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  1. It's faster to re-install Debian than to get rid of GNOME. Also I don't want to have any residues from GNOME on my system.

    Thursday, 13-Nov-14 15:45:11 UTC from Choqok
    1. @broniebrown You could always install an alternate UI and then launch into that- GNOME's easier to get rid of when it's not running.

      Thursday, 13-Nov-14 16:41:09 UTC from web
      1. @soren Already re-installed Debian. I know I could do that but I couldn't stand the thought that I failed at the installation process.

        Thursday, 13-Nov-14 16:43:27 UTC from Choqok
        1. @broniebrown Welcome to Linux. =P

          Thursday, 13-Nov-14 16:46:15 UTC from web
          1. @soren I know Linux for a long time. It's my main system on my laptop. I use Linux since 2006. I experimented with Linux before 2006 but I never used it on any productive system (live CD or on a scrap computer). I started with OpenSuse, then I switched to Kubuntu. Finally I settled with Debian (and Arch on my ARM home server).

            Thursday, 13-Nov-14 16:50:57 UTC from Choqok
            1. @broniebrown Arch is good- I like CentOS for servers and tend to like Debian based for desktop/consumer just because of how far .deb packages have come.
              I am a linux system administrator and love Linux for servers but I still use Windows for home computer because people still haven't caught on to making mainstream games for linux.

              Thursday, 13-Nov-14 17:21:24 UTC from web