on Zorin 6.x core 64-bit, I added LXDE and KDE and just select when I log in. I decided to add then when some updates triggered the Zorin Start menu to be hijacked by the Ubuntu Start button.
I was going to try Ultimate Linux, but one stick of RAM going bad and a drop down to a slower AMD AM2 CPU, put that on the back burner for awhile.
Joan in Reno
--- On Fri, 2/8/13, Paul pfrederick1@yahoo.com> wrote:
From: Paul pfrederick1@yahoo.com>
Subject: [LINUX_Newbies] Re: Distribution Question
To: LINUX_Newbies@yahoogroups.com
Date: Friday, February 8, 2013, 5:48 PM
--- In LINUX_Newbies@yahoogroups.com, wombat wrote:
>
> It's only my own experience but I liked XUbuntu a lot on my netbook until I fiddled around one time too many and scragged it, so am currently installing Mint 13 xfce edition (I like xfce!) which seems to work out of the box . Much depends on your system and your personal preferences.
> The Wombat
>
> Charles Doubek wrote:
>
Mint and XFCE are good stuff. I still don't understand why distributions put out Desktop Environment editions though. You can change those anytime you like. The classic way is to simply edit your ~/.xinitrc file. A long time ago Window Managers came with menu options where you could change on the fly. Which was pretty neat, because after you selected a Window Manager off the menu you'd switch, but retain whatever applications you happened to be running at the time. Your X Window session wouldn't even restart. I think that trick was accomplished by making another application the parent process instead of the Window Manager.
Now folks seem to think you need to do a new installation to change? The most you should ever have to do in order to switch is start a new X session.
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