On 18 May 2006, Adam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Thu, 18 May 2006 09:24:58 +0300 Liviu Daia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>
> >     I never said I have a problem running a stripped down system.
> > What I do have a (conceptual) problem with is making a bunch of
> > console applications dependent on 30 MB of code that never gets run,
> > for no good reason.
>
> But see, most people don't care about 29MB of hard drive space being
> used.

    Do you have statistical figures to back up this statement?

> If you do, then you need to be smart enough to only install the 1MB
> you actually need.  You already had to install freetype for gd 1.x,
> the only difference now is that freetype is in a tarball with some
> other X related stuff, instead of on its own.  Delete the other stuff
> if you don't like it.

    Sure, I can also compile and install gd 1.8, mrtg, rrdtools, and
whatever else I need from sources (which is probably what I'll end up
doing anyway).  However, that's not what the ports are all about, is it?

> > > Truecolor images.  Support for gifs.  Anti-aliased fonts.
> >
> >     Are these relevant to my question?  If you still don't get it,
> > what I'm asking is: what are the disadvantages of keeping both 2.0.x
> > and 1.8.x?
>
> Yes, they are.

    You are (probably intentionally) confusing features with utility.

> That is why gd was updated, which is what you asked.

    Like I said: what I'm asking is, what are the disadvantages of
keeping both 2.0.x and 1.8.x?

> The old version is not kept because its a waste of time and effort.

    Right, that's my answer.

> Why aren't the old, obsolete versions of every piece of software in
> ports still?

    Because most other pieces of software can be upgraded without also
installing 30 MB of other software that never gets run?

    Regards,

    Liviu Daia

-- 
Dr. Liviu Daia                                  http://www.imar.ro/~daia

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