<div dir="ltr"><div><font><font><font><font><font><font><font><font><font><font>@Martinx: this is something that has me intrigued, I already read on the server list that the kernel is the same for the server and the desktop versions of Ubuntu... My n00b question is: isn't supposed that server and desktop kernels are optimized for their respective roles? Duuhhh :S </font></font></font></font></font></font></font></font></font></font></div>
<font><font><font><font><font><font><font><font><font><font>@Gilles: LOL!! Excellent point! I will enable it tomorrow and see what happens (knocking wood now!)</font></font></font></font></font></font></font></font></font></font><div>
<font><font><font><font><font><font><font><font><font><font>@Liam: Absolutely! :D I spended a month trying to enjoy Gentoo's flexibility, finally gave up bored to death out of the long compiling times (specially the KDE SC stack). Good distro to harness the Hadron Collider power, if you ask me. Funtoo is even nicer :)</font></font></font></font></font></font></font></font></font></font></div>
<div><font><font><font><font><font><font><font><font><font><font><font><font>@Lucius: had enjoyed Arch since 2007 so I know very well your feelings about it ;) But nowadays I need to spend more time using my system than administering it ;) (Words from an Arch lover...). By the way, please check your last sentence as I think there's a typo there, would you please run this command? $ sed -i s/vi/emacs/g </font></font></font></font></font></font></font></font></font></font></font></font></div>
<div class="gmail_extra"><br><font><font><font><font><font><font><font><font class="">Cheers!</font></font></font></font></font></font></font></font></div></div>