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Is Crunchbang just Debian, with openbox, and some apps pre-installed?
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No. It's a lot, lot more (intangibly...).
Last edited by dura (2012-09-22 18:49:50)
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Is Crunchbang just Debian, with openbox, and some apps pre-installed?
Yes, that is what #! is.. the pre-installed apps and of course the community is what make it what it is..
The installer sets it a part IMO as well.
VSIDO
If you build it, they will come...
Words That Build Or Destroy
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Philip does recompile the Murrine gtk theme and some libraries, mostly for cosmetics; he also tweaked font rendering (in Waldorf anyway) so it looks closer to Ubuntu than Debian, but other than that and a few custom configs, it's almost-pure Debian. To me, these differences are like the juniper berry flavor in gin. 
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So the basic difference from "pure" Debian is the extra CrunchBang repositories which hold the recompiled and tweaked packages that pvsage mentioned.
John
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( a boring Japan blog , and idle twitterings )
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From my experience. I am not an expert on Linux, I am not a power user. I don't need to use the latest software, I don't have the most expensive laptop. What I looking for is a stable and reliable operative system, easy to keep up to date, and easy to install and configure.
I love Debian, it has been my distro for several years, but I always had to fix issues related with my wireless card and also my graphics settings. CrunchBang is now my first choice because it offers me the same superb quality of Debian... but everything works out of the box from the beginning.
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CrunchBang is now my first choice because it offers me the same superb quality of Debian... but everything works out of the box from the beginning.
This.
It has excellent defaults and functionality. I usually change a few things but it's as close to perfect for me as I've ever used.
brother mouse
new to crunchbang.
my first linux kernel build was on a 386-16sx with 6MB SIPP RAM ($50/MB!)
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In a way I'd prefer if projects like Crunchbang didn't exist as their own distro, a script to crunchify a fresh Debian install seems a cleaner way to do it.
The only problem I see is for people who need wireless connectivity out of the box (Debian isn't going to provide proprietary drivers and firmware).
LEGO won't be ready for the average user until it comes pre-assembled, in a single unified look, and glued together so it doesn't come apart.
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a script to crunchify a fresh Debian install seems a cleaner way to do it.
You could have a look here. 
John
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( a boring Japan blog , and idle twitterings )
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(Debian isn't going to provide proprietary drivers and firmware).
I thought Debian actually provided optional install images that included the non-free whatnots. Is this not, or no longer, the case? (I remember shortly after Debian announced that the Squeeze kernel would not include any proprietary blobs, I got the impression that they might eventually move the non-free packages into a separate repo, kinda like medibuntu...)
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