LinuxQuestions.org

LinuxQuestions.org (/questions/)
-   AryaLinux (https://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/aryalinux-120/)
-   -   My Introduction and some questions in my mind. (https://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/aryalinux-120/my-introduction-and-some-questions-in-my-mind-4175597981/)

Siddharth Upadhyay 01-21-2017 11:55 PM

My Introduction and some questions in my mind.
 
Hi guys
my name is Siddharth ,I am from India and my age is 13 years.I am a Linux lover,Hopping from One place to another for finding a Linux for me.
I hope that Arya Linux is that one.I am really happy that there is one Linux rising from India.
Now some questions in my mind.
1.There is any so that i could install synpatic package manager in Arya Linux.
2.There is any way to install packages not from terminal or from any software center.
3.Is it true that there is not anyway to install software not from terminal but from software center.
4.Why don't Arya Linux did not become Independent ?
And That's all
Thanks

Keruskerfuerst 01-23-2017 04:16 AM

1. Arya is based on LFS and as a result, Synaptic software center does not work here.

hydrurga 01-23-2017 05:07 AM

Siddharth, we are a global world now - it shouldn't matter where a Linux distro comes from (and, anyway, there are usually many people contributing to each distro who come from many different countries).

What matters is whether the distro you choose does what you want it to. In that case, Arya is perhaps not a good choice if you are asking the sorts of questions that you are asking. You should maybe therefore start with a distro which is more complete and needs less hands-on tweaking. Distrowatch.com would help you out in that respect.

fatmac 01-23-2017 06:13 AM

Welcome aboard. :)

If you like synaptic, you should really be looking for a Debian based system. ;)

I'm a fan of apt myself, & can use dpkg as well, all work with .deb packages.

(Personally, I would advise against Ubuntu, because they have altered a few things from the normal Debian.)

Edit: Maybe take a look at AntiX - http://antix.mepis.com/index.php?title=Main_Page

Siddharth Upadhyay 01-23-2017 07:33 AM

Thanks all of you.
Thanks for responding me and helping me.
Thanks

Siddharth Upadhyay 01-23-2017 07:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by hydrurga (Post 5658931)
Siddharth, we are a global world now - it shouldn't matter where a Linux distro comes from (and, anyway, there are usually many people contributing to each distro who come from many different countries).

What matters is whether the distro you choose does what you want it to. In that case, Arya is perhaps not a good choice if you are asking the sorts of questions that you are asking. You should maybe therefore start with a distro which is more complete and needs less hands-on tweaking. Distrowatch.com would help you out in that respect.

Sorry,But i am not a newbie,Thanks for response.You are saying right that it does not matter where is the distro from,but there is different happiness if that operating system is from your country,
Thanks

hazel 01-23-2017 10:03 AM

If you want an LFS derivative with a package manager, you could try NuTyX. It has a packaging system borrowed from Crux.

Jjanel 01-26-2017 03:57 AM

>"there is different happiness if that [distro] is from your country"
>[synpatic pkg mgr reference]
> 4.Why don't Arya Linux did not become Independent ?
Did you mean the "Based on" DistroWatch Search Criteria pull-down selections?

Hi&welcome! DistroWatch search, selecting India & .deb returns: 1. SuperX 3. Rebellin
2. BOSS GNU/Linux (212)
BOSS (Bharat Operating System Solutions) GNU/Linux is a Debian-based Linux distribution developed by C-DAC for enhancing the use of free and open source software in India. Made specifically for the Indian environment, it consists of a pleasing desktop environment coupled with support for several Indian languages (Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Malayalam, Punjabi, Tamil) and other packages that are most relevant for use in the government domain.
4. OpenLX (258)
OpenLX is a beginner-friendly Linux distribution made in India. Based on Linux Mint, it includes many additions, updated packages and user-friendly enhancements designed specifically for desktop use. It also comes with a number of games, multimedia and graphical programs, development tools, and support for Indian languages.

ByTheWay, I use VirtualBox, and *love* ['tiny'] NuTyX ;)
Might you tell us a tiny bit about your PC, Linux goals, particular areas of Linux interest[?]

ericson007 01-26-2017 04:43 AM

Wow, 13 years old. Soon you will be teaching us old guys stuff. Have fun with your experiments. Good to see young guys getting into these things.

wpeckham 01-26-2017 07:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Siddharth Upadhyay (Post 5658995)
Sorry,But i am not a newbie,Thanks for response.You are saying right that it does not matter where is the distro from,but there is different happiness if that operating system is from your country,
Thanks

I think that was NOT what he was saying, though I could be wrong.
If you want a distribution that supports a particular package manager (or other application) it makes sense to investigate the distributions on Distrowatch to see which ones include that particular package.
I am not sure that the country of origin even matters, though clearly the language support may be very important.

In any case, I wish you good fortune in your search.

chandrakant 01-27-2017 08:11 AM

Hi Siddharth,

I am the creator of Aryalinux. Am glad you liked it :-)

If you come from a debian or a red hat background you might be familiar with the GUI based package manager. Well Arya doesn't have anything like that. The reason is as someone stated earlier, there are no packages in arya like in other distributions. Everything builds from source code. alps makes it easy to do so but it's not a package manager like apt-get or yum. That being said we are working on a graphical front end for alps which would be bundled with the next release. It would be similar to Ubuntu synaptic though it would not download and install packages like in Ubuntu. It would simply help you build applications from source code.

I could not understand what you meant by Independent. If you could clarify that I could answer that as well.

BW-userx 01-27-2017 12:01 PM

command line updating and installing software is not as scary as some may think it is. It is a normal process for Linux. It can handle it, but can you? :D :D :D


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 03:44 AM.