* [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? @ 2005-08-31 22:28 Matt Garman 2005-08-31 22:50 ` John Jolet ` (10 more replies) 0 siblings, 11 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Matt Garman @ 2005-08-31 22:28 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Before this gets into a flame war, let's just operate under the assertion that the "best" window manager/desktop environment is strictly a matter of personal preference. So, having said that, what window manager do you use, and why? I wouldn't trade the multitude of options availabe in Linux for anything, but the choices can be overwhelming. I've played with a lot of 'em, starting with fvwm, through window maker, enlightenment 15 & 16, icewm, gnome, xfce, kde, blackbox... I've been using Fluxbox for quite a while now. I want something that is fairly minimal/lightweight, but with a hint of eye candy and a functional "panel" or taskbar. Fluxbox just about has this, but, I can't seem to figure out how to get a gnome-like panel (unless I ran gnome, which would trump the lighweight requirement). I've seen the E17 screenshots, and I'd like to run it, but it's not a trivial install, plus it's still alpha code (though there's plenty of anecdotal evidence that it's plenty stable... I'd still rather wait for an "official" release). Some interesting links, if you aren't already aware: http://xwinman.org/ - basic overview of available WMs/DEs http://www.lynucs.org/ - desktop screenshot archive http://www.enlightenment.org/ - best of eye candy :) Anyway, I was just hoping to start a "pub"-style conversation on what people like/disklike in a window manager. Thanks, Matt -- Matt Garman email at: http://raw-sewage.net/index.php?file=email -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-08-31 22:28 [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? Matt Garman @ 2005-08-31 22:50 ` John Jolet 2005-08-31 23:03 ` Christoph Eckert ` (9 subsequent siblings) 10 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: John Jolet @ 2005-08-31 22:50 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user I've pretty much settled on kde. I like the speed and functionality. I find gnome a little slow (on my hardware) and not quite as stable. I really like xfce, but find certain configuration tasks more difficult than in kde. On Aug 31, 2005, at 5:28 PM, Matt Garman wrote: > > Before this gets into a flame war, let's just operate under the > assertion that the "best" window manager/desktop environment is > strictly a matter of personal preference. > > So, having said that, what window manager do you use, and why? I > wouldn't trade the multitude of options availabe in Linux for > anything, but the choices can be overwhelming. > > I've played with a lot of 'em, starting with fvwm, through window > maker, enlightenment 15 & 16, icewm, gnome, xfce, kde, blackbox... > I've been using Fluxbox for quite a while now. > > I want something that is fairly minimal/lightweight, but with a hint > of eye candy and a functional "panel" or taskbar. Fluxbox just > about has this, but, I can't seem to figure out how to get a > gnome-like panel (unless I ran gnome, which would trump the > lighweight requirement). > > I've seen the E17 screenshots, and I'd like to run it, but it's not > a trivial install, plus it's still alpha code (though there's plenty > of anecdotal evidence that it's plenty stable... I'd still rather > wait for an "official" release). > > Some interesting links, if you aren't already aware: > > http://xwinman.org/ - basic overview of available WMs/DEs > http://www.lynucs.org/ - desktop screenshot archive > http://www.enlightenment.org/ - best of eye candy :) > > Anyway, I was just hoping to start a "pub"-style conversation on > what people like/disklike in a window manager. > > Thanks, > Matt > > -- > Matt Garman > email at: http://raw-sewage.net/index.php?file=email > -- > gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list > > -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-08-31 22:28 [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? Matt Garman 2005-08-31 22:50 ` John Jolet @ 2005-08-31 23:03 ` Christoph Eckert 2005-08-31 23:32 ` Neil Bothwick ` (8 subsequent siblings) 10 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Christoph Eckert @ 2005-08-31 23:03 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user > Before this gets into a flame war, let's just operate under the > assertion that the "best" window manager/desktop environment is > strictly a matter of personal preference. yes it is. Mine is KDE. It eats hardware but I do not care. It's configurable and convenient, and I like the development process. Many bugs and feature requests I've posted have been fixed or included in a very short time. It's stable and consistent, and there are a lot of "third party" applications which integrate perfectly. No flamewar, but most of the above reasons are not valid for Gnome. I dislike applications with multi panel windows, and the file open and save dialog, a basic GUI element, simply is a pain compared to KDE. Best regards ce -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-08-31 22:28 [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? Matt Garman 2005-08-31 22:50 ` John Jolet 2005-08-31 23:03 ` Christoph Eckert @ 2005-08-31 23:32 ` Neil Bothwick 2005-08-31 23:35 ` Steve B ` (7 subsequent siblings) 10 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Neil Bothwick @ 2005-08-31 23:32 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 664 bytes --] On Wed, 31 Aug 2005 17:28:21 -0500, Matt Garman wrote: > So, having said that, what window manager do you use, and why? I > wouldn't trade the multitude of options availabe in Linux for > anything, but the choices can be overwhelming. KDE. I've tried others but always end up missing some feature of KDE so I go back. Yes, it has more features and options than I'd ever use, but i'd rather have 50 unwanted features than be missing one that I need. Konqueror is simply awesome, due in no small part to the kioslaves giving access to just about any type of data from any source. -- Neil Bothwick I must have slipped a disk; my pack hurts. [-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-08-31 22:28 [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? Matt Garman ` (2 preceding siblings ...) 2005-08-31 23:32 ` Neil Bothwick @ 2005-08-31 23:35 ` Steve B 2005-08-31 23:35 ` Steve B ` (2 more replies) 2005-08-31 23:41 ` Fernando Canizo ` (6 subsequent siblings) 10 siblings, 3 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Steve B @ 2005-08-31 23:35 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user, gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1165 bytes --] On 9/1/05, Matt Garman <garman@raw-sewage.net> wrote: > > > Before this gets into a flame war, let's just operate under the > assertion that the "best" window manager/desktop environment is > strictly a matter of personal preference. > > So, having said that, what window manager do you use, and why? I was in the same position as you a couple of years ago. I tried various WM's and wasn't sure which one to stick with. I came up with the following. I used Gnome for a long time, however about six months ago I switched to KDE permantly. I do miss certian things about gnome (like better integration with D-Bus and automounting hardware), and despite the fact that I primarly program with wxWidgets and not Qt.. I still have found KDE to be the most usefull to me. I think the big change for me was when Gentoo started the split KDE ebuild's so I don't have to have a huge monolithic KDE install anymore. Just the basics and some stuff that I acctualy use. KDE is no longer a hardware/cpu hog and doesn't take much more resources than Fluxbox. However I still use fluxbox if I am going to run a game such as AA. -- Steve B. [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1534 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-08-31 23:35 ` Steve B @ 2005-08-31 23:35 ` Steve B 2005-09-01 0:54 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-01 6:29 ` Nagatoro 2 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Steve B @ 2005-08-31 23:35 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user, gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1165 bytes --] On 9/1/05, Matt Garman <garman@raw-sewage.net> wrote: > > > Before this gets into a flame war, let's just operate under the > assertion that the "best" window manager/desktop environment is > strictly a matter of personal preference. > > So, having said that, what window manager do you use, and why? I was in the same position as you a couple of years ago. I tried various WM's and wasn't sure which one to stick with. I came up with the following. I used Gnome for a long time, however about six months ago I switched to KDE permantly. I do miss certian things about gnome (like better integration with D-Bus and automounting hardware), and despite the fact that I primarly program with wxWidgets and not Qt.. I still have found KDE to be the most usefull to me. I think the big change for me was when Gentoo started the split KDE ebuild's so I don't have to have a huge monolithic KDE install anymore. Just the basics and some stuff that I acctualy use. KDE is no longer a hardware/cpu hog and doesn't take much more resources than Fluxbox. However I still use fluxbox if I am going to run a game such as AA. -- Steve B. [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1534 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-08-31 23:35 ` Steve B 2005-08-31 23:35 ` Steve B @ 2005-09-01 0:54 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-01 6:29 ` Nagatoro 2 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Holly Bostick @ 2005-09-01 0:54 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Steve B schreef: > On 9/1/05, *Matt Garman* <garman@raw-sewage.net > <mailto:garman@raw-sewage.net>> wrote: > > > Before this gets into a flame war, let's just operate under the > assertion that the "best" window manager/desktop environment is > strictly a matter of personal preference. > > So, having said that, what window manager do you use, and why? > All right, I'm good and sick of all the answers in this thread being 'how cool is KDE', so, for something completely different: I use Openbox (3). I was a GNOME user for a long time, and I do have GNOME installed, and I do use a lot of GNOME/GTK programs (wherever possible, actually; I very much dislike KDE for a number of reasons). However, if I felt KDE was bloated (and I do), GNOME wasn't much better in that regard-- or at least not enough better to satisfy me. Nautilus is fairly useless for the way I like to manage files. I don't like desktop icons. In fact, all I really liked about The GNOME Desktop (as opposed to GNOME applications) was gnome-panel, which is quite cool for a full-featured panel. Then one day I happened on a forum thread about OB 3. It's a window manager. And that's about it.... OK, you get a dock, if you want to use it. Everything else, you get to configure yourself... but it's a lot easier than FVWM. Right-click on the desktop for the main menu--- *your* main menu, created by you from an xml file. Keybindings and mouse bindings up the wazoo. Undecorate windows at will. Scroll through your desktops with the mouse wheel (on the desktop, on the panel, if you use pypanel like me), or again, set up keybindings to switch desktops as well. Send your windows to any desktop, and follow them there-- or don't. With devilspie, do any or all of the above automatically. Use whatever panel you like. Or replace GNOME/KDE/ROX's WMs (metacity, kwin, whatever ROX uses) with Openbox, and use all of OB's features with your favorite DE. One week, I might sit down with FVWM and see if it can top OB when you really start using all OB's features, but I honestly don't see any reason to put such an intensive study date on my agenda atm. I'm having too much fun looking through all the stuff I was never able to use before because my DE got in the way. OB isn't perfect, and it's by no means as flashy as E (what could be), but its not ugly like FVWM is out-of-the-box, its easy to start working with, you can use programs from any DE or WM with it (except maybe peksystray, which didn't work for me when I tried it some time ago), and you can set it up so it works with the way you actually work-- not only in terms of key and mouse bindings, and in terms of the fact that you can use the helper apps that you find most comfortable to use, rather than the ones the DE foists on you, but in terms of the helper apps that become available to you. Not that you can't use devilspie and asbutton under KDE or GNOME, but who really ever does? Because all the utility programs your average DE comes with aren't included, I went looking, and now I've got all kinds of neat stuff that I never knew about before. Conky is the newest. I like it, not least because it replaced several dockapps. That was a blessing, as the dock was getting a bit bulky with all of the cool monitors and the 4 asbuttons that allow me to launch any one of *108* applications in a 64*256px space (9 launchers per button, each launcher can launch up to 3 apps depending on which mouse button is used to click it-- and I don't have to run Afterstep to use it, which is the best part imo, no offense to AS). All of that fading and highlighting and other glitz is all very nice, but I'm more impressed by functionalities that help me work faster because I set them up to work with me, rather than learning to work the way they tell me. But, "'each to his own taste,' said the lady as she kissed the cow," as my mother used to say (no idea where she got that from). Holly -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-08-31 23:35 ` Steve B 2005-08-31 23:35 ` Steve B 2005-09-01 0:54 ` Holly Bostick @ 2005-09-01 6:29 ` Nagatoro 2005-09-01 12:46 ` Holly Bostick 2 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Nagatoro @ 2005-09-01 6:29 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Steve B wrote: > On 9/1/05, *Matt Garman* <garman@raw-sewage.net > <mailto:garman@raw-sewage.net>> wrote: [...] > So, having said that, what window manager do you use, and why? I use gnome with enlightenment as the WM, nice and good looking setup. But... still I'm thinking about trying KDE for real. > doesn't take much more resources than Fluxbox. However I still use > fluxbox if I am going to run a game such as AA. [Way off topic] But where did you find AA? I've looked around and all I've seen is "sorry tray again later when we've upgraded the linux code" -- Naga -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-01 6:29 ` Nagatoro @ 2005-09-01 12:46 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-02 10:06 ` Nagatoro 0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Holly Bostick @ 2005-09-01 12:46 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Nagatoro schreef: > > [Way off topic] > But where did you find AA? I've looked around and all I've seen is > "sorry tray again later when we've upgraded the linux code" > Portage? eix america * games-fps/americas-army Available versions: 230 Installed: none Homepage: http://www.americasarmy.com/ Description: America's Army: Special Forces - military simulations by the U.S. Army to provide civilians with insights on soldiering Found 1 matches According to the site, that's the latest version available for Linux (though there's a 2.4 version for Windows): Latest Full Client Info America's Army For Windows Users : AA:SF (Q-Course) v.2.4 (855 MB) - This is the full windows installation. Linux & Mac versions are still at v2.3 (Firefight). We will update the links to v2.4 once they become available. HTH, Holly -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-01 12:46 ` Holly Bostick @ 2005-09-02 10:06 ` Nagatoro 0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Nagatoro @ 2005-09-02 10:06 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Holly Bostick wrote: > Nagatoro schreef: > >>[Way off topic] >>But where did you find AA? I've looked around and all I've seen is >>"sorry tray again later when we've upgraded the linux code" > > Portage? Doh! /me goes into a corner for awhile. Thanks! -- Naga -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-08-31 22:28 [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? Matt Garman ` (3 preceding siblings ...) 2005-08-31 23:35 ` Steve B @ 2005-08-31 23:41 ` Fernando Canizo 2005-09-01 0:42 ` Bob Sanders ` (5 subsequent siblings) 10 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Fernando Canizo @ 2005-08-31 23:41 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user El 31/ago/2005 a las 19:28 -0300, Matt me decía: > I've played with a lot of 'em, starting with fvwm, through window > maker, enlightenment 15 & 16, icewm, gnome, xfce, kde, blackbox... > I've been using Fluxbox for quite a while now. > > I want something that is fairly minimal/lightweight, but with a hint > of eye candy and a functional "panel" or taskbar. Fluxbox just > about has this, but, I can't seem to figure out how to get a > gnome-like panel (unless I ran gnome, which would trump the > lighweight requirement). Hum... then 'wmi' (http://wmi.modprobe.de/) doesn't apply to you. But i have at least to friends that were using fluxbox and said to me that they already find the WM they want, that they're conformant, etc, etc, and now they are using wmi ;) I think 'wmi' is the right WM for CLI users. -- Fernando Canizo - http://www.lugmen.org.ar/~conan/ Lazlo's Chinese Relativity Axiom: No matter how great your triumphs or how tragic your defeats -- approximately one billion Chinese couldn't care less. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-08-31 22:28 [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? Matt Garman ` (4 preceding siblings ...) 2005-08-31 23:41 ` Fernando Canizo @ 2005-09-01 0:42 ` Bob Sanders 2005-09-01 2:40 ` Qiangning Hong 2005-09-01 8:22 ` Philip Webb ` (4 subsequent siblings) 10 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Bob Sanders @ 2005-09-01 0:42 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Wed, 31 Aug 2005 17:28:21 -0500 Matt Garman <garman@raw-sewage.net> wrote: > > So, having said that, what window manager do you use, and why? I > wouldn't trade the multitude of options availabe in Linux for > anything, but the choices can be overwhelming. > enlightenment E16. After messing with KDE, Gnome, Openbox, fluxbox, flirting with XCFE and a few others, I came back to Enlightenment. It's fast, doesn't have the feature I hate most - a taskbar. Which, IMO, is the most worthless piece of trash ever created - wastes window space and provides nothing useful in return. I like sliding from one desktop to the other - clicking on a desktop to move to is rather silly. And I hate having my Xroot hidden by Gnome/KDE with their overlays. I detest most icons - mainly those drive icons and mailbox icons. Simply put if I wanted Windows, with a "Start" button and a task bar, I'd run Windows. Bob -- - Are you living in the real world? - -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-01 0:42 ` Bob Sanders @ 2005-09-01 2:40 ` Qiangning Hong 2005-09-02 1:04 ` Bob Sanders 0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Qiangning Hong @ 2005-09-01 2:40 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Bob Sanders wrote: > enlightenment E16. After messing with KDE, Gnome, Openbox, fluxbox, > flirting with XCFE and a few others, I came back to Enlightenment. As an XFCE user currently, I'm curious about what make you guys leave XFCE for other lightweight WMs? -- Qiangning Hong Registered Linux User #396996 Get Firefox! <http://www.spreadfirefox.com/?q=affiliates&id=67907&t=1> -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-01 2:40 ` Qiangning Hong @ 2005-09-02 1:04 ` Bob Sanders 2005-09-02 1:11 ` Holly Bostick 0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Bob Sanders @ 2005-09-02 1:04 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Thu, 01 Sep 2005 10:40:08 +0800 Qiangning Hong <hongqn@gmail.com> wrote: > Bob Sanders wrote: > > enlightenment E16. After messing with KDE, Gnome, Openbox, fluxbox, > > flirting with XCFE and a few others, I came back to Enlightenment. > > As an XFCE user currently, I'm curious about what make you guys leave > XFCE for other lightweight WMs? > The feel and I run at 1600x1024 with Eterm as my main term. I like the way the menu system works. I like the ease of setting up my own background - especially without a lot of menu crawling. I like the seperate pager and Windows Overview of E. On a laptop, E makes it real easy to have multiple desktops with apps running, easy to get to. But it does come down to personal preferences. And I've used a lot of window managers. Perhaps more than most -- original microVAX/VMS win, then X (the very firstl), GEM on AtariST, Amiga's WM, NeXt, Sun, BeOS, Win 3.1/95/98/NT/2K/XP, ripped off the wm in Win98 and put Litestep on, used CDE (had to test it, yuk!), 4DWM (Irix, about the only one I've been able to stand the icons on). It's like editors, use enough of them, and they all feel a bit familar, but you end up coming back to one or two for all your daily activity because of the feel. And I'm no longer any good at any editor - used too many in the past, way too many. Email programs as well, I miss RSTS/E email. That was one sweet program. But it too got too "safe" when they productized it. Bob - -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-02 1:04 ` Bob Sanders @ 2005-09-02 1:11 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-02 1:54 ` Greg Shikhman 2005-09-02 14:56 ` ellotheth rimmwen 0 siblings, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Holly Bostick @ 2005-09-02 1:11 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Bob Sanders schreef: > But it does come down to personal preferences. And I've used a lot of window managers. ><snip> > ripped off > the wm in Win98 and put Litestep on Hey, finally, another Litestep expat! I was beginning to think I was the only one.... :) Holly -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-02 1:11 ` Holly Bostick @ 2005-09-02 1:54 ` Greg Shikhman 2005-09-02 2:53 ` Mark Shields 2005-09-02 14:56 ` ellotheth rimmwen 1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Greg Shikhman @ 2005-09-02 1:54 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 750 bytes --] I have tried out KDE and I am now using GNOME. It seems like GNOME has more of a skinning functionality although it does look a lot more bland initially. ++ OT: In KDE, if I emerged an app, it would appear in the applications menu. In GNOME, I have to add them in manually. Is there any configuration setting to change that? On 9/1/05, Holly Bostick <motub@planet.nl> wrote: > > Bob Sanders schreef: > > But it does come down to personal preferences. And I've used a lot of > window managers. > ><snip> > > ripped off > > the wm in Win98 and put Litestep on > > Hey, finally, another Litestep expat! I was beginning to think I was the > only one.... :) > > Holly > -- > gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list > > [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1139 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-02 1:54 ` Greg Shikhman @ 2005-09-02 2:53 ` Mark Shields 0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Mark Shields @ 2005-09-02 2:53 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 948 bytes --] They should be adding automatically, Greg. Mine does. On 9/1/05, Greg Shikhman <cornmander@gmail.com> wrote: > > I have tried out KDE and I am now using GNOME. It seems like GNOME has > more of a skinning functionality although it does look a lot more bland > initially. > ++ OT: > In KDE, if I emerged an app, it would appear in the applications menu. In > GNOME, I have to add them in manually. Is there any configuration setting to > change that? > > On 9/1/05, Holly Bostick <motub@planet.nl> wrote: > > > > Bob Sanders schreef: > > > But it does come down to personal preferences. And I've used a lot of > > window managers. > > ><snip> > > > ripped off > > > the wm in Win98 and put Litestep on > > > > Hey, finally, another Litestep expat! I was beginning to think I was the > > only one.... :) > > > > Holly > > -- > > gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list > > > > > -- - Mark Shields [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1802 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-02 1:11 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-02 1:54 ` Greg Shikhman @ 2005-09-02 14:56 ` ellotheth rimmwen 1 sibling, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: ellotheth rimmwen @ 2005-09-02 14:56 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 9/1/05, Holly Bostick <motub@planet.nl> wrote: > Hey, finally, another Litestep expat! I was beginning to think I was the > only one.... :) and here's another. *grin* currently using enlightenment. i like the pager, i like the config options, and quite frankly, the drag bar is just nifty. i'm on my way to exploring blackbox and its family. and this is my first list post (gentoo installed last weekend), so hello list. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-08-31 22:28 [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? Matt Garman ` (5 preceding siblings ...) 2005-09-01 0:42 ` Bob Sanders @ 2005-09-01 8:22 ` Philip Webb 2005-09-01 11:36 ` Martins Steinbergs 2005-09-01 13:02 ` krzaq ` (3 subsequent siblings) 10 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Philip Webb @ 2005-09-01 8:22 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user 050831 Matt Garman wrote: > what window manager do you use, and why? I've done my own review a couple of times, when dissatisfied, so I have an idea of what each of a fair number does. I started with a very primitive KDE on an early Mandrake, read about Xfce, tried it -- version 3.18.8 -- , liked it & adopted it: it was more elegant than KDE, but fully capable of managing my activities. Soon afterwards, the Xfce devs brought out a total rewrite (4.0.0), which never lived upto their promises & lacked items from 3.18.8 . Finally, irritated by the state of things around Xfce, I did another review & discovered Blackbox (0.65), which was very simple, but also fully useable once I found out how. Soon afterwards, the Blackbox dev (there's only one) brought out a rewrite -- 0.70 -- which didn't work with some of the BB plug-ins & gadgets, making it impossible to use without constant irritation. As I had KDE installed to support useful apps, I went back to that & have found that it is now fast & highly configurable to my tastes with a very wide range of useful features, so that is today's choice. I like to use the whole of my 15" screen & KDE allows me to hide the panel; I rely on the R-click desktop menu to start apps. The KDE team did a very thoro' survey of users' requests c 2003 & as a result introduced a host of improvements, which shine today. They also made a real effort to make the whole thing much faster & now the Gentoo devs have split it up into easy bits for emerging. I do have Fluxbox installed as a back-up, in case KDE falls down a hole. Fvwm looks like a meta-WM which can be infinitely configured & I still have it installed, but haven't pursued it anywhere. My strong preference is for something I can use & look at day after day without being distracted by candy or hindered by awkwardnesses. -- ========================,,============================================ SUPPORT ___________//___, Philip Webb : purslow@chass.utoronto.ca ELECTRIC /] [] [] [] [] []| Centre for Urban & Community Studies TRANSIT `-O----------O---' University of Toronto -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-01 8:22 ` Philip Webb @ 2005-09-01 11:36 ` Martins Steinbergs 0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Martins Steinbergs @ 2005-09-01 11:36 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user > > what window manager do you use, and why? I stick with KDE, got on it since kde 3.0. and still using it 'cause just i am confortable with it, and looks pretty. Also got installed" Gnome - to run gnope apps Xcfs - for emergency e 17 - just for eye, and actualy this works even if xorg goes bad had used icewm and blackbox on one old box, but now that box is gone. However, hello to everyone Martins -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-08-31 22:28 [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? Matt Garman ` (6 preceding siblings ...) 2005-09-01 8:22 ` Philip Webb @ 2005-09-01 13:02 ` krzaq 2005-09-01 13:02 ` krzaq 2005-09-02 12:59 ` danielhf ` (2 subsequent siblings) 10 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: krzaq @ 2005-09-01 13:02 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user, gentoo-user On 9/1/05, Matt Garman <garman@raw-sewage.net> wrote: > Anyway, I was just hoping to start a "pub"-style conversation on > what people like/disklike in a window manager. Xfce4 is really great in my opinion. KDE is just ... too much. I see all tons of icons/apps that I never use and get discouraged. I also use icewm from time to time. Its very simple, small and has most features you would want from a WM. -- Regards Karol Krzak -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-01 13:02 ` krzaq @ 2005-09-01 13:02 ` krzaq 0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: krzaq @ 2005-09-01 13:02 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user, gentoo-user On 9/1/05, Matt Garman <garman@raw-sewage.net> wrote: > Anyway, I was just hoping to start a "pub"-style conversation on > what people like/disklike in a window manager. Xfce4 is really great in my opinion. KDE is just ... too much. I see all tons of icons/apps that I never use and get discouraged. I also use icewm from time to time. Its very simple, small and has most features you would want from a WM. -- Regards Karol Krzak -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-08-31 22:28 [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? Matt Garman ` (7 preceding siblings ...) 2005-09-01 13:02 ` krzaq @ 2005-09-02 12:59 ` danielhf 2005-09-02 12:59 ` danielhf 2005-09-02 13:15 ` [gentoo-user] " Thomas Kirchner 2005-09-02 21:57 ` [gentoo-user] " Matthias Bethke 2005-09-07 4:41 ` Martin S 10 siblings, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: danielhf @ 2005-09-02 12:59 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user; +Cc: gentoo-user On Wed, Aug 31, 2005 at 05:28:21PM -0500, Matt Garman wrote: > > Before this gets into a flame war, let's just operate under the > assertion that the "best" window manager/desktop environment is > strictly a matter of personal preference. > > So, having said that, what window manager do you use, and why? I > wouldn't trade the multitude of options availabe in Linux for > anything, but the choices can be overwhelming. > > I've played with a lot of 'em, starting with fvwm, through window > maker, enlightenment 15 & 16, icewm, gnome, xfce, kde, blackbox... > I've been using Fluxbox for quite a while now. > > I want something that is fairly minimal/lightweight, but with a hint > of eye candy and a functional "panel" or taskbar. Fluxbox just > about has this, but, I can't seem to figure out how to get a > gnome-like panel (unless I ran gnome, which would trump the > lighweight requirement). > > I've seen the E17 screenshots, and I'd like to run it, but it's not > a trivial install, plus it's still alpha code (though there's plenty > of anecdotal evidence that it's plenty stable... I'd still rather > wait for an "official" release). > > Some interesting links, if you aren't already aware: > > http://xwinman.org/ - basic overview of available WMs/DEs > http://www.lynucs.org/ - desktop screenshot archive > http://www.enlightenment.org/ - best of eye candy :) > > Anyway, I was just hoping to start a "pub"-style conversation on > what people like/disklike in a window manager. > > Thanks, > Matt > > -- > Matt Garman > email at: http://raw-sewage.net/index.php?file=email > -- > gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list > seems that nobody likes FVWM, i dont like to try a lot of things, most of WMs mentioned here are not used )-: Gnome and KDE are OK and used to be my faviorate desktops, however, they are just too good for me, ;-) i would like one which is lightweight and can be fully controlled. i know there must be a lot of excellent WM around, i just give FVWM a try and stick to it afterwards, i configured a taskbar, a clock, some menus and nothing more. it's perfect! -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-02 12:59 ` danielhf @ 2005-09-02 12:59 ` danielhf 2005-09-02 13:15 ` [gentoo-user] " Thomas Kirchner 1 sibling, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: danielhf @ 2005-09-02 12:59 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user; +Cc: gentoo-user On Wed, Aug 31, 2005 at 05:28:21PM -0500, Matt Garman wrote: > > Before this gets into a flame war, let's just operate under the > assertion that the "best" window manager/desktop environment is > strictly a matter of personal preference. > > So, having said that, what window manager do you use, and why? I > wouldn't trade the multitude of options availabe in Linux for > anything, but the choices can be overwhelming. > > I've played with a lot of 'em, starting with fvwm, through window > maker, enlightenment 15 & 16, icewm, gnome, xfce, kde, blackbox... > I've been using Fluxbox for quite a while now. > > I want something that is fairly minimal/lightweight, but with a hint > of eye candy and a functional "panel" or taskbar. Fluxbox just > about has this, but, I can't seem to figure out how to get a > gnome-like panel (unless I ran gnome, which would trump the > lighweight requirement). > > I've seen the E17 screenshots, and I'd like to run it, but it's not > a trivial install, plus it's still alpha code (though there's plenty > of anecdotal evidence that it's plenty stable... I'd still rather > wait for an "official" release). > > Some interesting links, if you aren't already aware: > > http://xwinman.org/ - basic overview of available WMs/DEs > http://www.lynucs.org/ - desktop screenshot archive > http://www.enlightenment.org/ - best of eye candy :) > > Anyway, I was just hoping to start a "pub"-style conversation on > what people like/disklike in a window manager. > > Thanks, > Matt > > -- > Matt Garman > email at: http://raw-sewage.net/index.php?file=email > -- > gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list > seems that nobody likes FVWM, i dont like to try a lot of things, most of WMs mentioned here are not used )-: Gnome and KDE are OK and used to be my faviorate desktops, however, they are just too good for me, ;-) i would like one which is lightweight and can be fully controlled. i know there must be a lot of excellent WM around, i just give FVWM a try and stick to it afterwards, i configured a taskbar, a clock, some menus and nothing more. it's perfect! -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-02 12:59 ` danielhf 2005-09-02 12:59 ` danielhf @ 2005-09-02 13:15 ` Thomas Kirchner 2005-09-04 17:13 ` Matt Garman 1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Thomas Kirchner @ 2005-09-02 13:15 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 633 bytes --] * On Sep 2 20:59, danielhf@21cn.com wrote: > seems that nobody likes FVWM Hey, I use FVWM and love it, have for a long time ;) FVWM is small, ultimately customizable, and can do everything any other WM can do, with a bit of work. Virtually any dreamable interface is possible with it. This can be a bit daunting, though, so when I was setting it up I found a fairly good base (taviso's, I believe) and customized the heck out of it. Now it's perfect for me, and I just can't get rid of it. I've tried pretty much every other option, but only FVWM can scratch everyone's exact itch - if they're patient. Tom [-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-02 13:15 ` [gentoo-user] " Thomas Kirchner @ 2005-09-04 17:13 ` Matt Garman 2005-09-04 17:53 ` Philip Webb 0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Matt Garman @ 2005-09-04 17:13 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Fri, Sep 02, 2005 at 09:15:26AM -0400, Thomas Kirchner wrote: > This can be a bit daunting, though, so when I was setting it up I > found a fairly good base (taviso's, I believe) and customized the > heck out of it. Now it's perfect for me, and I just can't get rid > of it. I've tried pretty much every other option, but only FVWM > can scratch everyone's exact itch - if they're patient. I did a search for "taviso" and found his fvwm2rc file: http://dev.gentoo.org/~taviso/fvwm2rc.html There's also a lot of screenshots (and even a video!) of that desktop. After starting this thread, I got to playing with enlightenment DR16 (not ready for 17 yet). Despite being known for the eye candy, it (so far) has proven itself to be a great lightweight window manager. Raster (enlightenment author) wrote a simple window manager benchmark program; see the results of some typical window managers here: http://www.rasterman.com/index.php?page=News I'd like to see some more window manager benchmarks (because I'm a bit suspicious given that enlightenment had the best results in this benchmark). But I ran the two tests on my machine, and my results were consistent with Raster's. In fact, the two "fastest" window managers I tested were enlightenment DR16 and FVWM. I did play with Fvwm for a while, though. And taviso's configuration pretty much proves that *anything* is possible. It just takes so much work to get it looking "nice"! The Fvwm development team might take offense to this, but they could probably improve their "market share" if fvwm looked... different... out of the box. Not that market share is really important here, but it's a bit ironic to see all the window managers that have been written, either from scratch or as hacks on FVWM, when FVWM has been able to do pretty much everything for a long time. Well, now I'm thinking I need to learn X11 programming, and hack on FVWM or something... another project in my infinitely-long queue of started-but-not-finished projects. Matt -- Matt Garman email at: http://raw-sewage.net/index.php?file=email -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-04 17:13 ` Matt Garman @ 2005-09-04 17:53 ` Philip Webb 0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Philip Webb @ 2005-09-04 17:53 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user 050904 Matt Garman wrote: > I did a search for "taviso" and found his fvwm2rc file: > http://dev.gentoo.org/~taviso/fvwm2rc.html > There's also a lot of screenshots (and even a video!) of that desktop. The video is astonishing ! Fvwm2 looks like great fun, if you have the time. -- ========================,,============================================ SUPPORT ___________//___, Philip Webb : purslow@chass.utoronto.ca ELECTRIC /] [] [] [] [] []| Centre for Urban & Community Studies TRANSIT `-O----------O---' University of Toronto -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-08-31 22:28 [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? Matt Garman ` (8 preceding siblings ...) 2005-09-02 12:59 ` danielhf @ 2005-09-02 21:57 ` Matthias Bethke 2005-09-02 22:34 ` Wade Brown 2005-09-07 4:41 ` Martin S 10 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Matthias Bethke @ 2005-09-02 21:57 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1036 bytes --] Hi Matt, on Wednesday, 2005-08-31 at 17:28:21, you wrote: > Anyway, I was just hoping to start a "pub"-style conversation on > what people like/disklike in a window manager. It's been XFCE here for a while. When I ran NetBSD years ago, nothing but fvwm would run at decent speed (not that there had been much choice), so I used this for a while. Then it was Linux/KDE for a while on a 486, which was quite a pain. When I discovered Gnome, I liked the clean look of GTK and its speed. Version 2 annoyed me because everything got fatter and had less features than the 1.x version, but I stuck with it out of inertia, it was well configured and all... XFCE is for me what Gnome used to be: slim and fast, a clean look and just as many knobs to tweak as I need but no more. Now, WMII looks interesting as well. Unlikely I'm going to switch but I'll have a look at it. cheers! Matthias -- I prefer encrypted and signed messages. KeyID: 90CF8389 Fingerprint: 8E 1F 10 81 A4 66 29 46 B9 8A B9 E2 09 9F 3B 91 [-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 481 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-02 21:57 ` [gentoo-user] " Matthias Bethke @ 2005-09-02 22:34 ` Wade Brown 0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Wade Brown @ 2005-09-02 22:34 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2639 bytes --] I suppose to make this thread complete I'll be the first (maybe only?) one to voice support for good old WindowMaker. I think the biggest reason I still use it is that I'm just stuck in a rut, I have been running it for ages and have never wanted anything better. It's definitely light weight enough to suit most needs for people who have that desire, theming exists, but no actual skinning support. It's a bit boxier than most so for eyecandy, it's not stellar, but has a simple clean feel to it. I think my favorite feature is the dockapps (check http://www.bensinclair.com/dockapp/ for examples), which I know are clearly portable, but integrate most cleanly into WindowMaker. These can provide that desired eyecandy, such as wmBlob, or simple controls to your favorite programs, like wmXMMS. With adjustable icon width, these can take up almost no space around your edges leaving plenty of real estate for your web browsers and such. Better still, they don't even have to be reserved space, they can just fade into the background. One extra bonus to XFCE users is WindowMaker works fairly well with that on top, not that I use it, but I've known a few people who do because they like the added functionality. I'm sure none of my reasons justify WindowMaker as the best choice for my desires, but like I said, I'm in a rut, and it's quite comfortable. Maybe when the bedsores start popping up I'll come back to this thread... -- Wade Brown On 9/2/05, Matthias Bethke <Matthias.Bethke@gmx.net> wrote: > > Hi Matt, > on Wednesday, 2005-08-31 at 17:28:21, you wrote: > > Anyway, I was just hoping to start a "pub"-style conversation on > > what people like/disklike in a window manager. > > It's been XFCE here for a while. When I ran NetBSD years ago, nothing > but fvwm would run at decent speed (not that there had been much > choice), so I used this for a while. Then it was Linux/KDE for a while > on a 486, which was quite a pain. When I discovered Gnome, I liked the > clean look of GTK and its speed. Version 2 annoyed me because everything > got fatter and had less features than the 1.x version, but I stuck with > it out of inertia, it was well configured and all... > XFCE is for me what Gnome used to be: slim and fast, a clean look and > just as many knobs to tweak as I need but no more. > Now, WMII looks interesting as well. Unlikely I'm going to switch but > I'll have a look at it. > > cheers! > Matthias > > -- > I prefer encrypted and signed messages. KeyID: 90CF8389 > Fingerprint: 8E 1F 10 81 A4 66 29 46 B9 8A B9 E2 09 9F 3B 91 > > > [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 3142 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-08-31 22:28 [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? Matt Garman ` (9 preceding siblings ...) 2005-09-02 21:57 ` [gentoo-user] " Matthias Bethke @ 2005-09-07 4:41 ` Martin S 2005-09-07 4:41 ` Martin S ` (2 more replies) 10 siblings, 3 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Martin S @ 2005-09-07 4:41 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user, gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 3083 bytes --] I enjoy KDE, especially since the atomic builds were introduced. The full KDE is so full of - for my needs - completely useless junk, that I've kept away from it. The bloatedness of KDE atomic is quite acceptable for me. Also, I'm pretty satisfied with the eye-candy. Useability wise, for me, KDE is "better" than Gnome, which I've tried very hard to like. I wanted to like Gnome, and was excited by the new release (what is standard now - I've forgotten the version number) but the dialog boxes for Open File etc simply made me throw it out. Add to that the main KDE killer Evolution went from the Outlook layout to something else, and Kontact took its place. (The organisation of data is the only think I like in Outlook). I've played with other WM/DEs as well. On RedHat I used WindowMaker and on Gentoo I've played with Enlightenment E16/E17 a bit. When the urge comes over me to be "Unixy" I use E. It was some time ago though. The main problem I feel is that lots of apps are written for a specific WM rather than a generic non-WM/DE-dependent API. Which makes the entire desktop look like bits and pieces the cat draged home (run Gimp, Kontact and Scid under KDE and you'll know what I mean). There was (is?) a setting in KDE to force *some* apps to bend to the theme of KDE, but that was buggy when I tried it last time. 2005/9/1, Matt Garman <garman@raw-sewage.net>: > > > Before this gets into a flame war, let's just operate under the > assertion that the "best" window manager/desktop environment is > strictly a matter of personal preference. > > So, having said that, what window manager do you use, and why? I > wouldn't trade the multitude of options availabe in Linux for > anything, but the choices can be overwhelming. > > I've played with a lot of 'em, starting with fvwm, through window > maker, enlightenment 15 & 16, icewm, gnome, xfce, kde, blackbox... > I've been using Fluxbox for quite a while now. > > I want something that is fairly minimal/lightweight, but with a hint > of eye candy and a functional "panel" or taskbar. Fluxbox just > about has this, but, I can't seem to figure out how to get a > gnome-like panel (unless I ran gnome, which would trump the > lighweight requirement). > > I've seen the E17 screenshots, and I'd like to run it, but it's not > a trivial install, plus it's still alpha code (though there's plenty > of anecdotal evidence that it's plenty stable... I'd still rather > wait for an "official" release). > > Some interesting links, if you aren't already aware: > > http://xwinman.org/ - basic overview of available WMs/DEs > http://www.lynucs.org/ - desktop screenshot archive > http://www.enlightenment.org/ - best of eye candy :) > > Anyway, I was just hoping to start a "pub"-style conversation on > what people like/disklike in a window manager. > > Thanks, > Matt > > -- > Matt Garman > email at: http://raw-sewage.net/index.php?file=email > -- > gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list > > -- Regards, Martin S [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 3667 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-07 4:41 ` Martin S @ 2005-09-07 4:41 ` Martin S 2005-09-07 8:02 ` Neil Bothwick 2005-09-07 12:51 ` Holly Bostick 2 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Martin S @ 2005-09-07 4:41 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user, gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 3083 bytes --] I enjoy KDE, especially since the atomic builds were introduced. The full KDE is so full of - for my needs - completely useless junk, that I've kept away from it. The bloatedness of KDE atomic is quite acceptable for me. Also, I'm pretty satisfied with the eye-candy. Useability wise, for me, KDE is "better" than Gnome, which I've tried very hard to like. I wanted to like Gnome, and was excited by the new release (what is standard now - I've forgotten the version number) but the dialog boxes for Open File etc simply made me throw it out. Add to that the main KDE killer Evolution went from the Outlook layout to something else, and Kontact took its place. (The organisation of data is the only think I like in Outlook). I've played with other WM/DEs as well. On RedHat I used WindowMaker and on Gentoo I've played with Enlightenment E16/E17 a bit. When the urge comes over me to be "Unixy" I use E. It was some time ago though. The main problem I feel is that lots of apps are written for a specific WM rather than a generic non-WM/DE-dependent API. Which makes the entire desktop look like bits and pieces the cat draged home (run Gimp, Kontact and Scid under KDE and you'll know what I mean). There was (is?) a setting in KDE to force *some* apps to bend to the theme of KDE, but that was buggy when I tried it last time. 2005/9/1, Matt Garman <garman@raw-sewage.net>: > > > Before this gets into a flame war, let's just operate under the > assertion that the "best" window manager/desktop environment is > strictly a matter of personal preference. > > So, having said that, what window manager do you use, and why? I > wouldn't trade the multitude of options availabe in Linux for > anything, but the choices can be overwhelming. > > I've played with a lot of 'em, starting with fvwm, through window > maker, enlightenment 15 & 16, icewm, gnome, xfce, kde, blackbox... > I've been using Fluxbox for quite a while now. > > I want something that is fairly minimal/lightweight, but with a hint > of eye candy and a functional "panel" or taskbar. Fluxbox just > about has this, but, I can't seem to figure out how to get a > gnome-like panel (unless I ran gnome, which would trump the > lighweight requirement). > > I've seen the E17 screenshots, and I'd like to run it, but it's not > a trivial install, plus it's still alpha code (though there's plenty > of anecdotal evidence that it's plenty stable... I'd still rather > wait for an "official" release). > > Some interesting links, if you aren't already aware: > > http://xwinman.org/ - basic overview of available WMs/DEs > http://www.lynucs.org/ - desktop screenshot archive > http://www.enlightenment.org/ - best of eye candy :) > > Anyway, I was just hoping to start a "pub"-style conversation on > what people like/disklike in a window manager. > > Thanks, > Matt > > -- > Matt Garman > email at: http://raw-sewage.net/index.php?file=email > -- > gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list > > -- Regards, Martin S [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 3667 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-07 4:41 ` Martin S 2005-09-07 4:41 ` Martin S @ 2005-09-07 8:02 ` Neil Bothwick 2005-09-07 12:51 ` Holly Bostick 2 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Neil Bothwick @ 2005-09-07 8:02 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 752 bytes --] On Wed, 7 Sep 2005 06:41:36 +0200, Martin S wrote: > The main problem I feel is that lots of apps are written for a specific > WM rather than a generic non-WM/DE-dependent API. Which makes the > entire desktop look like bits and pieces the cat draged home (run Gimp, > Kontact and Scid under KDE and you'll know what I mean). There was > (is?) a setting in KDE to force *some* apps to bend to the theme of > KDE, but that was buggy when I tried it last time. Each DE has its own set of design guidelines, while there isn't so much of a coherent overall standard. x11-themes/gtk-engines-qt can help with a consistent look, it seems stable nowadays. -- Neil Bothwick If it doesn't move, eat it. If it moves, kill it. Then eat it. [-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-07 4:41 ` Martin S 2005-09-07 4:41 ` Martin S 2005-09-07 8:02 ` Neil Bothwick @ 2005-09-07 12:51 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-12 3:50 ` Martin S 2 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Holly Bostick @ 2005-09-07 12:51 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Martin S schreef: > > The main problem I feel is that lots of apps are written for a > specific WM rather than a generic non-WM/DE-dependent API. Which > makes the entire desktop look like bits and pieces the cat draged > home (run Gimp, Kontact and Scid under KDE and you'll know what I > mean). There was (is?) a setting in KDE to force *some* apps to bend > to the theme of KDE, but that was buggy when I tried it last time. Actually, I use(d) the setting (kcontrol=> Appearance and Themes=> Color=> Apply KDE colors to non-KDE apps, which I still have set), so colors always matched across both toolsets (except for Firefox, where most themes don't pick up system colors), which is a big step in the right direction. But now I use: x11-themes/gtk-engines-qt Available versions: 0.6-r1 Installed: 0.6-r1 Homepage: http://www.freedesktop.org/Software/gtk-qt Description: GTK+2 Qt Theme Engine This package 1) adds a setting to Kcontrol to tell KDE to use either use the KDE theme and fonts for GTK apps, or you can specify theme and fonts what to use for GTK apps, the benefit being you can do this in Kcontrol, rather than having to get a GNOME theme switch application (though I had one anyway, and this function seems to apply only to GTK2, not GTK1, which was a problem for me--but I solved it); 2) provides an engine for the various KDE themes that have been 'ported' to GTK (2), such as Liquid, I think Baghira's been done, basically search 'GTK' on KDE-Look.org, and you'll find a bunch. But this didn't help me with GTK1 apps, of which I have several, notably multi-gnome-terminal. But I was able to conform them as well by doing the following: Found a theme on KDE-Look org which was for all three toolsets: KDE, GTK2, and GTK1 (there are not many, but there are a couple), namely QTCurve. Set all three toolsets to use it (KDE in Kcontrol, GTK2 in either Kcontrol, Gnome Control Center/Themes, gtk-chtheme, or gtk-theme-switch (version 2, called with 'switch2'), and GTK1 in gtk-theme-switch (version 1, also installed, called with 'switch'). I'm sure that many would consider this overcomplicated (and it probably is), but the hardest part was finding a theme (that I liked) that was designed for all three toolsets. Once I had done that, setting it up was pretty simple, and it works well; all applications (except those which do not use system themes, which on my system is essentially Firefox and OO.o) use the same theme and colors, from The Gimp, to Krusader, to gnotepad +. So my desktop looks quite consistent in that respect, despite the fact that it is neither KDE nor GNOME. Fonts are a bit of a problem, though-- font sizes seem to change if I 'mix' apps from KDE (specifically, I don't think this happens if I run a QT-but-not-KDE app) on my primarily GTK-based desktop. The fonts and sizes are set to the same in both GNOME and KDE, but if I open a KDE app, they seem to display as smaller, and then newly-opened GTK apps seem to display the fonts as slightly bigger. I suspect that this is a bit of fallout from the lack of interoperability/lack of conformance to the freedesktop.org standard, and neither DE is quite sure who's supposed to be controlling the font size once both DEs are controlling a portion of the open applications on the desktop, so they have a minor conflict about it. It's an annoyance, not really a 'problem', and overall, the system works well. Holly -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-07 12:51 ` Holly Bostick @ 2005-09-12 3:50 ` Martin S 0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Martin S @ 2005-09-12 3:50 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 344 bytes --] 2005/9/7, Holly Bostick <motub@planet.nl>: > > > > x11-themes/gtk-engines-qt > ... Haven't tried that. I'll give it a look. I do think it is problem though that you will have such very different standards as to how applications are supposed to work between WMs/DEs (just take file management). Regards, Martin S [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 609 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
[parent not found: <200509010402.j8141G5V026647@robin.gentoo.org>]
* [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? [not found] <200509010402.j8141G5V026647@robin.gentoo.org> @ 2005-09-01 15:31 ` Charles Marcus 2005-09-03 22:39 ` waltdnes 0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Charles Marcus @ 2005-09-01 15:31 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user IceWM (with ROXFiler if you want Desktop icons, etc) lightening fast, easy to configure -- Charles -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-01 15:31 ` [gentoo-user] " Charles Marcus @ 2005-09-03 22:39 ` waltdnes 2005-09-03 22:56 ` Mark Knecht 0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: waltdnes @ 2005-09-03 22:39 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Thu, Sep 01, 2005 at 11:31:28AM -0400, Charles Marcus wrote > IceWM (with ROXFiler if you want Desktop icons, etc) > > lightening fast, easy to configure Blackbox WM here. This goes back to when my 6-year-old Dell, 450 mhz PIII, 128 megs of RAM, was still my main machine. The GNOME and KDE people write some great apps (Gimp, Gnumeric, AbiWord, KDE Office), but their "desktop environments" are huge, bloated, resource hogs. With Blackbox, I can still run the apps, without the desktop. Put it this way I don't run desktops, I run applications. I think lightweight WM's will be important. Linux in general will have a great "window of Opportunity" when Vista is released. A lot of current machines will not be able to run it well ("crawl" != "run"). If people are faced with a choice of throwing out their old W2K, and XP machines, and buying new ones, versus keeping their machines and switching to linux, I think we could see quite a few converts. We can also pound away on the TCO angle at Microsoft's expense. Running the latest version of linux doesn't require you to buy a new desktop. On the other hand, that may explain why some PC hardware companies are so lukewarm (in some cases hostile) about linux support. -- Walter Dnes <waltdnes@waltdnes.org> My musings on technology and security at http://tech_sec.blog.ca -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-03 22:39 ` waltdnes @ 2005-09-03 22:56 ` Mark Knecht 2005-09-04 1:53 ` John Jolet ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Mark Knecht @ 2005-09-03 22:56 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 9/3/05, waltdnes@waltdnes.org <waltdnes@waltdnes.org> wrote: > On Thu, Sep 01, 2005 at 11:31:28AM -0400, Charles Marcus wrote > > IceWM (with ROXFiler if you want Desktop icons, etc) > > > > lightening fast, easy to configure > > Blackbox WM here. This goes back to when my 6-year-old Dell, 450 mhz > PIII, 128 megs of RAM, was still my main machine. The GNOME and KDE > people write some great apps (Gimp, Gnumeric, AbiWord, KDE Office), but > their "desktop environments" are huge, bloated, resource hogs. With > Blackbox, I can still run the apps, without the desktop. Put it this way > > I don't run desktops, I run applications. > > I think lightweight WM's will be important. Linux in general will > have a great "window of Opportunity" when Vista is released. A lot of > current machines will not be able to run it well ("crawl" != "run"). If > people are faced with a choice of throwing out their old W2K, and XP > machines, and buying new ones, versus keeping their machines and > switching to linux, I think we could see quite a few converts. We can > also pound away on the TCO angle at Microsoft's expense. Running the > latest version of linux doesn't require you to buy a new desktop. On > the other hand, that may explain why some PC hardware companies are so > lukewarm (in some cases hostile) about linux support. > In general I'll have to take the unpopular position and say I disagree. All those potential converts are just like you - They don't run desktops they run apps - and because they are so entrenched with dollars already spent on Microsoft Windows, Microsoft email, Microsoft Office, Quicken,, etc., they won't come just because they can save $400 buying a new PC. To become a Linux user is a commitment. People don't make new commitments lightly, and making a light commitment to Linux is doomed to failure. It's far too hard to use. Imagine knowing absolutely nothing about any Linux editor, nor even terminal commands, and trying to configure networking. It's nigh on impossible. That said, Linux, and Gentoo specifically, is a pleasure to run when it's running, but even after 3-4 years of being a newbie it's taken me 3 days of work to get my new AMD64 machine to the point where it's starting to do multimedia. Just my 2 cents, Mark -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-03 22:56 ` Mark Knecht @ 2005-09-04 1:53 ` John Jolet 2005-09-04 9:41 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-04 18:07 ` Neil Bothwick 2 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: John Jolet @ 2005-09-04 1:53 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user > > I don't run desktops, I run applications. > > > In general I'll have to take the unpopular position and say I > disagree. All those potential converts are just like you - They don't > run desktops they run apps - and because they are so entrenched with > dollars already spent on Microsoft Windows, Microsoft email, Microsoft > Office, Quicken,, etc., they won't come just because they can save > $400 buying a new PC. > > To become a Linux user is a commitment. People don't make new > commitments lightly, and making a light commitment to Linux is doomed > to failure. It's far too hard to use. Imagine knowing absolutely > nothing about any Linux editor, nor even terminal commands, and trying > to configure networking. It's nigh on impossible. > I agree. I'm a longtime unix administrator with many opportunities to convert family and friends to linux, but haven't yet, either due to lack of linux drivers for multi-function devices, or lack of linux compatibility to apps they need to run. Until companies support all their hardware o linux (specifically in my case lexmark), people will feel trapped in windows. even clients of mine that have spent hundreds of dollars for me to clean their windows boxes of spyware can't afford to move due to websites they NEED to run requiring activeX controls. -- John Jolet Your On-Demand IT Department 512-762-0729 www.jolet.net john@jolet.net -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-03 22:56 ` Mark Knecht 2005-09-04 1:53 ` John Jolet @ 2005-09-04 9:41 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-04 19:45 ` Uwe Thiem 2005-09-04 18:07 ` Neil Bothwick 2 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Holly Bostick @ 2005-09-04 9:41 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Mark Knecht schreef: > To become a Linux user is a commitment. People don't make new > commitments lightly, and making a light commitment to Linux is doomed > to failure. It's far too hard to use. This is a common 'perception', and yet again I have to object to it, because it's *wrong* (not for the reasons you think), but it's nonetheless wiping the floor with us (much in the same way that the common perception that the world was flat wiped the floor with many early potential explorers). <rant> Yes, becoming a Linux user is a commitment. I'm with you that far. But then saying that in combination with "it's far too hard to use", implying that it should be easy to use is a contradiction in terms. Operating a vehicle is also a commitment, and you have to learn to drive a car/truck/motorcycle-- you even have to learn to ride a bike. A bike is "easier" to use than a car, and a car is easier to use than a bus (I suppose), but in fact none of these vehicles is really "easy to use" and half the tools created to make it easier to use actually make it harder (how many people have trouble using a GPS system, for example?). In fact, the only 'easy' way to use a car is to get someone else to do all the hard work of driving on your behalf, since we do not yet have mental-telepathy-controlled vehicles, or transport beams ala Star Trek. Yes, of course, once you've learned to drive, it's (pretty) easy to do, but does the fact that it's easy once you've learned it mean that you can judge the task as objectively 'easy'? I don't think so-- if you have to learn how to do it, it's automatically 'hard' (or at the very least, "not easy"). Especially since, continuing with this example, learning one variant of how to perform the total operation does not enable you to 'automatically' perform any other variant knowledgeably (you can drive a car, but you can't drive a bus or a motorcycle, or an 18-wheeler). That suggests to me --because of the limits of the human animal, and because of the current design of vehicles-- that "operating a vehicle" can not ever be considered an 'easy' task, notwithstanding that many people are able to do so. Which brings us to 'commitment', proving my point. You don't make 'commitments' to tasks that are easy; you don't have to. You don't have to 'commit' to 'taking a cookie and eating it', because that's easy-- unless of course you have an eating disorder, in which case you do, because 'eating' is now no longer easy, but hard, due to your illness. *OPERATING A COMPUTER IS NOT EASY.* That's just all there is to it. The current design of computers is like a Neanderthal stone axe, for Pete's sake. It's not like a stone axe is not useful, and certainly it's better than your bare hands for chopping down a tree, but it's a long way from a gas-powered chainsaw, which is itself a long way from something like a (back to Star Trek) replicator, which would provide the result (wood, in this example), without even destroying the original source (a tree). Windows is designed with the premise that this fundamental truth should be concealed from 'users' at all costs (they've even abused monopoly power in an effort to promote the perception that using a computer is easy; yes, of course surfing all of the non-compliant sites with *IE* is 'easy", especially if you make sure that the non-compliance is built in by your free-for-the-asking design kit, fold your browser (which of course knows all the tricks) into the OS so that most 'average users' will just use it by default, and bump the competitors out of the market so that 'not-so-average' users won't wonder just what's up with why they can't view thus and so site with X browser, but can with Y(our) browser. Linux, on the other hand, doesn't see that there's anything to hide-- possibly because it was originally meant for server admins, who of course already know that operating a computer is a complex task. Now, of course, the community is all undecided about whether to break the news 'gently' to the hoped-for migrating Windows users (which is a whole sub-argument as to how to do that, or what it even means), or whether to just fling 'em in the water and let $DEITY sort 'em out. But just because Microsoft says that operating a computer is easy does not make it so-- and may I just point out that operating Windows is *not* "easy" either; leaving aside the idea that a complete reformat and reinstall is an 'easier' solution to something going wrong than editing a text file, icons and associating icons with specific programs and understanding the whole concept of files and applications is all *learned behaviour*-- thus, by definition, not 'easy'. So how is changing one *operating system* to another supposed to be an easier task than the global task of operating the computer in the first place? I mean, please. It's a commitment, yes (if only because in order to learn a behaviour, you must commit to learning and retaining what you learn), and when is commitment ever easy? "Light" commitment.... what is that? There is 'conditional' commitment, as in "I'll help you move if I don't have to stay late at work", but the only way this could be constructed as 'light commitment' is "Maybe I'll come help you move"-- which is not a commitment at all. Commitments in the real world usually have to be *sworn* before the state, and often before $DEITY. Why? Because they're so hard to carry out, and so important to be carried out properly once made, that all the power of $DEITY is sometimes needed to keep you to your promise once you've made it (it's hard, and sometimes it's too hard-- we're 'only human', after all-- and only fear of the state or $DEITY will keep you on track). This is my basic objection with the current state of society w.r.t. technology; it's made available to everyone as if it does not require commitment, but the actual state of the technology is so low that it does in fact require commitment to operate reliably/well/sometimes 'at all'. If you gave me a block of wood with a hole, a screw, and a screwdriver, all you'd have to say (assuming that I didn't know what a screwdriver was), is, "This is the tool used to put that thing in that hole," and I could screw in the screw with the tool. A child could figure it out (leaving aside the motor coordination issues involved). *That's* 'easy'. But a digital camera, an answering machine , an automobile-- they *must* have instructions, because if they didn't, you wouldn't be able to use them (or only use them at the most basic level, which makes it pointless to have gotten a device with advanced features). And if you must be instructed in order to use the device, you must commit to accepting that instruction, and there you are-- committed. If you refuse to commit to such instruction, the device goes back in the box, or is impoperly used, creating negative conditions ranging from distress, to damage to property or injury, to death of self or others, depending on the nature of the device. This is why I can't deal with all the people I encounter who suggest that 'it' should 'JustWork' without need for instruction of any sort (whether that be a physical manual, man pages, READMEs, or Windows Help files). Like humanity is sooooooo good at making stuff, and 'users' are sooooooo brilliantly educated, that they should be able to look at a computing device and immediately know what it all means (like looking at a screwhole, a screw, and a screwdriver). It's not gonna happen any time soon, and it certainly hasn't happened yet. Operating a computer safely, reliably, and with any degree of competence whatsoever is a hard and complex task, and it's going to be hard for some time to come. So for $DEITY's sake, get over it, and stop whining (not you personally, Mark). </rant> Holly -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-04 9:41 ` Holly Bostick @ 2005-09-04 19:45 ` Uwe Thiem 2005-09-04 20:40 ` Holly Bostick 0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Uwe Thiem @ 2005-09-04 19:45 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 04 September 2005 11:41, Holly Bostick wrote: I've tried to stay away from this thread but can't resist any more. ;-) [ snip a lot of Holly's rant I mostly agree with ] > This is why I can't deal with all the people I encounter who suggest > that 'it' should 'JustWork' without need for instruction of any sort > (whether that be a physical manual, man pages, READMEs, or Windows Help > files). > > Like humanity is sooooooo good at making stuff, and 'users' are sooooooo > brilliantly educated, that they should be able to look at a computing > device and immediately know what it all means (like looking at a screwhole, > a screw, and a screwdriver). > > It's not gonna happen any time soon, and it certainly hasn't happened > yet. Operating a computer safely, reliably, and with any degree of > competence whatsoever is a hard and complex task, and it's going to be > hard for some time to come. That is exactly the reason I feel I have to make sure I do not add further complexity to it for my users. My users, or actually my customers and their users, are mostly office workers, engineers and journalists or other workers at newspapers. So it's mostly about corporate computing rather than home users. They do not administrate their boxes, they use them. Or, to use Holly's example of driving, they are drivers rather than car mechanics. My POV is: The most important feature of a GUI is consistency. Before I'll argue that point, I have to put away a fairy tale of computing: The intuitive desktop. Such beast does not exist. Intuition is highly based on one's cultural background. Since cultures are pretty much diverse, desktops cannot be intuitive across different culture. Lemme give you some examples, all of them coming from KDE because that is what I know best. Let's have a look at the icon for "Email". That's a capital "E", an envelop leaning against it. Pretty intuitive, no? Alright, let's just assume I have grown up with a language that does not use the Latin script, and I do not speak English at all. In that case, the "E" is meaningless to me. Let's additionally assume my culture doesn't use envelops for mail but scrolls. The entire icon does not contain one single hint for me to guess what it means. Look at the icon for "Help". Let's say you have never been on a ship. Let's say you have never seen a ship - and yes, there are a lot of people like that. What does that red-and-white ring tell you? Next to nothing. Same for the "Home" icon. Unless your home looks somehow like that, you won't be able to associate the icon with "home" intuitively. A diagonal line from the bottom-left corner to the top-right one means "upwards", right? Well, yes, it does for most of us. The keyword here is "most". Most of us read from the left to the right. That gives us the sense of direction when we look at that line. Those who read from the right to the left perceive it as "downwards". And how about those who read from top to bottom? Actually, I have no idea how they may perceive that line. Alright, I have got into my favourite pasttime: Intercultural communications. I'll stop here as long as we can agree on "intuitive desktops" being a fairy tale that has never made it into real life. Let's forget about that concept and come back to my initial point: The most crucial property of any computer (G)UI is consistency. Inconsistencies make it damn much harder for users to learn their environment or, in Holly speak, to commit to it. To borrow from Holly's example of driving again: All cars have their accelerators on the right hand side, the clutch on the left hand side and the brake in between (alright, cars with automatic gearboxes omit the clutch). That makes it feasible to change to another car without learning driving from scratch. Same for computers and, especially, desktops. All "Open" dialogues *must* look and operate the same regardless which application one uses. The "Print" entry *must* be in the same menu regardless of the application. The same icon means the same in every application; a particular action is represented by the same icon in each and every application. Same for wording. "Dismiss", "Cancel", "Bail out" - that's simply confusing for someone who *tries* to commit themselves to something new like linux. That's the reason I strongly advise to go with a real Desktop Environment for users rather than choose a windows manager and all the apps at random. Throw KDE or GNOME at your users to make it easier for them commit themselves. Make it easier for them to "drive" their desktops by providing a consistent interface. </my rant> If you geeks want to use whatever you want, that is fine. For *you*. Don't even dream about converting the vast majority of computer *users* with that approach. Good night Uwe -- 95% of all programmers rate themselves among the top 5% of all software developers. - Linus Torvalds http://www.uwix.iway.na (last updated: 20.06.2004) -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-04 19:45 ` Uwe Thiem @ 2005-09-04 20:40 ` Holly Bostick 0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Holly Bostick @ 2005-09-04 20:40 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Uwe Thiem schreef: > On 04 September 2005 11:41, Holly Bostick wrote: > > I've tried to stay away from this thread but can't resist any more. > ;-) > > [ snip a lot of Holly's rant I mostly agree with ] > > >> This is why I can't deal with all the people I encounter who >> suggest that 'it' should 'JustWork' without need for instruction of >> any sort (whether that be a physical manual, man pages, READMEs, >> or Windows Help files). >> >> Like humanity is sooooooo good at making stuff, and 'users' are >> sooooooo brilliantly educated, that they should be able to look at >> a computing device and immediately know what it all means (like >> looking at a screwhole, a screw, and a screwdriver). >> >> It's not gonna happen any time soon, and it certainly hasn't >> happened yet. Operating a computer safely, reliably, and with any >> degree of competence whatsoever is a hard and complex task, and >> it's going to be hard for some time to come. > > > That is exactly the reason I feel I have to make sure I do not add > further complexity to it for my users. My users, or actually my > customers and their users, are mostly office workers, engineers and > journalists or other workers at newspapers. So it's mostly about > corporate computing rather than home users. They do not administrate > their boxes, they use them. Or, to use Holly's example of driving, > they are drivers rather than car mechanics. Yes, Uwe, I see what you mean-- but do you see that they don't *have* to be competent/educated/committed.... because they have you to be that for them? My point was only that *someone* has to be, because we are not at such a state of technological advancement where it's possible for such a device to operate without somebody who knows what they're doing somewhere along the line. Behind every good (and bad) user, there's a frazzled admin keeping the channel clear for them. > <snip of Uwe's rant, most of which I agree with> > > If you geeks want to use whatever you want, that is fine. For *you*. > Don't even dream about converting the vast majority of computer > *users* with that approach. Hey, who you calling a geek? ;-) But seriously, where are you going with this? First of all, who cares about converting anybody? But let's say somebody does... and there are, naturally, those who do. Those who do are... let's see... commercial distributions like Mandriva, SUSE, RedHat. Seems to me that they already go to a lot of trouble to conform their environments to the type of standard you describe. Only a few apps like OO.o just won't get in line. So those who have a stake in managing such issues, manage such issues. Those who have a stake in such issues being managed, go with the organization that's managing the issues they need managed. So is there any reason that I, as someone not particularly interested in managing this issue, need to think any more about this :-) ? Holly -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-03 22:56 ` Mark Knecht 2005-09-04 1:53 ` John Jolet 2005-09-04 9:41 ` Holly Bostick @ 2005-09-04 18:07 ` Neil Bothwick 2005-09-04 20:02 ` Mark Knecht 2 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Neil Bothwick @ 2005-09-04 18:07 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1554 bytes --] On Sat, 3 Sep 2005 15:56:34 -0700, Mark Knecht wrote: > In general I'll have to take the unpopular position and say I > disagree. All those potential converts are just like you - They don't > run desktops they run apps - and because they are so entrenched with > dollars already spent on Microsoft Windows, Microsoft email, Microsoft > Office, Quicken,, etc., they won't come just because they can save > $400 buying a new PC. > > To become a Linux user is a commitment. People don't make new > commitments lightly, and making a light commitment to Linux is doomed > to failure. It's far too hard to use. Imagine knowing absolutely > nothing about any Linux editor, nor even terminal commands, and trying > to configure networking. It's nigh on impossible. You're confusing using with administering. Yes, administering a Linux system takes more knowledge than clicking a few buttons in Windows, but using a correctly setup system is no harder with Linux, even Gentoo, than Windows. My partner is about as computer-illiterate as they come, but she uses a Gentoo system. She runs apps, not a desktop and not an operating system. She uses KDE, not because she prefers it, but because it's what I use, so it was the easiest one for me to show her around. But as long as her mailer, browser and office programs work, she doesn't care what's underneath. This is someone so technophobic that she cannot use a VCR, but Linux is not hard to use for her. -- Neil Bothwick Forgive your enemies. But hit them a few times first. [-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-04 18:07 ` Neil Bothwick @ 2005-09-04 20:02 ` Mark Knecht 2005-09-04 20:57 ` Neil Bothwick 2005-09-05 5:13 ` Matt Randolph 0 siblings, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Mark Knecht @ 2005-09-04 20:02 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 9/4/05, Neil Bothwick <neil@digimed.co.uk> wrote: > On Sat, 3 Sep 2005 15:56:34 -0700, Mark Knecht wrote: > > > In general I'll have to take the unpopular position and say I > > disagree. All those potential converts are just like you - They don't > > run desktops they run apps - and because they are so entrenched with > > dollars already spent on Microsoft Windows, Microsoft email, Microsoft > > Office, Quicken,, etc., they won't come just because they can save > > $400 buying a new PC. > > > > To become a Linux user is a commitment. People don't make new > > commitments lightly, and making a light commitment to Linux is doomed > > to failure. It's far too hard to use. Imagine knowing absolutely > > nothing about any Linux editor, nor even terminal commands, and trying > > to configure networking. It's nigh on impossible. > > You're confusing using with administering. Yes, administering a Linux > system takes more knowledge than clicking a few buttons in Windows, but > using a correctly setup system is no harder with Linux, even Gentoo, than > Windows. My partner is about as computer-illiterate as they come, but she > uses a Gentoo system. She runs apps, not a desktop and not an operating > system. She uses KDE, not because she prefers it, but because it's what I > use, so it was the easiest one for me to show her around. But as long as > her mailer, browser and office programs work, she doesn't care what's > underneath. This is someone so technophobic that she cannot use a VCR, > but Linux is not hard to use for her. > > > -- > Neil Bothwick Neil, But to use it you have to set it up, right? ;-) I'm not confusing administering a system with using a system. Although my skill set is permanantly locked somewhere around the 6 out of 10 level I do understand that difference. I also understand what it's like on the other side. I administer not only my own Gentoo systems (numbering 3) but I also administer my wife's Gentoo box, my son's Fedora box, my father's Gentoo box and 4 Pundit-R's that are used as MythTV frontend machines. I get the difference. I love Gentoo, and Linux in general, but it took a long time. The point is that not a single one of those people could even begin to take a Gentoo CD and end up with a running system, or if they did it would take weeks. Everyone of them can do that with Windows in an afternoon. They have. None of them could even begin to do what's in a Gentoo install doc in terms of configuration. The editors are arcane, the instructions sometimes a bit vague, and RTFM instructions would simply send them back to Windows in a heart beat. We both understand that without vi or nano experience that without luck you'll probably never get networking, and without networking you go nowhere fast. We both can see that if someone tried to use Linux on a Windows network the first question after getting the machine up would probably be some Samba oriented issue about 'Where is network neighborhood' Windows gives me that. How do I get my files?" ...etc... I've had to solve that for my family. Browsers are almost OK these days, as long as you don't want or need multimedia, flash, etc., but after I'll hit the real issue that was raised earlier. Even if the machine is up and working perfectly, I need M$ Word, Excel, Outlook, or all my old stuff is lost and I'm just starting over. Damn, the kid sure is screaming loud about his stupid games not working, my wife want's her 'Family Tree' program or some other such thing. I give up and go to the pub for liquid therapy. I've done this, both for myself and for 3 family members. Granted, I ain't that smart, but I've seen the problems. On the other hand I think many hot shot Linux folks cannot always see the forest for the trees and take far, far too much for granted. For someone who just wants to browse the web and get a little email through GMail Window gets the job done until it fails. When it does they wipe their disk, reinstall, and go on. That sort of user is never, IMHO, going to make a commitment to learn vi... Just my two cents, respectfully given. I'm not bashing Linux, or developers, or anyone here. I'm just saying life isn't all about CS majors just out of college. cheers, Mark -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-04 20:02 ` Mark Knecht @ 2005-09-04 20:57 ` Neil Bothwick 2005-09-04 21:11 ` Mark Knecht 2005-09-05 5:13 ` Matt Randolph 1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Neil Bothwick @ 2005-09-04 20:57 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1924 bytes --] On Sun, 4 Sep 2005 13:02:30 -0700, Mark Knecht wrote: > > You're confusing using with administering. Yes, administering a Linux > > system takes more knowledge than clicking a few buttons in Windows, > > but using a correctly setup system is no harder with Linux, even > > Gentoo, than Windows. My partner is about as computer-illiterate as > > they come, but she uses a Gentoo system. She runs apps, not a desktop > > and not an operating system. She uses KDE, not because she prefers > > it, but because it's what I use, so it was the easiest one for me to > > show her around. But as long as her mailer, browser and office > > programs work, she doesn't care what's underneath. This is someone so > > technophobic that she cannot use a VCR, but Linux is not hard to use > > for her. > Neil, > But to use it you have to set it up, right? ;-) Wrong. someone has to set it up, but it doesn't have to be the user. > I'm not confusing administering a system with using a system. > Although my skill set is permanantly locked somewhere around the 6 out > of 10 level I do understand that difference. I also understand what > it's like on the other side. I administer not only my own Gentoo > systems (numbering 3) but I also administer my wife's Gentoo box, my > son's Fedora box, my father's Gentoo box and 4 Pundit-R's that are > used as MythTV frontend machines. I get the difference. I love Gentoo, > and Linux in general, but it took a long time. See, you are the admin, your wife etc. are users. they don't care about the ins and outs of the system, only what they can do with it. > The point is that not a single one of those people could even begin > to take a Gentoo CD and end up with a running system, or if they did > it would take weeks. Why would they need to, they have you for that :) -- Neil Bothwick OPERATOR ERROR: Nyah, Nyah, Nyah, Nyah, Nyah! [-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-04 20:57 ` Neil Bothwick @ 2005-09-04 21:11 ` Mark Knecht 2005-09-04 23:56 ` Neil Bothwick 2005-09-07 1:08 ` waltdnes 0 siblings, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Mark Knecht @ 2005-09-04 21:11 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 9/4/05, Neil Bothwick <neil@digimed.co.uk> wrote: > > But to use it you have to set it up, right? ;-) > > Wrong. someone has to set it up, but it doesn't have to be the user. Surely... > > > I'm not confusing administering a system with using a system. > > Although my skill set is permanantly locked somewhere around the 6 out > > of 10 level I do understand that difference. I also understand what > > it's like on the other side. I administer not only my own Gentoo > > systems (numbering 3) but I also administer my wife's Gentoo box, my > > son's Fedora box, my father's Gentoo box and 4 Pundit-R's that are > > used as MythTV frontend machines. I get the difference. I love Gentoo, > > and Linux in general, but it took a long time. > > See, you are the admin, your wife etc. are users. they don't care about > the ins and outs of the system, only what they can do with it. Fine, but going back to the only thing in the thread that got me involved (why do I get involved? ) ;-) Walter siad: "I think lightweight WM's will be important. Linux in general will have a great "window of Opportunity" when Vista is released. A lot of current machines will not be able to run it well ("crawl" != "run"). If people are faced with a choice of throwing out their old W2K, and XP machines, and buying new ones, versus keeping their machines and switching to linux, I think we could see quite a few converts. " Now, if by a 'few' we want to assume one or two who learn enough to make it work, then I agree with Walter, but that's not very interesting. On the other hand, if by a few mean mean thousands (not millions, etc.) then I suggest it isn't going to happen because they won't be able to administer it themselves and they won't know someone who'll do it for them like I do for my family. My 'disagreement', if there is one, is that a savings of $300 for a new computer and a $99 Windows upgrade won't convince many people to learn to do it themselves using Linux. It takes a much stronger reason than that, at least in my limited part of the planet. > > > The point is that not a single one of those people could even begin > > to take a Gentoo CD and end up with a running system, or if they did > > it would take weeks. > > Why would they need to, they have you for that :) > 3 people do, but thousands don't. Anyway, 'nuff said. Thanks! Cheers, Mark -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-04 21:11 ` Mark Knecht @ 2005-09-04 23:56 ` Neil Bothwick 2005-09-05 3:20 ` Bob Sanders 2005-09-07 1:08 ` waltdnes 1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Neil Bothwick @ 2005-09-04 23:56 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1638 bytes --] On Sun, 4 Sep 2005 14:11:51 -0700, Mark Knecht wrote: > > See, you are the admin, your wife etc. are users. they don't care > > about the ins and outs of the system, only what they can do with it. > > Fine, but going back to the only thing in the thread that got me > involved (why do I get involved? ) ;-) Walter siad: > > "I think lightweight WM's will be important. Linux in general will > have a great "window of Opportunity" when Vista is released. A lot of > current machines will not be able to run it well ("crawl" != "run"). If > people are faced with a choice of throwing out their old W2K, and XP > machines, and buying new ones, versus keeping their machines and > switching to linux, I think we could see quite a few converts. " > > Now, if by a 'few' we want to assume one or two who learn enough to > make it work, then I agree with Walter, but that's not very > interesting. On the other hand, if by a few mean mean thousands (not > millions, etc.) then I suggest it isn't going to happen because they > won't be able to administer it themselves and they won't know someone > who'll do it for them like I do for my family. Fair comment. If you're talking about individual user/admins then the learning curve of installing and administering a different OS (not necessarily more difficult, just different) is a serious obstacle. > > Why would they need to, they have you for that :) > > > 3 people do, but thousands don't. Be thankful for that, I'm sure three is more than enough at times :) -- Neil Bothwick Time for a diet! -- [NO FLABBIER]. [-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-04 23:56 ` Neil Bothwick @ 2005-09-05 3:20 ` Bob Sanders 2005-09-05 3:46 ` Paul Hoy 2005-09-05 7:37 ` Neil Bothwick 0 siblings, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Bob Sanders @ 2005-09-05 3:20 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Mon, 5 Sep 2005 00:56:56 +0100 Neil Bothwick <neil@digimed.co.uk> wrote: > Fair comment. If you're talking about individual user/admins then the > learning curve of installing and administering a different OS (not > necessarily more difficult, just different) is a serious obstacle. > Based on my experiences, I'll disagree with you Neil. I had a couple of interns working for me last year. One was about to graduate from college and the other was in the middle of getting a Master's degree. Both were comp-sci majors. The Master's degree intern had been running Red Hat or something, but really didn't know Linux. The other intern used WinXX - college was teaching her Java, nothing much more than that. First thing I did was get them set up with systems and hand them a Gentoo minimal CD and url for the installation manual. Told them to ask anything they wanted at any time. Explained to them that they needed to learn Linux, but that RPM based distros wouldn't give them any type of broad knowledge, and wouldn't be any better than learning to install WinXX. They took about a week, with a couple of restarts, had them run fluxbox and Enlightenment before allowing them to run their choice of WM. Eventually, they moved to KDE, which is fine, but they had an X environment and additional knowledge, they could work while KDE was compiling. *Btw - they were also learning how to install and use Irix at the same time.) While they were there, they had no real problems with Gentoo. As part of their task at the time was porting/fixing former Irix tests to run on Linux, it was a lot easier to deal with the issues on Gentoo, then move the the tests to RH and SuSE, where all kinds of things broke. But they were more able to fix the tests because they had a better peek under the hood. While they've left to go to other companies, one of the interns told me that she misses her Gentoo system - she's back in the Java/WinXX world of Corporate computing. For training new technical individuals on Linux, source based distributions with package management systems that stay out of the way, are great tools. Even if the end of the road for many of them is some - keep your distance, GUI installer based, RPM Linux system. For a long time I used to think that starting a new user with a nice RPM based distribution was the right answer. I was wrong. It's the wrong answer. It teaches them nothing they can use in the future. It's painful during upgrades. It binds their hands in the shackles of - you will do things the way we tell you to do them. And letting new users utilize GUI based installers, always ends in - where is the install everything check box? They may migrate to another distribution, and that's fine. But they will be prepared and have knowledge. To use Holly's car analogy - they learned to drive a stick shift, but now want an automatic. No problem. (It's a poor analogy on my part - too simplistic and not fair to Portage.) Also, this isn't just the two interns. With only two exceptions - a Slackware user, and a remote Engineer who prefers to have Corp IS administrate the box, I've moved a lot of technical people to Gentoo. A few have gone to other dists, and a few have returned back to Gentoo - the others are just too painful to administer. But, in all cases, they are more knowledgeable because of having to "do things the hard way." And being more knowledgeable make them much more valuable as skilled employees. More so than any certification will. Bob - -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-05 3:20 ` Bob Sanders @ 2005-09-05 3:46 ` Paul Hoy 2005-09-06 3:45 ` Bob Sanders 2005-09-05 7:37 ` Neil Bothwick 1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Paul Hoy @ 2005-09-05 3:46 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Sep 4, 2005, at 11:20 PM, Bob Sanders wrote: > On Mon, 5 Sep 2005 00:56:56 +0100 > Neil Bothwick <neil@digimed.co.uk> wrote: > > > >> Fair comment. If you're talking about individual user/admins then the >> learning curve of installing and administering a different OS (not >> necessarily more difficult, just different) is a serious obstacle. >> >> > > Based on my experiences, I'll disagree with you Neil. I had a > couple of > interns working for me last year. One was about to graduate from > college and the > other was in the middle of getting a Master's degree. Both were > comp-sci majors. > The Master's degree intern had been running Red Hat or something, > but really didn't > know Linux. The other intern used WinXX - college was teaching her > Java, > nothing much more than that. > > First thing I did was get them set up with systems and hand them a > Gentoo minimal > CD and url for the installation manual. Told them to ask anything > they wanted at any > time. Explained to them that they needed to learn Linux, but that > RPM based distros > wouldn't give them any type of broad knowledge, and wouldn't be any > better than learning > to install WinXX. They took about a week, with a couple of > restarts, had them run fluxbox > and Enlightenment before allowing them to run their choice of WM. > Eventually, they moved > to KDE, which is fine, but they had an X environment and additional > knowledge, they could > work while KDE was compiling. *Btw - they were also learning how > to install and use Irix > at the same time.) > > While they were there, they had no real problems with Gentoo. As > part of their task at the > time was porting/fixing former Irix tests to run on Linux, it was > a lot easier to deal with the > issues on Gentoo, then move the the tests to RH and SuSE, where all > kinds of things > broke. But they were more able to fix the tests because they had a > better peek under > the hood. > > While they've left to go to other companies, one of the interns > told me that she misses her > Gentoo system - she's back in the Java/WinXX world of Corporate > computing. > > For training new technical individuals on Linux, source based > distributions with package > management systems that stay out of the way, are great tools. > Even if the end of the road > for many of them is some - keep your distance, GUI installer based, > RPM Linux system. > > For a long time I used to think that starting a new user with a > nice RPM based distribution > was the right answer. I was wrong. It's the wrong answer. It > teaches them nothing they > can use in the future. It's painful during upgrades. It binds > their hands in the shackles of - > you will do things the way we tell you to do them. And letting new > users utilize GUI based > installers, always ends in - where is the install everything check > box? > > They may migrate to another distribution, and that's fine. But > they will be prepared and > have knowledge. To use Holly's car analogy - they learned to > drive a stick shift, but > now want an automatic. No problem. (It's a poor analogy on my > part - too simplistic > and not fair to Portage.) > > Also, this isn't just the two interns. With only two exceptions - > a Slackware user, and a > remote Engineer who prefers to have Corp IS administrate the box, > I've moved a lot of > technical people to Gentoo. A few have gone to other dists, and a > few have returned > back to Gentoo - the others are just too painful to administer. > But, in all cases, they > are more knowledgeable because of having to "do things the hard > way." And being > more knowledgeable make them much more valuable as skilled > employees. More so than > any certification will. > > Bob > - > -- > gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list > > Hi Bob, I found your email really informative and I have a question regarding one of your final comments. To paraphrase, you state that doing things the hard way will make employees more knowledgeable, "more so than any certification will." So, my question is this: is it worthwhile to obtain certification? And, if so, which would be a better choice in your opinion: Red Hat certification or say, for instance, certification from the Linux Professional Institute? Btw, I'm not sure if I have hijacked the thread. If so, please feel free to edit the subject line. Paul -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-05 3:46 ` Paul Hoy @ 2005-09-06 3:45 ` Bob Sanders 0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Bob Sanders @ 2005-09-06 3:45 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Sun, 4 Sep 2005 23:46:02 -0400 Paul Hoy <paul.hoy@mac.com> wrote: > Hi Bob, > > I found your email really informative and I have a question regarding > one of your final comments. To paraphrase, you state that doing > things the hard way will make employees more knowledgeable, "more so > than any certification will." So, my question is this: is it > worthwhile to obtain certification? And, if so, which would be a > better choice in your opinion: Red Hat certification or say, for > instance, certification from the Linux Professional Institute? > The certification tests do require real knowledge - mainly on setting up things like mail, ftp, drive arrays, etc - lots of "after the install items." certainly all requiring skill and knowledge. Red Hat focuses on Red Hat, though many items are transferable for the motivated individual. LPI certification is broader, and, some say, the harder test of the two. Are they worth it? Depends upon the job market. The knowledge required to pass the tests is certainly a large part of managing any Linux system. But if your starting with a blank hard drive, then neither will get you past any problems that may occur during the install or with the package manager. > Btw, I'm not sure if I have hijacked the thread. If so, please feel > free to edit the subject line. > Hijack a hijacked thread that was originally an OT about window managers? Bob - -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-05 3:20 ` Bob Sanders 2005-09-05 3:46 ` Paul Hoy @ 2005-09-05 7:37 ` Neil Bothwick 2005-09-05 13:10 ` John SJ Anderson 1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Neil Bothwick @ 2005-09-05 7:37 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1409 bytes --] On Sun, 4 Sep 2005 20:20:39 -0700, Bob Sanders wrote: > > Fair comment. If you're talking about individual user/admins then the > > learning curve of installing and administering a different OS (not > > necessarily more difficult, just different) is a serious obstacle. > Based on my experiences, I'll disagree with you Neil. I had a couple of > interns working for me last year. One was about to graduate from > college and the other was in the middle of getting a Master's degree. > Both were comp-sci majors. These are hardly typical user who have never seen anything but Windows. They are the focus of this discussion. > Also, this isn't just the two interns. With only two exceptions - a > Slackware user, and a remote Engineer who prefers to have Corp IS > administrate the box, I've moved a lot of technical people to Gentoo. Yes, technical people, the people who can respond to the challenge of changing the mindset needed when you switch operating systems. Try the same with someone who has only ever used Windows, but has never installed it, and has no idea of the inner workings. Such people consider Windows to be intuitive, not because it is, but because it is what they know, and will balk at anything different. Who was is said "the only truly intuitive user interface is the tit"? -- Neil Bothwick Energizer Bunny arrested, charged with battery :) [-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-05 7:37 ` Neil Bothwick @ 2005-09-05 13:10 ` John SJ Anderson 0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: John SJ Anderson @ 2005-09-05 13:10 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Neil Bothwick <neil@digimed.co.uk> writes: > Who was is said "the only truly intuitive user interface is the tit"? Somebody who never had children: babies and moms have to _learn_ how to nurse, and sometimes aren't able to pull it off. john. -- genehack.org * weblog == ( bioinfo / linux / opinion / stuff ) * daily * Don't compare floating point numbers just for equality. - The Elements of Programming Style (Kernighan & Plaugher) -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-04 21:11 ` Mark Knecht 2005-09-04 23:56 ` Neil Bothwick @ 2005-09-07 1:08 ` waltdnes 2005-09-07 3:32 ` Mark Knecht 2005-09-07 4:01 ` John Jolet 1 sibling, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: waltdnes @ 2005-09-07 1:08 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Sun, Sep 04, 2005 at 02:11:51PM -0700, Mark Knecht wrote > My 'disagreement', if there is one, is that a savings of $300 for a > new computer and a $99 Windows upgrade won't convince many people to > learn to do it themselves using Linux. It takes a much stronger reason > than that, at least in my limited part of the planet. How about "the hard truth"... Admiinistering Linux is hard. Keeping a Windows machine free of spyware is harder. -- Walter Dnes <waltdnes@waltdnes.org> My musings on technology and security at http://tech_sec.blog.ca -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-07 1:08 ` waltdnes @ 2005-09-07 3:32 ` Mark Knecht 2005-09-07 4:01 ` John Jolet 1 sibling, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Mark Knecht @ 2005-09-07 3:32 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 9/6/05, waltdnes@waltdnes.org <waltdnes@waltdnes.org> wrote: > On Sun, Sep 04, 2005 at 02:11:51PM -0700, Mark Knecht wrote > > > My 'disagreement', if there is one, is that a savings of $300 for a > > new computer and a $99 Windows upgrade won't convince many people to > > learn to do it themselves using Linux. It takes a much stronger reason > > than that, at least in my limited part of the planet. > > How about "the hard truth"... > > Admiinistering Linux is hard. > Keeping a Windows machine free of spyware is harder. Damn straight!!! Actually, building a Win XP machine is pretty damn hard also. I wrote down what I did today building my only dual boot machine from scratch. I swear it almost took long to load Win XP successfully than it did to do a stage 3 Gentoo install! No less than 12 reboots and one spontanious reboot that shouldn't have happened. All this just to get XP loaded, Windows update done, and NAV loaded. What a mess!!! Everythign is up except grub. I need to send the list a question about that before I run grub and actually install it. Cheers, Mark -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-07 1:08 ` waltdnes 2005-09-07 3:32 ` Mark Knecht @ 2005-09-07 4:01 ` John Jolet 1 sibling, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: John Jolet @ 2005-09-07 4:01 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Sep 6, 2005, at 8:08 PM, waltdnes@waltdnes.org wrote: > On Sun, Sep 04, 2005 at 02:11:51PM -0700, Mark Knecht wrote > > >> My 'disagreement', if there is one, is that a savings of $300 for a >> new computer and a $99 Windows upgrade won't convince many people to >> learn to do it themselves using Linux. It takes a much stronger >> reason >> than that, at least in my limited part of the planet. >> > > How about "the hard truth"... > > Admiinistering Linux is hard. > Keeping a Windows machine free of spyware is harder. amen brother....can I get a witness? As an independent technical consultant, I make most of my money, unfortunately, cleaning windows computers of spyware. In most of those cases, any old linux desktop with openoffice would fit their needs, but they've bought the marketing. In most of those cases, the amount of money they'd have paid me to do the "up front" administering, would have been less. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-04 20:02 ` Mark Knecht 2005-09-04 20:57 ` Neil Bothwick @ 2005-09-05 5:13 ` Matt Randolph 2005-09-05 11:04 ` Holly Bostick 1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Matt Randolph @ 2005-09-05 5:13 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [I just thought I'd chip in my two cents on the question of whether Linux is easy or hard. It's turned into more like my $11.62, so it's a good thing it's broken into sections.] Linux is easy. That's not to say that it can't be hard. Depending on what you're trying to do, you may have to be able to think like an engineer to get the desired results. But that doesn't detract from my previous statement. In general, Linux is easy. Allow me to explain my reasoning. Knoppix is easier than Windows. Koko the the sign-language gorilla could turn an OS-less computer into a feature-loaded Debian system by merely pressing two buttons and inserting a Knoppix CD. ANY idiot that has ever used Windows 95 can find their way around in KDE without help (that's not to say that Koko is an idiot, mind you). If Koko is familiar with Gaim, Firefox and OpenOffice.org from her Windows experience, she's instantly able to do in Linux what she spends 99% of her time doing in Windows (actually, I'm pretty sure Koko usually uses a Mac, but you get my drift). "Out of the box" Knoppix should be completely intuitive to anyone that has ever used a relatively recent version of Windows. Is KDE intuitive if you don't read from left to right, or email doesn't begin with an E in your language? Maybe not. It's probably not very intuitive to pygmy headhunters either. But I'd bet 90% of Windows and Mac users could figure out how to do everything they want to do in Knoppix in twenty minutes or less... they just have to be willing to try. (Knoppix might be beyond the abilities of some BSD people, though. ;-) Installing Linux can be easy. While a Windows user is twiddling her thumbs as Windows XP installs, Koko the gorilla is getting in a quick game of frozen-bubble as Debian is copied to the disk. If something goes wrong during the install, well Koko just opens up a browser and Googles the error message. Our person installing Windows has to find another working machine in order to do that. The only thing that might give Koko some trouble about the install is partitioning her disk. This must be done during a Windows install too, of course, but our Windows user only had to accept all of the defaults when she partitioned a disk during an install. Installing Linux USED to be hard. This is probably why so many people think Linux IS hard. I've tried Slackware, Redhat, Suse, Mandrake, Debian (and Lindows/Linspire), and probably others. FreeBSD too. For years and years I wanted to play with Linux, but I could never even get it installed. I think I tried to install Redhat about half a dozen times (each time a new version number was released or so) before I ever had a working graphical system. I think Redhat was up to version 6 or 7 when I finally managed to get it up and running to my satisfaction (I switched to Debian when Redhat started demanding subscription fees). Getting X configured properly was always a sticky issue. The monitor never had refresh rates listed on the back label. And I could never find the hard copy manual for the monitor either. I only had one computer so I had to power off, swap disks, boot into Windows, look for the refresh rates online, power off, swap disks, try installing Linux again, type in the refresh rates... But what's this? "How the hell am I supposed to know the speed of my graphics card's RAMDAC?! WTF is a RAMDAC!? If Windows does this automatically anyway, why can't Linux! Screw this!" Fortunately, Linux has come a long way since then. Installing Gentoo can be hard. I tried to install Gentoo on three different occasions. Just like with those ancient versions of other distributions, the first two times I attempted to install relatively recent copies of Gentoo I was thwarted by mysterious errors while having no ready access to the web (or even a proper GUI) for help. On the third occasion, unable to get the LiveCDs to work, I finally managed to get Gentoo installed from within Kanotix64. Each time I encountered an error, trusty Firefox was there to display the solution. I had to promise myself the reward of buying and installing Doom3 to get me to stick with it. Actually, the fact that Doom3 and AA were both in amd64 in portage is what finally pushed me towards trying Gentoo again (I erroneously assumed they would be 64-bit versions). Well, that and the prospect of effortless updates and the fact that REAL Linux men and women (and gorillas) install all their software from source. So getting Gentoo (circa 2004) installed was a challenge the likes of which I hadn't seen since Redhat version 5 and prior. But keeping it installed (solving every problem that came along without throwing up my hands and switching distros) has been easy. I owe that in part to the large and largely savvy Gentoo community. Getting Gentoo to do all of the things that I want has certainly been harder than in Knoppix. It's been harder than in Redhat or Suse or regular Debian too. But mostly I think that's because "what I want" has become so much more since moving to Gentoo. I never bothered to do half of the things I now routinely do in Linux until switching to Gentoo. Heck, I don't think I ever even compiled a kernel in Suse, Mandrake, or Redhat. Administering Linux is easy. Administering it well, properly or wisely is hard, but the same can be said of Windows. Staying on top of Windows security patches, keeping up with new proprietary technologies, forking over loads of cash for software and support, all of those things are hard to do (for me, at least). A modern Linux machine is capable of performing admirably (for a user with the simplest needs) for YEARS right out of the box without ever having to change more than a few settings from the default values, without ever having to install external applications, without ever even having to REBOOT! How many machines are out there that are still running ancient versions of the Kernel because there has never been a reason to upgrade that warrants the downtime of a reboot? (Well, OK, there are other reasons for using older kernels too, but you see what I'm getting at.) One thing that the Linux administrator has that the Windows one doesn't is a seemingly endless supply of free support. A Windows admin may have to buy a support subscription to get access to help. At a minimum, she had to buy some software. And when the developer stops supporting that version... well she gets to buy some software again. Most of the problems a would-be Linux admin (the only kind I can speak to) will encounter, however, have already been solved. Some non Linux specific Unix issues may even have been solved decades ago! And if the solution cannot be found online, the uber-Linux admin probably has all of the tools needed to find the solution herself! Have you ever tried to solve a rare Windows problem? The solutions sometimes don't seem to have anything to do with the problem. The admin can't figure out the answer entirely by herself because it might be a glitch in some seemingly unrelated piece of code that she didn't even know her program used because she didn't have access to the source code. She has to complain to the developers (and wait until enough other people complained too) before a fix is released, all the while being told that it's not their problem, it's a problem with the OS! And if the problem is some flaky piece of hardware... well... for all the finger pointing it might be easier to just buy a new computer. ...with a new version of Windows to boot. ... easy partly because Linux has better documentation than Windows. Windows apps typically have help files, but have you ever tried to read them? In my experience, they never have anything even remotely related to your problem in them. Windows help files aren't there to help the admin make the software work when it doesn't. They're there to tell the enduser what he probably already knows through intuition or by just experimenting. Sometimes the first resort a Windows admin has for help is a forum. Linux admins get to RTFM first. Sure, commercial Windows software typically comes with a hard copy manual, but it is often little better than the help file. Some times it IS the help file. And if it actually contains useful information, it might be written in such a highly technical way that college graduates, PhD's even, run out and buy a "...for Dummies" book. When our would be admin buys a book about a Unix program, it's because she wants to learn how to use that program "well." Not just "at all." Administering Gentoo is especially easy. At least, most of the day-to-day stuff is trivial, that is. Sure, Windows XP downloads security updates automatically, whereas in Gentoo you have to type in a command or create a cron job, but look at what that single command does! You've not only plugged any security holes in your system files/programs, you've plugged the holes in ALL of your programs (assuming you stay in portage). A Windows user might have to visit dozens of websites on a daily basis to find out that there is a security patch for one of their commercial apps in time to block an exploit. And there WILL be an exploit! Granted, in Gentoo one has to run dispatch-conf afterwards, but, hey, would you really want some program mucking around in your config files unchaperoned anyway? When new versions of Windows or Windows applications are released, the smart Windows admin waits a while in the hopes that some of the bugs will get worked out before upgrading. But how long to wait? As reports of Windows 2000 machines getting wormed to pieces reveal, they often guess wrong. With Gentoo, the would-be admin can be pretty confident that anything in arch has been well tested and is safe enough to install. ...partly because portage is the easiest! Installing new software on Linux machines had long been a thorn in my side. For years, every time I found some interesting program on SourceForge or Freshmeat, it would only be available as a source file. Countless times I would download and attempt to compile a program only to have the build die halfway through. After chasing down half a dozen dependencies and trying to get them installed in the right order, I'd invariably give up in disgust when it turned out that a dependency no longer existed for download in the required version number or it conflicted with software that was already installed. Portage (and Debian's apt) made what for me was long the hardest part of using (I use the word use as in the word enduser) Linux into one of the easiest. If there was a GUI based tool that enabled a Koko to turn a tarball and a list of dependencies into a properly ebuild, there would be virtually no room for improvement in my eyes. The fact that Gentoo has such a rabid fan base (sporting many developers and package maintainers) has helped to ensure that most of the programs that most people might want can be painlessly installed on Gentoo with merely a few keystrokes. Other distributions are easy too. I think of Redhat as the distro you use if you don't want to learn anything about Linux (OK, OK, and nearly every Linux app. has an rpm available). For many people it is, or will be, their first distro. And, not infrequently, their last. Getting hardware to work with Redhat is probably the easiest because many of the hardware manufacturers that release Linux drivers, only do so in the form of .rpm's. I think Debian, on the other hand, must be for lazy people. I mean, look at apt! It's like emerge only everything is precompiled. That's almost too easy! Suse impressed me with Yast because I could do what I wanted with only a slight shift from the Windows paradigm. Slackware... well, Slackware is a beast. It was the first distro I ever attempted to install, and I think it scarred me for life. I don't think I ever actually got it up and running, though I haven't tried in many years. The last time I looked at their website, though, it was little more than a brief text file with links to .tgz's and .iso's. I'm sure it's an awesome distribution, but I never got to see why first hand. So aside from my experience with ancient versions of Slack, most of the other major distros proved themselves to be easy to install and configure once they came of age. Well, I haven't tried Slack in years so I assume that it came of age also and is now easy too. Linux is (often) easier than Windows. Linux (well, all Unices I know of) come with scads of powerful tools that Windows simply doesn't have. There are countless things that a Linux user can do with just a few standard commands and some pipes that a Windows guru would have to use commercial software and/or VB (or C) to do. Many's the time I've moved every file of some Windows project to a Linux box and back again just so that I'd have access to the Unix tools. I am a bit of an odd duck, though, as I'd probably try to write a bash script to brush my teeth if I thought I could. Linux isn't having an easy time. The only thing that is harder to do in the Linux world that in the Windows world is to find commercial software and some driver support. In the Windows world, you don't have to ask yourself "is this software available for my OS?" In the Windows world, you buy the hardware first and then check to see if it's compatible AFTER you start having trouble getting it to work in your computer. This is the only area in which Windows has the upper hand to Linux. Unfortunately, it is the area over which we have the least control. It is only as the user base grows that these problems will fade away. As more people use Linux, more hardware manufacturers will support Linux, and more prospective users will discover that they have compatible hardware. As more businesses use Linux, more people will learn how to use it on the job. As businesses look for ways to cut costs, some will turn to Linux as an obvious answer. One day there will be a big article in Fortune or The Wallstreet Journal about a little nano-tech company that made it big. And it will mention that one of the factors that helped them beat the competition was that they saved scads of money by putting Linux on all of their desktops. And people will read this article and they will be paying attention. Koko and I are just sure of it. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-05 5:13 ` Matt Randolph @ 2005-09-05 11:04 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-05 14:39 ` Matt Randolph 0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Holly Bostick @ 2005-09-05 11:04 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Matt Randolph schreef: > [I just thought I'd chip in my two cents on the question of whether > Linux is easy or hard. It's turned into more like my $11.62, so it's > a good thing it's broken into sections.] > > Linux is easy. > <snip of Matt's tour-de-force, virtually all of which I agree with, except it still assumes that a 'knowledgeable user'; i.e. an admin, is involved, which was the point of the whole debate-- Windows users believe that they should always be 'pure users' and the very fact that they or someone must 'admin' Linux automatically makes it "too hard"> > > The only thing that is harder to do in the Linux world that in the > Windows world is to find commercial software and some driver support. > > > > > > > In the Windows world, you don't have to ask yourself "is this > software available for my OS?" In the Windows world, you buy the > hardware first and then check to see if it's compatible AFTER you > start having trouble getting it to work in your computer. Which is, btw, completely bass-ackward to start with, which was my original point (the assumption that 'pure user, no admin necessary' is possible is fundamentally wrong, and patently false based on the observed evidence). You can't buy a couch on a whim without taking into account the measurements of your doors/room first (well you can, but if you can't get it into your house, no vendor is going to say, 'oh, sorry, that's my fault'). If you do, and the movers can't get the couch up the stairs/through the door/into the room, whose fault is everyone (including you) going to say it is that you can't use the couch? *Yours* for not determining that the device (couch) was appropriate for your environment before buying. This idea that somehow computer hardware is different (fostered by MS, where everything supposedly 'JustWorks') is completely contrary to knowledge and experience we have of the Real World --where you can't just buy 'anything' without checking something first (you try on clothes, or at least check the size, you make sure that electrical appliances have the right connectors for your wiring or needs, heck, if nothing else you make sure the color matches your room or shoes). Judgement is an 'admin-level task', and it is unavoidable that judgement should be involved in such a situation as buying computer hardware (because we are currently unable to create computers that are able to either make such judgements for themselves, or are so flexible/standard that such judgement does not need to be made at all). The fact that the OS manufacturer with 90+% of the market is actively fostering the complete untruth that judgement is not only outdated and uncool, but furthermore completely unneccessary in Our Modern World (ha!) is, shall we say, "deeply disturbing" to me. Holly -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-05 11:04 ` Holly Bostick @ 2005-09-05 14:39 ` Matt Randolph 2005-09-05 15:38 ` Holly Bostick 0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Matt Randolph @ 2005-09-05 14:39 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Holly Bostick wrote: >Matt Randolph schreef: > > >>[I just thought I'd chip in my two cents on the question of whether >>Linux is easy or hard. It's turned into more like my $11.62, so it's >> a good thing it's broken into sections.] >> >>Linux is easy. >> >> >> ><snip of Matt's tour-de-force, virtually all of which I agree with, >except it still assumes that a 'knowledgeable user'; i.e. an admin, is >involved, which was the point of the whole debate-- Windows users >believe that they should always be 'pure users' and the very fact that >they or someone must 'admin' Linux automatically makes it "too hard"> > > >>The only thing that is harder to do in the Linux world that in the >>Windows world is to find commercial software and some driver support. >> >> >> >> >> >> >>In the Windows world, you don't have to ask yourself "is this >>software available for my OS?" In the Windows world, you buy the >>hardware first and then check to see if it's compatible AFTER you >>start having trouble getting it to work in your computer. >> >> > >Which is, btw, completely bass-ackward to start with, which was my >original point (the assumption that 'pure user, no admin necessary' is >possible is fundamentally wrong, and patently false based on the >observed evidence). > >You can't buy a couch on a whim without taking into account the >measurements of your doors/room first (well you can, but if you can't >get it into your house, no vendor is going to say, 'oh, sorry, that's my >fault'). If you do, and the movers can't get the couch up the >stairs/through the door/into the room, whose fault is everyone >(including you) going to say it is that you can't use the couch? > >*Yours* for not determining that the device (couch) was appropriate for >your environment before buying. > >This idea that somehow computer hardware is different (fostered by MS, >where everything supposedly 'JustWorks') is completely contrary to >knowledge and experience we have of the Real World --where you can't >just buy 'anything' without checking something first (you try on >clothes, or at least check the size, you make sure that electrical >appliances have the right connectors for your wiring or needs, heck, if >nothing else you make sure the color matches your room or shoes). > >Judgement is an 'admin-level task', and it is unavoidable that judgement >should be involved in such a situation as buying computer hardware >(because we are currently unable to create computers that are able to >either make such judgements for themselves, or are so flexible/standard >that such judgement does not need to be made at all). > >The fact that the OS manufacturer with 90+% of the market is actively >fostering the complete untruth that judgement is not only outdated and >uncool, but furthermore completely unneccessary in Our Modern World >(ha!) is, shall we say, "deeply disturbing" to me. > >Holly > > I don't think Knoppix really has an administrator. It really is an enduser only flavour of Linux. It's sort of a "fire and forget" distro. Sure, someone had to go to a lot of trouble to get it set up just right in the first place, but once that was done it can perform reliably without further administrative intervention. The enduser not only probably won't set the root password, the enduser doesn't even need to know that it is unset. Or even that a root account exists! I don't believe this sort of user experience is limited to read-only systems like Knoppix, though. Look at Lindows/Linspire. How about those $200 Linux computers they are (or were) selling at Wal*Mart (strewth!). I expect those machines ARE intended to provide the enduser with an essentially administratorless (to coin a word) experience. Linspire (at least used to) have the user running everything as root. But do you think the enduser always knows that? I think the enduser simply knows that when they pay to install OpenOffice.org from Linspire's private apt servers, it just works; it installs without their ever having to `su` or `sudo` or anything. That Linspire user essentially is the admin, though she doesn't know it and she almost certainly doesn't behave like one. That's true for Windows XP users too (personal users, at least). The default Windows XP account runs everything with administrative privileges. But that doesn't mean there's an admin at the controls. Microsoft has tried to shift the most frequently performed critical administrative task, namely installing security updates, from the user's shoulders onto their own. I think portage and apt achieve similar (nay, superior) functionality for Linux users, and I don't think that's a bad thing. Should Linux users be able to get away without administering their systems? Well, I think Linspire users should be able to get away without administering their systems themselves. For their target users, Linspire systems should me largely maintenance free. For these people, any administrative tasks that must be performed should probably be handled by corporate HQ as much as possible. Professionally written scripts should be used and a cron job should download and install updates to those scripts. Should the rest of us be able to get away without administering (or attempting to administer, in my case) our systems? Of course not. That'd be daft. You wouldn't agree to ride in a car without a licensed driver behind the wheel, would you? Well, I suppose some people might if one was driving it by remote control. I don't think we're really disagreeing on this point (not about the car, about the initial question). Secondly, I didn't mean to imply that it was appropriate for Windows folks to buy hardware without first verifying that it is compatible with Windows. I'm merely saying that, for many Windows users, it is probably quite common behavior. They may even be able to get away with it more often than not. Does a savvy Windows user or an administrator or even a pimply-faced computer gamer do this? Of course not. These types of users will sit down and research the prospective hardware purchase carefully beforehand. But how often do you think John Q. Enduser somewhere walks into a store and buys a mouse or a hard drive or even a wireless NIC combo without doing a lick of homework first? I'd say it probably IS more often than not. He was probably goaded into the purchase by the 75%-off mail in rebate which he will promptly fail to send in properly anyway. What I think I hear you saying is that being able to get away with this foolish behavior should not be one of our goals. I did not mean to imply that careless hardware shopping should be encouraged. Rather, I used this as an example to try to illustrate how lacking driver support slows the growth of Linux. If Linux is going to grow it's user base significantly, it's probably going to have to attract quite a few of those careless boobs too. And if Linux can't be made to work on their hardware, do you think they are going to run out and buy a new computer or will they simply rethink the decision to try Linux? Although careless hardware shopping should not be encouraged, being able to get away with it (that is, having nearly ubiquitous hardware support) should indeed be one of our goals. I was not aware that any company was trying to encourage careless hardware shopping. If knew it to be so, I'd be as unhappy about it as you appear to be. Well... I do suppose that is what those mail-in rebates ARE trying to do. And I am certainly unhappy about that (disgusted, even). I guess there's another reason Linux is a superior OS: it makes you behave. - Matt [Oh, and thank you for your kind comments.] -- "Pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate" - W. of O. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-05 14:39 ` Matt Randolph @ 2005-09-05 15:38 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-06 1:37 ` Matt Randolph 0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Holly Bostick @ 2005-09-05 15:38 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Matt Randolph schreef: > Holly Bostick wrote: > >>> >>> In the Windows world, you don't have to ask yourself "is this >>> software available for my OS?" In the Windows world, you buy the >>> hardware first and then check to see if it's compatible AFTER >>> you start having trouble getting it to work in your computer. >>> >> >> >> Which is, btw, completely bass-ackward to start with, which was my >> original point (the assumption that 'pure user, no admin necessary' >> is possible is fundamentally wrong, and patently false based on the >> observed evidence). >> <snip> >> > > I don't think Knoppix really has an administrator. It really is an > enduser only flavour of Linux. It's sort of a "fire and forget" > distro. Sure, someone had to go to a lot of trouble to get it set up > just right in the first place, but once that was done it can perform > reliably without further administrative intervention. The enduser > not only probably won't set the root password, the enduser doesn't > even need to know that it is unset. Or even that a root account > exists! Interesting. But again, *someone* had to administer the system to set it up so that a user could be 'pure'. > > I don't believe this sort of user experience is limited to read-only > systems like Knoppix, though. Look at Lindows/Linspire. How about > those $200 Linux computers they are (or were) selling at Wal*Mart > (strewth!). I expect those machines ARE intended to provide the > enduser with an essentially administratorless (to coin a word) > experience. Linspire (at least used to) have the user running > everything as root. But do you think the enduser always knows that? I > think the enduser simply knows that when they pay to install > OpenOffice.org from Linspire's private apt servers, it just works; it > installs without their ever having to `su` or `sudo` or anything. > That Linspire user essentially is the admin, though she doesn't know > it and she almost certainly doesn't behave like one. And many now question whether Linspire can even be called a Linux distribution for this and other reasons, despite the fact that it runs on a Linux kernel. We're all wondering if that is then the only requirement, or does it also need to follow 'the rules' to be counted? But that's a whole 'nother discussion. > <snip> > What I think I hear you saying is that being able to get away with > this foolish behavior should not be one of our goals. I did not mean > to imply that careless hardware shopping should be encouraged. > Rather, I used this as an example to try to illustrate how lacking > driver support slows the growth of Linux. If Linux is going to grow > it's user base significantly, it's probably going to have to attract > quite a few of those careless boobs too. And if Linux can't be made > to work on their hardware, do you think they are going to run out > and buy a new computer or will they simply rethink the decision to > try Linux? > > Although careless hardware shopping should not be encouraged, being > able to get away with it (that is, having nearly ubiquitous hardware > support) should indeed be one of our goals. OK, I understand that, but... how exactly is allowing one to 'get away' with such behaviour not 'encouraging' such behaviour? If one has always been able to 'get away' with any behaviour, why would one think that any other behaviour is possible? If for my entire life, I have walked into "stores", taken what I wanted, and left again (which is perfectly acceptable behaviour wherever I'm from), the day I walk into a "real" store, and get taken away by the police for 'stealing' (because I didn't pay, which I have never heard of and thus never even considered that a 'store' represents an 'exchange' of 'money' for 'goods'), it may be true that I have not been 'encouraged' to 'steal', but I definitely have been poorly trained in the actual working of The (rest of the) Real World, and that is not a good thing. Ubiquitous hardware support, on the one hand, is closer than you think (there's not all that much hardware that cannot, no matter what you do, be made to work under Linux; it's just not that it all "JustWorks"), and on the other hand is less relevant than you think (I have drivers that enable my ATI card to 'work' under Linux, but they suck, so whose fault is that? Not Linux's. Nor is it Linux's fault if I plug in my digicam and it is mounted, but I don't know how to get the dv output into Kino, or can't figure out how to properly mount my perfectly-well-detected Flash card to get my pictures into whatever graphics display or editing program I might use). The hardware works fine. But that's no help if I can't understand how to use it, or can't use it effectively. And enabling some kind of efficient communication between the hardware that is being properly detected by the kernel, and the programs the user uses to utilize the device is a design issue, which is an administrative task. If Wine/Cedega will run Morrowind using my ATI card under certain configurations, but not others (or the 'default' config), then someone has to be responsible for setting that up so that the user (who is also me, of course) can just click an icon and run Morrowind. Hell, someone has to make sure that the ATI drivers are installed in the first place-- and supposedly the user is never supposed to know about any of this, and there should never be an admin, so who's supposed to do it then? The Tooth Fairy? The fact that you may be able to "Plug and Play" does not remove the necessity that administration must occur: under Windows, a Wizard does it, in an enterprise situation, IT does it, under SuSE, maybe YaST does it, under Gentoo, you do it (or Mark does it for you :) ). But the fact that at some point somebody has to be responsible for administration is inescapable, and I feel that saying that's wrong somehow is... wrong. Because it's a limit of technology, and pretending that such limits don't exist (or worse yet, attempting to conceal such limits) seems very very unwise to me. > > I was not aware that any company was trying to encourage careless > hardware shopping. If knew it to be so, I'd be as unhappy about it > as you appear to be. One word.... Winmodem (easiest possible example). All winmodems are (naturally) marked that they work under Windows. How many of them are marked that they *only* work under Windows, because a Winmodem is an incomplete piece of hardware, where the functioning of certain physical chips (which are physically no longer present) are replaced by software functions available only in the Windows Operating System (because the Windows Operating System was specifically designed with closed-source APIs to replace the functions of specific chips formerly on the modem PCB)? How many 'real' hardware modems (which have all the chips, and do not replace any hardware functionality with OS-based functions) are distinguished on their packaging from WinModems, or vice versa? And do you think that the 1) creation of, and 2) lack of disclosure on the packaging of, such crippled hardware was somehow not 'encouraged' by the company whose product's market share benefits the most from the existance of such hardware (because the hardware seems to JustWork with their software)? The benefit to the hardware companies, of course, is that their product becomes cheaper to produce, since it requires less chips... and there's little chance that the old PCB with all the chips will need to make a reappearance, because the software being used to replace the hardware functioning is eternal (not least because of the manufacturer's new hardware design). And that's just the easy example. Holly -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-05 15:38 ` Holly Bostick @ 2005-09-06 1:37 ` Matt Randolph 2005-09-06 15:31 ` Holly Bostick 0 siblings, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Matt Randolph @ 2005-09-06 1:37 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Holly Bostick wrote: >Matt Randolph schreef: > > >>I don't think Knoppix really has an administrator. It really is an >>enduser only flavour of Linux. It's sort of a "fire and forget" >>distro. Sure, someone had to go to a lot of trouble to get it set up >> just right in the first place, but once that was done it can perform >> reliably without further administrative intervention. The enduser >>not only probably won't set the root password, the enduser doesn't >>even need to know that it is unset. Or even that a root account >>exists! >> >> > >Interesting. But again, *someone* had to administer the system to set it >up so that a user could be 'pure'. > > It sounds like we are in agreement on this point. We both state that someone had (past tense) to administer the system... at some point in time. We also both state (or imply) that the enduser doesn't take up the role of administrator. Is it possible to have any sort of computer that hasn't felt the effects of an administrator? Of course not. Any device of any significant complexity can only exist by the labors of some knowledgeable persons. I don't think anyone is trying to say the opposite. But does the Knoppix user's system have an administrator NOW? I say it does not. It has been configured by an admin... heck, the OS was installed to it's filesystem by an admin... but there is no admin looking over the shoulder of the Knoppix user. > > >>I don't believe this sort of user experience is limited to read-only >>systems like Knoppix, though. Look at Lindows/Linspire. How about >>those $200 Linux computers they are (or were) selling at Wal*Mart >>(strewth!). I expect those machines ARE intended to provide the >>enduser with an essentially administratorless (to coin a word) >>experience. Linspire (at least used to) have the user running >>everything as root. But do you think the enduser always knows that? I >> think the enduser simply knows that when they pay to install >>OpenOffice.org from Linspire's private apt servers, it just works; it >> installs without their ever having to `su` or `sudo` or anything. >>That Linspire user essentially is the admin, though she doesn't know >> it and she almost certainly doesn't behave like one. >> >> > >And many now question whether Linspire can even be called a Linux >distribution for this and other reasons, despite the fact that it runs >on a Linux kernel. We're all wondering if that is then the only >requirement, or does it also need to follow 'the rules' to be counted? > >But that's a whole 'nother discussion. > > I didn't mean to imply that Linspire is a proper Linux distribution. It certainly doesn't follow 'the rules' of a proper operating system. But neither does Windows for that matter (and for much the same reasons). Knoppix doesn't follow the traditional 'rules' in that it is read-only. Embedded versions of Linux don't follow 'the rules' in a sense because the user might never interface with the OS at all, merely a single application instead. Linspire IS trying to follow a set of rules. Specifically, the ones Windows goes by. So doesn't that mean that Linspire is at least as valid an OS as Windows is? No, Linspire is not proper Linux, but it is bringing the kernel and Linux apps into some peoples homes. It may not be bringing the traditions, the behaviors, or the ways of thinking that are a part of Linux, but those may come with time to those that seek them. But even if they never did, why should certain sorts of people be prevented from using Linux just because they aren't clever enough or are too busy to do it properly? Some people will never learn more than the basics of operating a computer. If those people are forced to chose between learning to use a proper OS properly versus using a typewriter, they'll start dusting off the old Selectric. I have heard rumors that some futurists are predicting the death of the PC in the not too distant future. Instead of PCs they predict people will use weird multi-function mobile phone devices with speech recognition interfaces. Will you want to have to log in to your mobile in order to answer it? Will you want to have to create a cron job to get it to download your email? But don't you want it to be Linux-based anyway? >>What I think I hear you saying is that being able to get away with >>this foolish behavior should not be one of our goals. I did not mean >> to imply that careless hardware shopping should be encouraged. >>Rather, I used this as an example to try to illustrate how lacking >>driver support slows the growth of Linux. If Linux is going to grow >> it's user base significantly, it's probably going to have to attract >> quite a few of those careless boobs too. And if Linux can't be made >> to work on their hardware, do you think they are going to run out >>and buy a new computer or will they simply rethink the decision to >>try Linux? >> >>Although careless hardware shopping should not be encouraged, being >>able to get away with it (that is, having nearly ubiquitous hardware >> support) should indeed be one of our goals. >> >> > >OK, I understand that, but... how exactly is allowing one to 'get away' >with such behaviour not 'encouraging' such behaviour? > >If one has always been able to 'get away' with any behaviour, why would >one think that any other behaviour is possible? > > In my town it is the custom to drive ten to fifteen miles per hour over the speed limit. Almost everybody does it. You're much more likely to see someone greatly exceeding the limit than you are to find someone strictly obeying it. By allowing people to get away with this scofflaw behavior, do you mean to imply that the police are actively encouraging it some how? Do you honestly believe a single one of those motorists doesn't know they are breaking the law? Or that it is even possible to drive more slowly? So which is it? When they put out limit signs and mentions of fines, but then don't pull you over for every little violation, are they encouraging or discouraging speeding? I think I see what you're driving at, though. What I hear you saying is that whenever someone gets away with a thing, they will invariably feel encouraged to do it again. I feel, however, that this "encouragement" is distinctly different from encouragement with the intent to encourage. The latter is the result of an action while the former is the result of an inaction. Encouraging is not the same as not discouraging. Some people are encouraged to speed by the lax enforcement, while others are discouraged from speeding by the signs and a desire to obey the law. Whether one is encouraged to be a lawbreaker or not varies from one person to the next. There is nothing invariable about it. But we're not really talking about cars here. We're talking about buying hardware and the availability of drivers for a particular operating system. Do you mean to imply that carefree hardware buying is such an evil that we must ensure that the behavior never goes unpunished? To me that would mean that hardware manufacturers would have to be DIScouraged from releasing Linux drivers so that every hardware purchase by the uninformed would be a total crap shoot. Allowing people to get away with careless shopping is an unavoidable consequence of having universal hardware support. If we labor to obtain the latter, we will be enabling the former poor behavior by default. But if Linux actually had 100% complete universal hardware support, failing to look for an OS compatibility sticker would no longer BE poor behavior. It would have become unnecessary entirely. >Ubiquitous hardware support, on the one hand, is closer than you think >(there's not all that much hardware that cannot, no matter what you do, >be made to work under Linux; it's just not that it all "JustWorks"), and on >the other hand is less relevant than you think (I have drivers that >enable my ATI card to 'work' under Linux, but they suck, so whose fault >is that? Not Linux's. Nor is it Linux's fault if I plug in my digicam >and it is mounted, but I don't know how to get the dv output into Kino, >or can't figure out how to properly mount my perfectly-well-detected >Flash card to get my pictures into whatever graphics display or editing >program I might use). The hardware works fine. But that's no help if I >can't understand how to use it, or can't use it effectively. > > You're right. Hardware support has come a long way. Knoppix, for instance, is awesome. More often than not, it really does "just work." But I do not believe that having even basic hardware support is as irrelevant as you seem to suggest. Are you not better off having crappy support from ATI than you would be if you had none? But I'm not wishing for poorly written or incomplete drivers. When I say that a piece of hardware has Linux support, I mean that it "runs" not "crawls" (to quote Mr. Knecht, I believe). If your digicam is mounted but you cannot get the contents into Kino, are you really getting support from the manufacturer? Shouldn't support for Linux include instructions on how to get it to work with Linux? If some insanely talented hacker/engineer reverse engineers your camera's interface and adds it to the kernel, yet no Howto exists to show you how to use it, do you really have "support?" I was talking about driver support but I guess I really meant to be talking about complete support: driver support, software support, technical support, the whole package the Windows folks get. If we had that from hardware manufacturers, Linux's growth would snowball. >And enabling some kind of efficient communication between the hardware >that is being properly detected by the kernel, and the programs the user >uses to utilize the device is a design issue, which is an administrative >task. If Wine/Cedega will run Morrowind using my ATI card under certain >configurations, but not others (or the 'default' config), then someone >has to be responsible for setting that up so that the user (who is also >me, of course) can just click an icon and run Morrowind. Hell, someone >has to make sure that the ATI drivers are installed in the first place-- >and supposedly the user is never supposed to know about any of this, and >there should never be an admin, so who's supposed to do it then? The >Tooth Fairy? > > As I understand it, in the case of Cedega, the someones responsible for setting things up for a particular game are the techs at Transgaming. In Wine, that someone is you, though hopefully someone else has posted how they did it so you won't have to reinvent the wheel. But Windows gamers often have to deal with administrative tasks too (and other Windows endusers do as well). It happens quite often that a Windows game has to be patched in order to work on a particular computer. The enduser may have to seek help from the developers and follow their instructions. Does this make the enduser the administrator? Or is the administrator the one that solved the problem, made the patch, and wrote the instructions? I'm not saying "there should never be an admin" ever. But for certain sorts of users, there need to be products that don't require that an admin be present in order to keep things working properly (enough). If a box is configured well and it can be made to be static, does it really need an administrator? What if that box is a refrigerator, a video game console, or even a non-networked PC? I think that a Linux appliance like one of these can and should be able to be used without the further help of an admin. >The fact that you may be able to "Plug and Play" does not remove the >necessity that administration must occur: under Windows, a Wizard does >it, in an enterprise situation, IT does it, under SuSE, maybe YaST does >it, under Gentoo, you do it (or Mark does it for you :) ). > >But the fact that at some point somebody has to be responsible for >administration is inescapable, and I feel that saying that's wrong >somehow is... wrong. > > "[S]omeone had to go to a lot of trouble to get it set up just right in the first place, but once that was done it can perform reliably without further administrative intervention," is what I said about Knoppix. There was an admin, but there isn't one now. I don't know what I said that led you to believe I thought something different. The more that is asked of a system, the more administering must be done to it. A video game console with a Linux OS only has to do one thing. As a result, it will require essentially no administrative intervention. An enterprise web server has to do more things than I can count. As a result, it has to be closely watched and fiddled with to keep things running smoothly. Somewhere in between is the Linspire desktop. If all it has to do is write documents, send emails, and surf the web, then little more than security updates would need to be performed (by cron, even) to keep it going. But if you actually want to use your computer AS a computer instead of an appliance, then a different distro would be a better choice and somebody is going to need to administer things. >Because it's a limit of technology, and pretending that such limits >don't exist (or worse yet, attempting to conceal such limits) seems very >very unwise to me. > > I agree that the limitations of a technology should be made aware to its users and it should be done in such a way that they will comprehend those limitations. But does that mean that trying to make simple systems that don't require constant babysitting by flesh and blood administrators is automatically a bad idea simply because it shields the enduser from the underlying mechanics? >>I was not aware that any company was trying to encourage careless >>hardware shopping. If knew it to be so, I'd be as unhappy about it >>as you appear to be. >> >> > >One word.... Winmodem (easiest possible example). > >All winmodems are (naturally) marked that they work under Windows. How >many of them are marked that they *only* work under Windows, > All of them. The list of hardware and software requirements on each package *only* indicates that it works under Windows. Granted, they don't say "won't work with Linux," but they don't say "won't work with a Cray," either. If you buy a piece of hardware and the manufacturer didn't say it would work with your OS, and you can't get it to work with your OS... then you're on your own. > because a >Winmodem is an incomplete piece of hardware, where the functioning of >certain physical chips (which are physically no longer present) are >replaced by software functions available only in the Windows Operating >System (because the Windows Operating System was specifically designed >with closed-source APIs to replace the functions of specific chips >formerly on the modem PCB)? > >How many 'real' hardware modems (which have all the chips, and do not >replace any hardware functionality with OS-based functions) are >distinguished on their packaging from WinModems, or vice versa? > > None that I've seen, but that doesn't mean there aren't any. I'm not sure, but I think a proper external modem can be made to work with both PC's and Macs. If so, it might even say so on the box. I believe I was able to tell that my last (last as in final) modem was a proper one because the box said it worked in DOS too. >And do you think that the 1) creation of, and 2) lack of disclosure on >the packaging of, such crippled hardware was somehow not 'encouraged' by >the company whose product's market share benefits the most from the >existance of such hardware (because the hardware seems to JustWork with >their software)? The benefit to the hardware companies, of course, is >that their product becomes cheaper to produce, since it requires less >chips... and there's little chance that the old PCB with all the chips >will need to make a reappearance, because the software being used to >replace the hardware functioning is eternal (not least because of the >manufacturer's new hardware design). > > Do you really believe that some little Taiwanese company failing to state "this product will not work without Windows," on a modem package is evidence that Microsoft is up to no good? I'm not saying Microsoft isn't. Of course they are. But I don't think they told hardware manufacturers how to word the compatibility information on each box in an effort to mislead those people who might want to switch from Windows to Linux some day (and do it at 53Kbps to boot). Even if Winmodems DID come with a warning about being unusable without Windows, do you really think that would have affected sales appreciably? And why aren't there Win-NICs, or Win-mice, or Win-hard drives? Granted, they may come with the arrival of the Microsoft brand of Digital Rights Management. That may even be the real reason they're moving towards DRM at all. But I think the fact that the RIAA and the MPAA have been screaming their heads off might have something to do with it too. ;-) - Matt -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-06 1:37 ` Matt Randolph @ 2005-09-06 15:31 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-06 16:21 ` Mark Knecht 2005-09-06 18:20 ` Matt Randolph 0 siblings, 2 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Holly Bostick @ 2005-09-06 15:31 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Matt Randolph schreef: > Holly Bostick wrote: > >> Matt Randolph schreef: >> >> >>> I don't think Knoppix really has an administrator. It really is >>> an enduser only flavour of Linux. It's sort of a "fire and >>> forget" distro. Sure, someone had to go to a lot of trouble to >>> get it set up just right in the first place, but once that was >>> done it can perform reliably without further administrative >>> intervention. The enduser not only probably won't set the root >>> password, the enduser doesn't even need to know that it is unset. >>> Or even that a root account exists! >>> >> >> >> Interesting. But again, *someone* had to administer the system to >> set it up so that a user could be 'pure'. >> >> > It sounds like we are in agreement on this point. We both state that > someone had (past tense) to administer the system... at some point > in time. We also both state (or imply) that the enduser doesn't take > up the role of administrator. Is it possible to have any sort of > computer that hasn't felt the effects of an administrator? Of course > not. Any device of any significant complexity can only exist by the > labors of some knowledgeable persons. I don't think anyone is > trying to say the opposite. > > But does the Knoppix user's system have an administrator NOW? I say > it does not. It has been configured by an admin... heck, the OS was > installed to it's filesystem by an admin... but there is no admin > looking over the shoulder of the Knoppix user. Right.... so here's a real-world problem, from elsewhere on this list ("authorization failure when sending email") > Matthew Lee schreef: >> I've tried every combination of kmail settings available, no joy. >> I've reemerged all the software that --depclean removed, no joy. >> I've reemerged kmail, no joy. I've reemerged ssmtp, no joy. >> However, I think ssmtp, or something associated with it is the >> problem. But what I haven't a clue. Is there another "simple" >> mail transfer agent I could try. I don't need anything fancy it's >> just a laptop connected to the lab DHCP server. >> Since this issue seems to revolve around programs also available to Knoppix (and likely also being used under Knoppix), it's probably a valid example. So you've got a user who is unable to use a simple user function (send email). In the proposed administratorless world, who is supposed to fix this? The "invisible administrator" (who must exist, but is no longer necessarily present). In the case of Knoppix, that's the Knoppix team or the Debian team, if we're restricting ourselves purely to the packages involved. Is the user supposed to download and install another "fixed" Knoppix disk in order to be able to use KMail as they did last week? Or is the user to follow the Debian protocol and not use the newer version of these programs (meaning they wouldn't be available to Debian stable in the first place, which of course, they probably aren't)? If everything is supposed to "JustWork" and does not, someone must be at fault. Who? The user is experiencing some unidentified conflict between programs that worked together well last week. Is there any way for those who are 'to blame' (development, packaging, some admin along the line) to work in such a way that these conflicts never ever filter down to the user? I say no, because we persist in making the conflicting applications known to the user before all such conflicts are identified and eliminated-- partly because development requires that these errors filter down to the user to be identified in the first place, as developers cannot test under all possible conditions. Basically the limit of software technology is that we make it immediately available to everyone as if it does not require administration, but it is (almost) never so stable and intuitive that this is in fact the case. The solution would seem to be to either not make the software available until it has been sufficiently tested so that it does "JustWork" under all possible conditions (which the trained greed of users will not allow), or teach the user that sometimes they may have to do something a bit more complicated than just click 'Send' (which means that the user cannot be a pure user anymore). I don't see any middle ground here, but maybe I'm missing something. Holly > >> >> >>> I don't believe this sort of user experience is limited to >>> read-only systems like Knoppix, though. Look at >>> Lindows/Linspire. How about those $200 Linux computers they are >>> (or were) selling at Wal*Mart (strewth!). I expect those >>> machines ARE intended to provide the enduser with an essentially >>> administratorless (to coin a word) experience. Linspire (at >>> least used to) have the user running everything as root. But do >>> you think the enduser always knows that? I think the enduser >>> simply knows that when they pay to install OpenOffice.org from >>> Linspire's private apt servers, it just works; it installs >>> without their ever having to `su` or `sudo` or anything. That >>> Linspire user essentially is the admin, though she doesn't know >>> it and she almost certainly doesn't behave like one. >>> >> >> >> And many now question whether Linspire can even be called a Linux >> distribution for this and other reasons, despite the fact that it >> runs on a Linux kernel. We're all wondering if that is then the >> only requirement, or does it also need to follow 'the rules' to be >> counted? >> >> But that's a whole 'nother discussion. >> >> > I didn't mean to imply that Linspire is a proper Linux distribution. > It certainly doesn't follow 'the rules' of a proper operating > system. But neither does Windows for that matter (and for much the > same reasons). Knoppix doesn't follow the traditional 'rules' in that > it is read-only. Embedded versions of Linux don't follow 'the rules' > in a sense because the user might never interface with the OS at all, > merely a single application instead. Linspire IS trying to follow a > set of rules. Specifically, the ones Windows goes by. So doesn't > that mean that Linspire is at least as valid an OS as Windows is? > > No, Linspire is not proper Linux, but it is bringing the kernel and > Linux apps into some peoples homes. It may not be bringing the > traditions, the behaviors, or the ways of thinking that are a part of > Linux, but those may come with time to those that seek them. But > even if they never did, why should certain sorts of people be > prevented from using Linux just because they aren't clever enough or > are too busy to do it properly? Some people will never learn more > than the basics of operating a computer. If those people are forced > to chose between learning to use a proper OS properly versus using a > typewriter, they'll start dusting off the old Selectric. > > I have heard rumors that some futurists are predicting the death of > the PC in the not too distant future. Instead of PCs they predict > people will use weird multi-function mobile phone devices with speech > recognition interfaces. Will you want to have to log in to your > mobile in order to answer it? Will you want to have to create a cron > job to get it to download your email? But don't you want it to be > Linux-based anyway? > >>> What I think I hear you saying is that being able to get away >>> with this foolish behavior should not be one of our goals. I did >>> not mean to imply that careless hardware shopping should be >>> encouraged. Rather, I used this as an example to try to >>> illustrate how lacking driver support slows the growth of Linux. >>> If Linux is going to grow it's user base significantly, it's >>> probably going to have to attract quite a few of those careless >>> boobs too. And if Linux can't be made to work on their hardware, >>> do you think they are going to run out and buy a new computer or >>> will they simply rethink the decision to try Linux? >>> >>> Although careless hardware shopping should not be encouraged, >>> being able to get away with it (that is, having nearly ubiquitous >>> hardware support) should indeed be one of our goals. >>> >> >> >> OK, I understand that, but... how exactly is allowing one to 'get >> away' with such behaviour not 'encouraging' such behaviour? >> >> If one has always been able to 'get away' with any behaviour, why >> would one think that any other behaviour is possible? >> >> > In my town it is the custom to drive ten to fifteen miles per hour > over the speed limit. Almost everybody does it. You're much more > likely to see someone greatly exceeding the limit than you are to > find someone strictly obeying it. By allowing people to get away > with this scofflaw behavior, do you mean to imply that the police are > actively encouraging it some how? Do you honestly believe a single > one of those motorists doesn't know they are breaking the law? Or > that it is even possible to drive more slowly? So which is it? When > they put out limit signs and mentions of fines, but then don't pull > you over for every little violation, are they encouraging or > discouraging speeding? > > I think I see what you're driving at, though. What I hear you saying > is that whenever someone gets away with a thing, they will > invariably feel encouraged to do it again. I feel, however, that > this "encouragement" is distinctly different from encouragement with > the intent to encourage. The latter is the result of an action while > the former is the result of an inaction. Encouraging is not the same > as not discouraging. Some people are encouraged to speed by the lax > enforcement, while others are discouraged from speeding by the signs > and a desire to obey the law. Whether one is encouraged to be a > lawbreaker or not varies from one person to the next. There is > nothing invariable about it. > > But we're not really talking about cars here. We're talking about > buying hardware and the availability of drivers for a particular > operating system. Do you mean to imply that carefree hardware buying > is such an evil that we must ensure that the behavior never goes > unpunished? To me that would mean that hardware manufacturers would > have to be DIScouraged from releasing Linux drivers so that every > hardware purchase by the uninformed would be a total crap shoot. > Allowing people to get away with careless shopping is an unavoidable > consequence of having universal hardware support. If we labor to > obtain the latter, we will be enabling the former poor behavior by > default. But if Linux actually had 100% complete universal hardware > support, failing to look for an OS compatibility sticker would no > longer BE poor behavior. It would have become unnecessary entirely. > >> Ubiquitous hardware support, on the one hand, is closer than you >> think (there's not all that much hardware that cannot, no matter >> what you do, be made to work under Linux; it's just not that it all >> "JustWorks"), and on the other hand is less relevant than you >> think (I have drivers that enable my ATI card to 'work' under >> Linux, but they suck, so whose fault is that? Not Linux's. Nor is >> it Linux's fault if I plug in my digicam and it is mounted, but I >> don't know how to get the dv output into Kino, or can't figure out >> how to properly mount my perfectly-well-detected Flash card to get >> my pictures into whatever graphics display or editing program I >> might use). The hardware works fine. But that's no help if I can't >> understand how to use it, or can't use it effectively. >> >> > You're right. Hardware support has come a long way. Knoppix, for > instance, is awesome. More often than not, it really does "just > work." But I do not believe that having even basic hardware support > is as irrelevant as you seem to suggest. Are you not better off > having crappy support from ATI than you would be if you had none? > > But I'm not wishing for poorly written or incomplete drivers. When I > say that a piece of hardware has Linux support, I mean that it > "runs" not "crawls" (to quote Mr. Knecht, I believe). > > If your digicam is mounted but you cannot get the contents into Kino, > are you really getting support from the manufacturer? Shouldn't > support for Linux include instructions on how to get it to work with > Linux? If some insanely talented hacker/engineer reverse engineers > your camera's interface and adds it to the kernel, yet no Howto > exists to show you how to use it, do you really have "support?" I > was talking about driver support but I guess I really meant to be > talking about complete support: driver support, software support, > technical support, the whole package the Windows folks get. If we > had that from hardware manufacturers, Linux's growth would snowball. > >> And enabling some kind of efficient communication between the >> hardware that is being properly detected by the kernel, and the >> programs the user uses to utilize the device is a design issue, >> which is an administrative task. If Wine/Cedega will run Morrowind >> using my ATI card under certain configurations, but not others (or >> the 'default' config), then someone has to be responsible for >> setting that up so that the user (who is also me, of course) can >> just click an icon and run Morrowind. Hell, someone has to make >> sure that the ATI drivers are installed in the first place-- and >> supposedly the user is never supposed to know about any of this, >> and there should never be an admin, so who's supposed to do it >> then? The Tooth Fairy? >> >> > As I understand it, in the case of Cedega, the someones responsible > for setting things up for a particular game are the techs at > Transgaming. In Wine, that someone is you, though hopefully someone > else has posted how they did it so you won't have to reinvent the > wheel. But Windows gamers often have to deal with administrative > tasks too (and other Windows endusers do as well). It happens quite > often that a Windows game has to be patched in order to work on a > particular computer. The enduser may have to seek help from the > developers and follow their instructions. Does this make the enduser > the administrator? Or is the administrator the one that solved the > problem, made the patch, and wrote the instructions? > > I'm not saying "there should never be an admin" ever. But for > certain sorts of users, there need to be products that don't require > that an admin be present in order to keep things working properly > (enough). If a box is configured well and it can be made to be > static, does it really need an administrator? What if that box is a > refrigerator, a video game console, or even a non-networked PC? I > think that a Linux appliance like one of these can and should be able > to be used without the further help of an admin. > >> The fact that you may be able to "Plug and Play" does not remove >> the necessity that administration must occur: under Windows, a >> Wizard does it, in an enterprise situation, IT does it, under SuSE, >> maybe YaST does it, under Gentoo, you do it (or Mark does it for >> you :) ). >> >> But the fact that at some point somebody has to be responsible for >> administration is inescapable, and I feel that saying that's wrong >> somehow is... wrong. >> >> > "[S]omeone had to go to a lot of trouble to get it set up just right > in the first place, but once that was done it can perform reliably > without further administrative intervention," is what I said about > Knoppix. There was an admin, but there isn't one now. I don't know > what I said that led you to believe I thought something different. > > The more that is asked of a system, the more administering must be > done to it. A video game console with a Linux OS only has to do one > thing. As a result, it will require essentially no administrative > intervention. An enterprise web server has to do more things than I > can count. As a result, it has to be closely watched and fiddled > with to keep things running smoothly. Somewhere in between is the > Linspire desktop. If all it has to do is write documents, send > emails, and surf the web, then little more than security updates > would need to be performed (by cron, even) to keep it going. But if > you actually want to use your computer AS a computer instead of an > appliance, then a different distro would be a better choice and > somebody is going to need to administer things. > >> Because it's a limit of technology, and pretending that such limits >> don't exist (or worse yet, attempting to conceal such limits) >> seems very very unwise to me. >> >> > I agree that the limitations of a technology should be made aware to > its users and it should be done in such a way that they will > comprehend those limitations. But does that mean that trying to make > simple systems that don't require constant babysitting by flesh and > blood administrators is automatically a bad idea simply because it > shields the enduser from the underlying mechanics? > >>> I was not aware that any company was trying to encourage careless >>> hardware shopping. If knew it to be so, I'd be as unhappy about >>> it as you appear to be. >>> >> >> >> One word.... Winmodem (easiest possible example). >> >> All winmodems are (naturally) marked that they work under Windows. >> How many of them are marked that they *only* work under Windows, >> > All of them. The list of hardware and software requirements on each > package *only* indicates that it works under Windows. Granted, they > don't say "won't work with Linux," but they don't say "won't work > with a Cray," either. If you buy a piece of hardware and the > manufacturer didn't say it would work with your OS, and you can't get > it to work with your OS... then you're on your own. > >> because a Winmodem is an incomplete piece of hardware, where the >> functioning of certain physical chips (which are physically no >> longer present) are replaced by software functions available only >> in the Windows Operating System (because the Windows Operating >> System was specifically designed with closed-source APIs to replace >> the functions of specific chips formerly on the modem PCB)? >> >> How many 'real' hardware modems (which have all the chips, and do >> not replace any hardware functionality with OS-based functions) are >> distinguished on their packaging from WinModems, or vice versa? >> >> > None that I've seen, but that doesn't mean there aren't any. I'm not > sure, but I think a proper external modem can be made to work with > both PC's and Macs. If so, it might even say so on the box. I > believe I was able to tell that my last (last as in final) modem was > a proper one because the box said it worked in DOS too. > >> And do you think that the 1) creation of, and 2) lack of disclosure >> on the packaging of, such crippled hardware was somehow not >> 'encouraged' by the company whose product's market share benefits >> the most from the existance of such hardware (because the hardware >> seems to JustWork with their software)? The benefit to the >> hardware companies, of course, is that their product becomes >> cheaper to produce, since it requires less chips... and there's >> little chance that the old PCB with all the chips will need to make >> a reappearance, because the software being used to replace the >> hardware functioning is eternal (not least because of the >> manufacturer's new hardware design). >> >> > Do you really believe that some little Taiwanese company failing to > state "this product will not work without Windows," on a modem > package is evidence that Microsoft is up to no good? I'm not saying > Microsoft isn't. Of course they are. But I don't think they told > hardware manufacturers how to word the compatibility information on > each box in an effort to mislead those people who might want to > switch from Windows to Linux some day (and do it at 53Kbps to boot). > Even if Winmodems DID come with a warning about being unusable > without Windows, do you really think that would have affected sales > appreciably? And why aren't there Win-NICs, or Win-mice, or Win-hard > drives? Granted, they may come with the arrival of the Microsoft > brand of Digital Rights Management. That may even be the real reason > they're moving towards DRM at all. But I think the fact that the > RIAA and the MPAA have been screaming their heads off might have > something to do with it too. ;-) > > - Matt -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-06 15:31 ` Holly Bostick @ 2005-09-06 16:21 ` Mark Knecht 2005-09-06 18:20 ` Matt Randolph 1 sibling, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Mark Knecht @ 2005-09-06 16:21 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 9/6/05, Holly Bostick <motub@planet.nl> wrote: <SNIP> > The solution would seem to be to either not make the software available > until it has been sufficiently tested so that it does "JustWork" under > all possible > conditions (which the trained greed of users will not allow), or teach > the user > that sometimes they may have to do something a bit more complicated than > just click 'Send' (which means that the user cannot be a pure user anymore). > > I don't see any middle ground here, but maybe I'm missing something. > > Holly <SNIP> I don't think you're missing anything but I do think there are options. None of what I say below is necessarily for Gentoo folks to do. It's just comments, none of which are original: 1) Having this 'Just Work' is important for end users. End users aren't interested in what's under the hood. They just want to drive. 'Just Works' is the most important thing. Nothing else matters unless you're ready to make a commitment. 2) The 'trained greed' mode is really with, IMO, coming from CS and IT types and other such folks who like living in the 'Wild West'. At my advanced age I personally don't care much if things are really up to date or not, unless they don't 'Just Work'. Unfortunately for folks like me portage keeps me far more updated than I really think I need to be. All my desktop and laptop machines (5 PCs) are almost constantly doing compiles. On the other hand my 4 MythTV frontend machines haven't been touched in 1-2 months. Of course, at this point they 'Just Work', so why touch them? 3) Releases could be more layered, such that consumer ready apps that do 'Just Work' are what's available and the stuff I'm emerging this morning isn't made so easily available to non-CS/IT types like me. In my mind this would probably end up looking more like a 'desktop release' instead of just the difference between stable and ~x86/~amd64. Of course, that's pretty much Fedora/Suse, Debian, but I want Gentoo's stability and I want an environment where it's really easy to do the few things I do that require me to compile and administer code. (Ardour & Linux Sampler mostly, but a few other audio apps also.) 4) Some set of apps, like the web-based CUPS manager, could be set up, documented and maintained better for end-user types like me. These apps should be able to administer all aspect of networking, video setup, sound, etc., so that the end-user type doesn't need to know how to use an editor. no more nano, vi, etc., for end-user types. Over time they will learn it, but in the beginning they should be able to set up a machine without it. (Maybe these already exist. I've heard of Webmin but the one time I tried it I ended up with problems on my Redhat box so I stopped.) All in all it's a big job, and I think a huge portion of what Microsoft appears to offer people. It's sad that underneath their offering is so little stability, so many viruses and so little control, but folks jump in, get set up, spend their money and then find the way out of that mess is not easy. To you Holly, thanks for all your inputs and insights. you've got lots of good stuff to say. Cheers, Mark -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-06 15:31 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-06 16:21 ` Mark Knecht @ 2005-09-06 18:20 ` Matt Randolph 2005-09-06 18:36 ` Matt Randolph 1 sibling, 1 reply; 63+ messages in thread From: Matt Randolph @ 2005-09-06 18:20 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Holly Bostick wrote: >Matt Randolph schreef: > > >>But does the Knoppix user's system have an administrator NOW? I say >> it does not. It has been configured by an admin... heck, the OS was >> installed to it's filesystem by an admin... but there is no admin >>looking over the shoulder of the Knoppix user. >> >> > >Right.... so here's a real-world problem, from elsewhere on this list >("authorization failure when sending email") > > > >>Matthew Lee schreef: >> >> >>>I've tried every combination of kmail settings available, no joy. >>>I've reemerged all the software that --depclean removed, no joy. >>>I've reemerged kmail, no joy. I've reemerged ssmtp, no joy. >>>However, I think ssmtp, or something associated with it is the >>>problem. But what I haven't a clue. Is there another "simple" >>>mail transfer agent I could try. I don't need anything fancy it's >>> just a laptop connected to the lab DHCP server. >>> >>> >>> > >Since this issue seems to revolve around programs also available to >Knoppix (and likely also being used under Knoppix), it's probably a >valid example. > >So you've got a user who is unable to use a simple user function (send >email). In the proposed administratorless world, who is supposed to fix >this? The "invisible administrator" (who must exist, but is no longer >necessarily present). > > Mr. Lee's problem is not that he cannot send email. It is that he cannot send email by the method he has chosen to use because he hasn't the knowledge necessary to make that method work. I assume he could probably resort to webmail in a pinch. If his distribution had provided those packages together with a wizard to bring the task of configuring them properly to within his grasp, he would not be having this problem. Is the task of producing such a wizard the responsibility of the Gentoo team? It would be only if he had paid them to provide such. But Mr. Lee hasn't paid anyone to do this configuration for him. He has consented to serve the role of administrator for his laptop himself by choosing a non-commercial distribution without a tech support line. However, it sounds like he is administering his laptop in a reasonable fashion by first exhausting every idea he can come up with before turning to the community for help. One might say that the admin is the person (or persons) that through knowledge and experience enable a system to perform what is required of it. Building systems that do not require physical interaction with administrators on a regular basis does not make the admin go away per se. It merely moves the admin FURTHER away. It may mean that the developers have assumed some of the roles an admin would have performed. So if developers can produce software that actually is maintenance free (to the satisfaction of the enduser), what has happened to your administrator? Now it is the developer that has made the system work by virtue of their experience. If the authors of kmail and ssmtp can't or won't do that, there may be others who will. The paid people at Redhat and Linspire come to mind. >In the case of Knoppix, that's the Knoppix team or the Debian team, if >we're restricting ourselves purely to the packages involved. Is the user >supposed to download and install another "fixed" Knoppix disk in order >to be able to use KMail as they did last week? Or is the user to follow >the Debian protocol and not use the newer version of these programs >(meaning they wouldn't be available to Debian stable in the first place, >which of course, they probably aren't)? > >If everything is supposed to "JustWork" and does not, someone must be at >fault. Who? The user is experiencing some unidentified conflict between >programs that worked together well last week. Is there any way for those >who are 'to blame' (development, packaging, some admin along the line) >to work in such a way that these conflicts never ever filter down to the >user? I say no, because we persist in making the conflicting >applications known to the user before all such conflicts are >identified and eliminated-- partly because development requires that >these errors filter down to the user to be identified in the first >place, as developers cannot test under all possible conditions. > >Basically the limit of software technology is that we make it >immediately available to everyone as if it does not require >administration, but it is (almost) never so stable and intuitive that >this is in fact the case. > >The solution would seem to be to either not make the software available >until it has been sufficiently tested so that it does "JustWork" under >all possible >conditions (which the trained greed of users will not allow), or teach >the user >that sometimes they may have to do something a bit more complicated than >just click 'Send' (which means that the user cannot be a pure user anymore). > >I don't see any middle ground here, but maybe I'm missing something. > >Holly > > In the world of the cathedral, the middle ground is "both." Console video games cannot easily be patched after release, so the developers DO do extensive testing before the first product is shipped. Windows software users are required to configure their email clients in order to get their mail, but instructions are generally provided by their ISPs. In each case, those administrative tasks that can be performed remotely by experts are so performed. The enduser will always have to initially configure her email client to talk to her ISP just as the video gamer will always have to read the instructions to learn how to play a new game. [Though I think AOL users actually have all of the configuration done for them automatically. But then, AOL isn't strictly an ISP.] The bazaar has settled on a "both" approach too, though. Linux distros have testing branches and stable branches in their package management schemes. Those users that can best be described as "endusers" should be encouraged to stay within the stable branch, while those users that can be better described as "administrators" should be encouraged to experiment with the testing branches. Even software in the stable branch will need to be configured properly to work, so knowledgeable people create Howtos and wizards for the benefit of the less knowledgeable. In each case, the novice receives the benefits of the experience of experts without having to be or to employ one of those experts. If the free help isn't helpful enough, the enduser needs to either get some skills or buy some personalized advice. I think I've lost sight of just what it is we're discussing here. I'm not saying that there shouldn't be knowledgeable people serving administrative roles. I'm just saying that there is a place in the world for software that attempts to reduce or eliminate dependence on administrators. Will anyone ever be able to run an Enterprise email server without an admin? Undoubtedly not; someone needs to be on hand to ensure it keeps working and, if it stops working, to fix it RIGHT NOW. But should Linspire users be able to use email without having to know what a mail transfer agent is? I think so. I think we have a difference of opinion on just what is meant by the word "admin." You seem to suggest that an admin is anyone whose interaction with an email client extends beyond merely clicking "send." I wouldn't call a person an admin simply because they may have installed a piece of software. Windows users install software all the time yet they seldom perform any of the other functions of an admin (if I had a nickel for each time I had to remove spyware that endusers had installed on their computers...). I don't think a person is an admin until they have taken significant responsibility for the care and upkeep of a system. The majority of personal Mac and Windows systems don't have administrators by that definition. Yet some of those systems often actually do "JustWork." Linux is actually an ideal operating system for those rank novices that have shirked their responsibilities as the de facto admins of their own computers. Properly configured, Linux is able to be incredibly stable. If I built a file server for my LAN and gave it a private IP, I could disconnect the monitor and keyboard and expect it to "JustWork." If it was plugged into a UPS and I had configured it well, it might "JustWork" continuously for many years until the hardware finally failed. Similarly, I believe a multi-function PC built on Linux, that would perform for years without a hiccup, is not an impossible target. If etc-update could be counted on to always do the right thing, that PC could even be running Gentoo. It's all a question of how numerous and complicated the demands are that are placed on the system. If a Linux box only has to do four things (say, email, the web, word processing, and solitaire), it is less likely but not unimaginable that one could be made to run for years without needing to be touched by an admin. If machines like that were placed in the hands of significant numbers of those people with such simple needs, users of proper Linux systems would reap benefits as well. Hardware manufacturers would have an incentive to find ways to release more Linux drivers. Commercial software developers (like game companies) would take Linux more seriously as a development target. Teenagers would discover that there was more to Linux than Mom and Dad's Linspire system and decide to join the rest of the club. - Matt -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? 2005-09-06 18:20 ` Matt Randolph @ 2005-09-06 18:36 ` Matt Randolph 0 siblings, 0 replies; 63+ messages in thread From: Matt Randolph @ 2005-09-06 18:36 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Matt Randolph wrote: > Mr. Lee's problem is not that he cannot send email. It is that he > cannot send email by the method he has chosen to use because he hasn't > the knowledge necessary to make that method work. I assume he could > probably resort to webmail in a pinch. > If his distribution had provided those packages together with a wizard > to bring the task of configuring them properly to within his grasp, he > would not be having this problem. Is the task of producing such a > wizard the responsibility of the Gentoo team? It would be only if he > had paid them to provide such. > > But Mr. Lee hasn't paid anyone to do this configuration for him. He > has consented to serve the role of administrator for his laptop > himself by choosing a non-commercial distribution without a tech > support line. However, it sounds like he is administering his laptop > in a reasonable fashion by first exhausting every idea he can come up > with before turning to the community for help. Excuse me. I have just learned that Mr. Lee is actually Dr. Lee. My apologies. - Matt -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 63+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2005-09-12 3:59 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 63+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2005-08-31 22:28 [gentoo-user] Slightly OT: favorite window manager/desktop environ? Matt Garman 2005-08-31 22:50 ` John Jolet 2005-08-31 23:03 ` Christoph Eckert 2005-08-31 23:32 ` Neil Bothwick 2005-08-31 23:35 ` Steve B 2005-08-31 23:35 ` Steve B 2005-09-01 0:54 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-01 6:29 ` Nagatoro 2005-09-01 12:46 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-02 10:06 ` Nagatoro 2005-08-31 23:41 ` Fernando Canizo 2005-09-01 0:42 ` Bob Sanders 2005-09-01 2:40 ` Qiangning Hong 2005-09-02 1:04 ` Bob Sanders 2005-09-02 1:11 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-02 1:54 ` Greg Shikhman 2005-09-02 2:53 ` Mark Shields 2005-09-02 14:56 ` ellotheth rimmwen 2005-09-01 8:22 ` Philip Webb 2005-09-01 11:36 ` Martins Steinbergs 2005-09-01 13:02 ` krzaq 2005-09-01 13:02 ` krzaq 2005-09-02 12:59 ` danielhf 2005-09-02 12:59 ` danielhf 2005-09-02 13:15 ` [gentoo-user] " Thomas Kirchner 2005-09-04 17:13 ` Matt Garman 2005-09-04 17:53 ` Philip Webb 2005-09-02 21:57 ` [gentoo-user] " Matthias Bethke 2005-09-02 22:34 ` Wade Brown 2005-09-07 4:41 ` Martin S 2005-09-07 4:41 ` Martin S 2005-09-07 8:02 ` Neil Bothwick 2005-09-07 12:51 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-12 3:50 ` Martin S [not found] <200509010402.j8141G5V026647@robin.gentoo.org> 2005-09-01 15:31 ` [gentoo-user] " Charles Marcus 2005-09-03 22:39 ` waltdnes 2005-09-03 22:56 ` Mark Knecht 2005-09-04 1:53 ` John Jolet 2005-09-04 9:41 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-04 19:45 ` Uwe Thiem 2005-09-04 20:40 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-04 18:07 ` Neil Bothwick 2005-09-04 20:02 ` Mark Knecht 2005-09-04 20:57 ` Neil Bothwick 2005-09-04 21:11 ` Mark Knecht 2005-09-04 23:56 ` Neil Bothwick 2005-09-05 3:20 ` Bob Sanders 2005-09-05 3:46 ` Paul Hoy 2005-09-06 3:45 ` Bob Sanders 2005-09-05 7:37 ` Neil Bothwick 2005-09-05 13:10 ` John SJ Anderson 2005-09-07 1:08 ` waltdnes 2005-09-07 3:32 ` Mark Knecht 2005-09-07 4:01 ` John Jolet 2005-09-05 5:13 ` Matt Randolph 2005-09-05 11:04 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-05 14:39 ` Matt Randolph 2005-09-05 15:38 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-06 1:37 ` Matt Randolph 2005-09-06 15:31 ` Holly Bostick 2005-09-06 16:21 ` Mark Knecht 2005-09-06 18:20 ` Matt Randolph 2005-09-06 18:36 ` Matt Randolph
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox