Yes of course, it is only a fraction. If you would
calculate it in
Megabytes, I would say that all the tings you mentioned take up a order
of magnitude less space than let's say KDE alone. There is also many
more work in terms of man/year behind projects like Gnome, KDE, Mozilla,
etc. than behind the entire Gentoo project.
no core, no distro, right?
i didn't talk about gentoo, but distros in general.
I know that choosing a distro is important. I have
already written much
about the pros and crons of different distros in the last posts. I only
wanted to highlight that it is by far not the only thing to think about.
For example Pascal Steichen also proposed to cover then KDE / Gnome
issue.
of course it is not the only thing. did i ever say so?
i only wanted to point out that the choice of the WM or browser or mail rpog
or whatever, doesn't make up a distro and by far isn't the only thing what
makes one feel comfortable about a distro in the long term, or not.
the "lower layer" is at least just as important as the "higher
stuff".
imagine a car without an engine? what good would be for?
for many things, maybe, but not for driving, right?
mplayer and xine was just an example. A Windows LISP
programmer
migrating to Linux will far be more interested in choosing the right
LISP environment (GNU Lisp or another implementation) than the distro.
you compare apples to bananas :-P!
we talk about person X choosing what distro to use, not coda-B migrating from
evil to good ( :-) ).
Believe me. A mathemetician will be more likeley to be
interested by the
differences of Maple and Mathematica than the distro. Same with
databases: Migrating from AIX with Oracle to Linux with Oracle is far
easier then migrating from AIX with Oracle to AIX with DB2. Especially
if you have much PL/SQL code.
of course.
but that's not what we talk about, right?
of course it doesn't matter for someone who wants to test-crash a car, what
car he crashes (in the first term), at least as he crashes one.....but that's
not the point here.
You are right. I have no clue about Gentoo. I had
already decided to
give it a try two weeks ago, but found no time. I *will* give it a try
in a month when I will have much more time.
a good advice is to read the docs.
if you do so, you won't have any problems, and you will find it real easy.
there are docs for just about anything, and they are well made.
Your explanations are good. Gentoo seems to have far
less disadvantages
than I thought.
yep...
I should not have judge it.
idem
But I still have the opinion, that people who are
following this
mailinglist and who have a hard time to choose a distro should begin
with experimenting.
sure.
But no major distro is
really a bad choice!
i got a different opinion on this one.
but anyway, what do you call "a major distro" ?
those which rank first on distrowatch ?
i wouldn't recommend suse to anyone, i, hate suse.
sorry, i know there are quite some people here who would "die" for suse :-D.
i've been using suse since v5.1 - 7.3. and having experience with it through
8-9.
maybe if you're just switching.... but not on a longer term....
You can even take SuSE to build a firewall,
really?.... uhhhh..... hurts while only imagining....
I only
must spend a bit more time uninstalling unneeded things and to get the
permissions right.
aha....and break some deps etc...
You can harden all Linux distros, it is just easier
to do it with some distros.
and some you have to break to make them useful for a certain purpose..
You seem to have difficulties to understand that there
are people who
*care* about whats under the hood, but still have a hard time to choose.
Otherwise, it would be very simple for them, they would just choose the
distro with the prettiest logo and name!!!
you seem to like to misinterpret what i write ? :-)
i know that there are ppl who care!
else there was no such thing as a distro!
that they have a hard time to choose is what i understand as well.
i was at the point of doing it all by myself, and in the middle of that, found
gentoo.
gentoo was at that time in it's early pre-state, but still i immediately was
amazed by it and have been using it til now.
Yes, I always order the CDs. But this is only to
support the distro. I
have *no* contractual guarantee (like you).
but that was your argument against me right?
who cares if
you paid for something, when they give it up?
your arguments are pretty bad.
Maybe. It doesn't matter if you paid for it. You are right at this
point. But you still have no control over it.
no control over what?
if gentoo dies.... there will be forks.
gentoo is a community project, not a company project.
to keep gentoo alive is easier than to keep a distro like suse alive.
with gentoo there would be forks....with suse there would be migrations.
I still think that it is important to be not too
dependend of the
network connection. Maybe you move to a new appartment without
possibilities to have DSL or Cable.
you don't stop with your assumptions don't you?
what would you do if you had always been using gentoo?
well, you would by cd's, and you would do the same as YOU! do right now with
slack.
you put them in and update.
voila.
except that updating gentoo is far-different from updating regular distros,
and easier.
Maybe SCO manages to shutdown the
Gentoo and Slackware servers by court (and having special contracts with
RedHat).
i doubt so....but let's imagine it :-)
I have already seen this. There have been nice Aqua
like themes
on
www.themes.org. These have been removed overnight (because of Apple).
different story.
but still...there we see those great copyright and patent
laws...wooohoooo....get them to europe...wohooo
grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
You have explained that it
*is* possible with Gentoo to store the software archives locally. Good.
I am wrong in judging Gentoo.
yup you are.
so why continue above...
Nobody can take you away what you have stored locally.
i know people who can....
(nope, i don't mean burglars)
Imagine you have stored important files in a
specific format (be it xfig, abiword, ...). Imagine you reinstall your
system without this app, because you don't need it. After a year you
must access this files and find that this app has been shut down because
of software patents.
you would be illegal by installing the backed-up software, but let's go on
imagining :-)
People who have installed everything over the
network and who have no CDs of older versions then have a problem.
plz understand that gentoo is not what you think it is.
so just stop it.... PLZ.
But I explicitly told that people should try in a
former post.
i just wanted to reply to your (you know what) post.
not to the whole thread.
Yes its my opinion. Without apps, the distro is
worthless.
but those apps include the core apps.
no core apps, no distro.
but not the point here.
Never forget
that the Linux kernel has been written to run bash, gcc, uemacs, etc and
later X Window. Without all these apps, the kernel would not have been
created and there would be no distros.
in fact as you like to go into such details, it hasn't.
gcc was there b4 linux.
apps were there b4 linux.
linux was written to have a free alternative kernel (to put it simple...and no
i don't want to start a disc. about this :-), google for details, the
internet is full of it.)
--
regards,
Georges Toth