On Monday 14 October 2002 12:33 am, David Pastern wrote: [big snip] dave, i'll give you a couple of points due to the fact that the subject header says linux, and not debian. but then, given that it's a debian list, i have to take back, at least, one of them. in fact, given that you'd have a hard time imposing on this list for any other kind of help than with debian, maybe i should take back the other, as well. i'm not arguing against tools, but against tools that never really met the goals they once aspired to achieve. as martin intimated, once aptitude takes precedence, we can easily and happily dispense with the rest. in fact, i find aptitude, even in its present form, to be a far more useful tool than either dselect or tasksel, not that any of them come near the efficiency of apt and dpkg.
as far as accommodating those who want a nice easy operating system is concerned, debian ain't it to begin with. i'm damn near willing to bet that of all the users on this list, less than one percent started with and stayed with debian as their sole experience of linux. it's not a beginners distro. on top of that, don't even try to exhort the developers on the basis of accommodating the average user. not only will their likely response make you hop from your seat way down there in the antipodes, but most other users will be totally on their side. don't ever forget, we get the best operating system that ever existed, along with the best support that ever existed for absolutely nothing, or, failing nothing, then for, at most, $5 or $10 for the install cd's. while i'd much rather live in a world where more people used debian than windows, that's not the world we're living in, right now. to my mind, a lot of the reason for that has to do with users being trapped into the m$ quagmire, lured by the frontend that says press enter or click ok and go and have a coffee. that kind of crap encourages willing ignorance, and i really hate that; and not just about computers. when i was much younger, i lived in australia, in a suburb of brisbane. i worked in a gas station on the main highway between brisbane and the gold coast. one day, a woman drove this car in to buy gas (petrol), and before i even got to the car, i could smell metal heated near to the point of fusing. she asked me to fill it up, and, before i set about that, i told her that the motor seemed hot. she said, well, put some water in the radiator. as i did that, i checked the dipstick and there wasn't a trace of oil on it. when i told her she needed oil, she angrily responded that all she wanted was petrol. i shrugged, gave her the gas, and let her go on her way. two hours later, a tow truck hauled her and her sad little car back into the gas station driveway. the motor had totally siezed and she was in tears. all of that happened because she had allowed herself to believe that all she had to do was buy gas in order to keep the car going. nobody else had ever told her anything else. that's just a little example of why i think holding the user's hand and letting them believe that they don't need to get acquainted with whatever kind of machine they're running is an insulting notion, however popular. at a certain point, it's not even about the user, any longer; it's about the conscience of those who know better. while dselect and tasksel may serve the ends of inexperienced users, it's nonetheless true that they still suck. i see no harm in their abandonment, since those who survive their absence are that much less likely to show up on the list asking the kind of questions that almost inevitably elicit responses in the fashion of rtfb. as i mentioned before, debian really isn't designed with a mind to being a linux starter kit, whatever about linux from scratch. by the time anyone gets here with a view to succeeding, they tend to know what they're up against. personally, i think apt and dpkg are all anyone should need, particularly for any of those who've busted their balls dealing with yast and rpm and, especially, that weird-ass halfway to nowhere installation aid offered by mandrake. you've said that you're relatively new to linux, so i give you back those two points for being gutsy enough to persevere with debian in the early days of your experience, but i'm pretty sure that, one of these days, perhaps in a year, you'll be feeling pretty much the same about those tools as they are now. even given martin's observation that tasksel serves the ends of those requiring a quickly installed bootstrap system, i'm also pretty damn sure that it doesn't take much time for the administrators of those systems to wean themselves of that dependency. just a rant. don't be offended. ben -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]