I've always been one of the (not so) few geeks who run Linux on PowerPC.
Sometime ago, Linus himself was one of us, however, it appears that now
he uses a different machine.
Since Apple dropped PPC, the Linux PPC world is quite in turmoil. The architecture is perceived as almost dead. However, new interest comes from the Linux on PS3 projects.
In any case Ubuntu dropped official support for PPC. That was a sad piece of new, since I was quite satisfied with it. I had to recompile the kernel in order to fully support my machine (but this would have been solved in successive releases).
I got back to Debian. I've been a Debian user since Woody, and I liked it ever since. I was a Debian unstable user, and I have always been satisfied with it. However, this time it was different. I've had many more troubles: each upgrade broke something I needed.
I don't know if it's a matter of developers paying more attention to Ubuntu or whatever: the point is that using Debian unstable as a 'reliable' desktop system on power pc seemed quite hard. I don't want to blame Debian developers: it's unstable. No warranties. I used it at my own risk.
Since Debian is unsuitable for my present needs (no hassle, no config, no time), I considered switching Yellow Dog. I know that these days a PPC community mantained version of Ubuntu has been released.
I bought a Yellow Dog Enhanced account, since I did want to support their work and I was interested in support, if something was not perferct in the first place. Remember, no time.
I installed the distribution from the DVD. My hardware was entirely recognized correctly. From the soundcard to the backlit keyboard. My video card should also work with dual head, though I haven't tried it yet. YD comes with a nice GUI to do this.
The only thing that was not working was the airport card. I just had to get the fwcutter and extract the firmware. Then it worked. Moreover, the network applet that stays in the notification area works great. I don't know why, but in Debian and Ubuntu for some reasons it did not work properly (in Ubuntu from a certain moment the whole network-manager stopped working). I did not investigate as I needed less time to write a couple of shell scripts to configure the network interfaces when I needed to switch.
I have always been skeptical about rpm-based distros. Once I used SuSE, but after using Debian I got somewhat convinced of the superiority of the Debian packages. More accurate studies on rpm done recently seem to go in another direction: it was not that deb is better than rpm. It is just that deb repositories were maintained more carefully.
YellowDog repositories are maintained quite carefully. However, there is not a lot of software. I suppose something like 1000 packages (Debian has got ten times that). So I had to learn how to cook my own rpms or simply build software from sources and install it with make install. This is probably the major drawback. However, I'm pretty satisfied with Yellow Dog.
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