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    <title>Crazy Or Genius?: Tag fedora</title>
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    <ttl>40</ttl>
    <description>When You Are Right 90% Of The Time, Why Quible Over The Remaining 3%?</description>
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      <title> Fedora: A Mixed Blessing</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;Over the summer, I have been using 2 operating systems on a regular basis: Windows 2000, which has been running on my home machine for 3.5 years now, and &lt;tag&gt;Fedora&lt;/tag&gt;, which is running on both my work machine and my campus machine. At the start of the summer they were both running Fedora Core 3. I had no problems with these set ups, as I didn&amp;#8217;t need them to play media like movies or mp3s. These were development desktop systems and they worked well. The only big addition to my work machine was the inclusion of apt, because yum doesn&amp;#8217;t want to work through the http proxy here for some reason (and yes, I did make sure to set it up so that it should).&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Recently, I decided I wanted to upgrade from Core 3 to Core 4. I installed the main Fedora4.rpm (or whatever it is labeled as), pointed apt at Core 4 rpm repositories, and ran apt-get update followed by apt-get install. As the upgrade included a new version of gnome, and I wanted to test some modifications I made to my rc.local file, I decided to restart my machine as well. Logging in, I was faced with the X Windows manager, instead of Gnome. Seems apt-get dist-upgrade removed a bunch of the core gnome packages instead upgrading them. Performing apt-get remove gnome followed by apt-get install gnome however, didn&amp;#8217;t make any difference. Finally, I discovered that gnome-session wasn&amp;#8217;t installed. A quick apt-get install fixed that and everything was better.&lt;/p&gt;


	&lt;p&gt;On campus, I decided to upgrade using yum. This was worse than apt-get. It completely destroyed my system. And by completely, I mean &lt;span class="caps"&gt;COMPLETELY&lt;/span&gt;. I wasn&amp;#8217;t even able to log in via the command line as it apparently decided to remove the default shells as well. Thankfully, There was very little information I actually needed saving, and a LiveCD allowed me to retrieve that. The system itself, however, got a complete reinstall. Hmmmmm&amp;#8230; since nothing is basically being run on it now, maybe I should try another linux distro&amp;#8230;&lt;/p&gt;</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 10 Aug 2005 19:13:00 +0200</pubDate>
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      <author>Sean</author>
      <link>http://www.crazyorgenius.com/articles/2005/08/10/fedora-a-mixed-blessing</link>
      <category>Geek</category>
      <category>linux</category>
      <category>fedora</category>
      <category>upgrade</category>
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