I recommend either
Ubuntu or
Fedora Core. They're both very easy
to install and use, and have good community support.
Mazemaster, here's some definitions you want :smile:
GNOME and KDE: GNOME and KDE are desktop environments. A desktop
environment sits on top of the main system (much like Windows sits on
DOS, until Windows 2000) and provides the accessories, user interface,
programs, etc. There are other environments you can use, but KDE and
GNOME are the biggest and best (and most Windows-like, dare I say).
Yast2: Yast stands for 'Yet Another Setup Tool, version 2'. It's
a program that SuSE (now
Novell) make
that allows easy configuration of the system. Yast is specific only to
SuSE Linux, but pretty much every distrubution provides a setup system.
GNOME is working on a universal setup tool that works on all
distributions; the latest version of GNOME (2.8 ) allows you to
configure pretty much everything desktop-related, but not much in
server-land.
Regarding kernel recompiles, it's much easier than it sounds, and
desktop users hardly ever need to do it if they're running a desktop
distro (I've never had to change a thing on my Fedora box). For geeks,
it's a lot of fun and very relaxing, I must say :smile:
Crono, RedHat don't sell the software, they sell support for the
software. All of their developments and software they made is released
for free into the Fedora project, where anybody can use it.