How did you find Bodhi? I am just interested... mean you no harm.
#1
Posted 16 September 2011 - 09:47 PM
For me it was after switching from Windows I found Ubuntu. I got sick of Windows 7 as it was, well sucky. Found Unbuntu, liked it a lot (this was before Unity). But I found myself still looking. Tried Gentoo, Mint, Fedora, and finally Arch. Loved Arch - until I needed getting things to work properly... To get just the smallest thing to work in it, seemed like a struggle. By this time I had discovered E17 after using Gnome 3 on Arch for a bit. This was all beside running Ubuntu, which I kept as my main system, while trying other distros on dualboot. By this time Ubuntu launched their Unity version, which bothered the crap out of me. I still, to this day, don't understand how they could go for Unity. However, as I had already seen the amazingness of E17, I Googled "E17 lightweight distro" and found Bodhi.
I am now (obviously) using Bodhi as my primary Distro since then. I will never look or go back, in this for life =)
So I am keen to find out how YOU found Bodhi? And... shoot! =)
#2
Posted 16 September 2011 - 09:54 PM
Jerry L.
Oregon, USA
#3
Posted 16 September 2011 - 09:56 PM
I found it after using many different Distros over the years , had play with e-16 and E-17 also even had a couple of distros set up with them. Debian, ubuntu, PCLinuxOS and Vector all come to mind and each of them have their strong points. But Like you I was basically a gnome 2.x guy never cared much for KDE. So when Gnome went to Gnome 3 I decided I needed a different desktop and basically tried the all , XFCE, LXDE, fluxbox , open box IceWM and a few others before settling on E-17 as the one I liked the best. Then saw Bodhi 1.2 on DistroWatch and give it a try. Still using it and still liking it very much. Have it installed on 4 machines now.
Cheers,
Dave
Interests: Ham Radio, Bible , Computers, Linux
Morse code an early form of digital communications.
#4
Posted 16 September 2011 - 10:20 PM
JerryL, on 16 September 2011 - 09:54 PM, said:
Jerry L.
Oregon, USA
Feell the same on Win7/Ubuntu. Ubuntu beats wWin7 hands down. Do you still know the link to that article, as I'd love to read it.
kc1di, on 16 September 2011 - 09:56 PM, said:
I found it after using many different Distros over the years , had play with e-16 and E-17 also even had a couple of distros set up with them. Debian, ubuntu, PCLinuxOS and Vector all come to mind and each of them have their strong points. But Like you I was basically a gnome 2.x guy never cared much for KDE. So when Gnome went to Gnome 3 I decided I needed a different desktop and basically tried the all , XFCE, LXDE, fluxbox , open box IceWM and a few others before settling on E-17 as the one I liked the best. Then saw Bodhi 1.2 on DistroWatch and give it a try. Still using it and still liking it very much. Have it installed on 4 machines now.
Cheers,
Dave
Yeah, Gnome 3 really dropped the ball in my opinion, seems like I am not the only one. I have also tried those wm's but still E17 is bets, also in my opinion. I have Bodhi installed on all my machines, and
it sucks work doesn't give me the opportunity to install it... else I would have,,,
Thanks for the input guys!
#5
Posted 16 September 2011 - 10:31 PM
aeonius, on 16 September 2011 - 10:20 PM, said:
Yeah, Gnome 3 really dropped the ball in my opinion, seems like I am not the only one. I have also tried those wm's but still E17 is bets, also in my opinion. I have Bodhi installed on all my machines, and
it sucks work doesn't give me the opportunity to install it... else I would have,,,
Thanks for the input guys!
http://www.makeuseof...omputers-linux/
#6
Posted 16 September 2011 - 10:32 PM
#7
Posted 17 September 2011 - 12:16 AM
"No technology can ever be too arcane or complicated for the black t-shirt crowd."
#8
Posted 17 September 2011 - 01:32 AM
I tried of course to Mandriva and Ubuntu, and I do not remember how many other distributions offer E at least as an alternative.
I regularly search at the Internet to see what's new appeared, and I do not remember where I saw an article about Bodhi, immediately downloaded the 0.16 and few days later the 0.17 that I installed on a virtual machine. I remember myself not totally convinced, but since those days watching the great potential it had.
When version 1.0 came I did not hesitate and download it, I remember those days was testing on my laptop Ubuntu 11.04 and was a huge failure. Without thinking twice, instead of trying to make the 11.04 runnable, I installed a Bodhi and there remained until today.
Everything works wonderfully well, though it is not a very recent model (Dell Inspiron 1501).
I am a teacher and I hope next year (school time) have the opportunity to change all the computers for students to Bodhi, now they have Ubuntu 10.04 installed.
I know my students as much as I enjoy the experience of using Bodhi and E as a regular DM.
My Blog: El Gato con Linux
#9
Posted 17 September 2011 - 06:23 AM

Oh! Those were the days!
cheers
mark
#10
Posted 17 September 2011 - 08:43 AM
So began my long search for that elusive distro, and I went through a long list of them, from various versions of Ubuntu to Fedora to FreeBSD. Either they wouldn't install due to my limited system resources, or if I did manage to install it, I couldn't get online because of no support for my wireless card.
Then I came across Bodhi after doing yet another search for a Linux distro. I was impressed to see how well its wireless network supporting worked right out of the box, and that was from trying out the live CD alone. That convinced me to install it, and it's been running very nicely on my laptop since. My Windows partition would have no doubt crashed yet again by now.
It's been a few months since I installed Bodhi and it still works great. It boots up unbelievably fast and the wireless networking works like a charm. It's awesome to finally come across a Linux distro that finally gets it right.
#11
Posted 17 September 2011 - 10:00 AM
At the end of Dappers lifetime time I decided to make he change to Mint 7. That too I had a few years. Next I found out about Pinguy and gave that a try. Both were working better than the Ubuntu they were based on by the way.
But then my main computer died on me and I made the change to lightweight hardware, where Vista could not work on, so never had to deal with that disaster. Well XP became heavier and slower by the day and I had enough of the bloat of Pinguy and started to scan google again for minimal distro's. I remember I stumbled over a discussion about Bodhi not being listed on distrowatch while it was to young. I read Jeffs blog and the next day I burned the ISO, booted and fell in love.
I lost count about the numbers of time I installed fresh new versions on several machines and I have downloaded my favorite apps to a CD for easy installing offline. I still have my windows partition, but I hardly boot into that one, knowing it would cost me hours, just for the update of my virusscanner and keeping microsoft "safe to use".
Well, that's my story. I'm not a linux guru, just a user, but I'm starting to know my way around. Just enough to be able to help myself and some other people.
I still love Bodhi.
Charles.
EEE PC 901, 1GB RAM, 12 GB SSD, WIN-XP SP3, Bodhi 1.4.0
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#12
Posted 17 September 2011 - 11:04 AM
#13
Posted 17 September 2011 - 02:24 PM
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#14
Posted 17 September 2011 - 02:32 PM
#15
Posted 17 September 2011 - 04:27 PM
#17
Posted 17 September 2011 - 05:29 PM
#18
Posted 17 September 2011 - 06:02 PM
#19
Posted 17 September 2011 - 06:38 PM
#20
Posted 17 September 2011 - 06:52 PM
~Jeff

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