bookmark_borderSo Long CrunchBang, And Thanks For All The Fish

They say nothing lasts forever, and sadly that statement seems to have been proven true again. Yesterday, Philip Newborough (aka corenominal) announced that he would no longer be developing CrunchBang Linux.

In his post, Philip stated that he felt that it “…no longer holds any value…,” and that “… it would be in the best interest of its users, who would benefit from using vanilla Debian.” I couldn’t disagree more Philip. For those of us who were trying to escape the trappings of increasingly bloated distributions like Ubuntu, Fedora, Mint, and their ilk, CrunchBang, with its light-weight Openbox window manager, was an asylum. A minimalist distribution; designed to be efficient and customizable, CrunchBang struck the right balance between speed and functionality. I still think there is a demand for such a distribution.

I can’t tell you how profoundly sad I am about this news. I of course wish Philip the very best in whatever the future may bring. He should be very proud of his creation, and he should know that CrunchBang Linux will always hold a special place in my heart.

bookmark_borderWhy I need to use Windows 7 Professional

Here at the old iceflatline compound there are a lot of Windows desktops running. Enough to where I actually looked into volume licensing at one point. I’m able to access all of these machines from the comfort of wherever I happen to be. Sure I could, and even may, switch some of these over to *nux, but last I checked, I wasn’t going to be able to count on playing, say, Dragon Age or Mass Effect on Ubuntu, or whatever, any time soon (so sad).

Imagine then how pleased I was when a Redmond announced their “family pack” option for Windows 7, which will allow users to upgrade three PCs to the Home Premium edition of the operating system for $149. Great I thought, when I get around to upgrading these machines, I’m going to save a ton of scratch, right? Then something in the back of my mind said hold on minute, what features might you be giving up? The answer: Remote Desktop. This feature is not available in home premium, only in Windows 7 versions starting with Professional. Oh sure you can access another Windows desktop (assuming it is using XP pro or Vista/Win 7 Pro and above) using Home Premium, but you won’t be able to access a Home Premium install remotely. Would it have killed them to put that feature in Home Premium making it…um… premium?

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