There is a new Linux distribution released almost every week,
sometimes, even every day. The latest is one called Stella, and the
first version is Stella 6.3. Stella is a desktop-focused remix of CentOS, and Stella 6.3 is based on CentOS 6.3.
If you are familiar with CentOS, you know that out of the box, it is not really designed as a desktop distribution. Stella changes all that, as it is primarily aimed at desktop users, while retaining the core enterprise features and capabilities of CentOS.
And you can see that just by looking at the package manager. The package categories tell you that everything you can find in CentOS is also available in Stella. Plus desktop applications that you will not find in any default installation of CentOS. For example, an application listed in the screen shot below, is ROSA Media Player (ROMP), the default media player in ROSA Desktop, a distribution based on Mandriva Linux.
Because it is loaded with desktop applications and media codecs not available in CentOS, you can play most audio and video file formats out of the box. Here it shows a favorite online video playing in Firefox.
The next few screen shots show what the desktop looks like and some of the applications accessible from the menu. This one shows installed Internet applications.
Installed Office applications.
Installed multimedia applications.
Updates manager.
The system is not without error, though.
Administrative tools in the Preferences menu.
System-wide management applications in the Administrative menu.
Read More......
If you are familiar with CentOS, you know that out of the box, it is not really designed as a desktop distribution. Stella changes all that, as it is primarily aimed at desktop users, while retaining the core enterprise features and capabilities of CentOS.
And you can see that just by looking at the package manager. The package categories tell you that everything you can find in CentOS is also available in Stella. Plus desktop applications that you will not find in any default installation of CentOS. For example, an application listed in the screen shot below, is ROSA Media Player (ROMP), the default media player in ROSA Desktop, a distribution based on Mandriva Linux.
Because it is loaded with desktop applications and media codecs not available in CentOS, you can play most audio and video file formats out of the box. Here it shows a favorite online video playing in Firefox.
The next few screen shots show what the desktop looks like and some of the applications accessible from the menu. This one shows installed Internet applications.
Installed Office applications.
Installed multimedia applications.
Updates manager.
The system is not without error, though.
Administrative tools in the Preferences menu.
System-wide management applications in the Administrative menu.
Read More......
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