On Thu, Mar 30, 2000 at 11:21:32AM -0800, Erik Ryberg wrote: --------------------- snip ----------------
> > My only point in all this (I think I'm the one who started it) was to respond > to the > word "sadly" in the above phrase, "sadly . . . people are coming to Linux > with zero > understanding of command line . . ." (I realize I've altered that quote a > little > bit.) People can't help it. Most people in the real world do not use Unix > at work > and virtually nobody has it at home. They do now :-) > Linux is their first introduction to this way of > doing things, and it's a pretty steep curve when you are trying to work it > out at home > after work. 'Steep curve' is an understatement - 'bewildering' is more like it. > I know because I am one of those people - reasonably fearless and > proficient with computers, but I've never even touched a machine with Unix > installed > on it. (of course I have mucked around in DOS) I don't think it is sad that > people > are coming to Linux with no Unix experience. I think it's great. That > doesn't mean I > think anything should change about Debian to accomodate them, it just means > we should > be careful to be welcoming and not elitist, because even if it makes you feel > cool, > elitism never helps in the long run. That's all. Well said. > I meant to nudge gently the > language used, not urge any wholesale OS changes. Have you ever seen the book "The Unix Programming Environment" by Brian Kernighan and Rob Pike ? It's one of those rare books which says little and teaches you a lot. That book gets my vote as a model for welcoming tone and clear presentation (it can also teach you a lot about Linux). I only mention it because I haven't seen one like it for Linux. Although, IMHO, "A Practical Guide to Linux" by Mark Sobell comes close. Regards, Robert Mognet > > Erik Ryberg > > > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null > >