On 8 May, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, on 05/08/98
>at 03:16 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
>
>>There is NO
>>WAY I could recommend someone install Red Hat 3.0.3 and then connect the
>>machine to the Internet! This does not mean that Red Hat 3.0.3 was buggy
>>- it's just
In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, on 05/08/98
at 03:16 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
>There is NO
>WAY I could recommend someone install Red Hat 3.0.3 and then connect the
>machine to the Internet! This does not mean that Red Hat 3.0.3 was buggy
>- it's just that the security holes that no-one knew about
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Thursday, May 07, 1998 1:55 PM
Subject: Re: Linux and Joe Sixpack
>interfaces do we need. fvwm isn't very pretty but do we really need to
>copy win95
On 7 May, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> The impression I get is that things having been moving too fast. We seem
> to be edging towards the situation commercial Unix was in, with 4 or 5
> slightly incompatible distributions and users who support their own brand
> of Linux to the exclusion of all ot
.place.
>
>My hypothesis is that if you start from a stable foundation and build toward
>Joe Sixpack, you're going to end up with a better platform than if you start
>with Joe Sixpack and build toward stability.
>
>The pro
Shawn McMahon said:
>Sure, Windows 95 sucks. But so does Linux. It just sucks in a different
>.place.
>
>My hypothesis is that if you start from a stable foundation and build toward
>Joe Sixpack, you're going to end up with a better platform than if you start
>with Joe Sixpack and build toward