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Mandrake 7.2 in Wal-Mart: A Good Idea? 241

You've got to give Linux-Mandrake publisher Mandrakesoft credit; their distribution deal with MacMillan Software is spreading their latest release to places Linux has never gone before, including Wal-Mart and other major retail chain stores.

The word we got last week from Bill Gardner, MacMillan's product manager for Mandrake titles, was that the boxed Mandrake 7.2 "desktop" version wasn't supposed to show up on store shelves until around November 10, but it's already out there. I've spotted copies in my local Wal-Mart, and others have emailed me to say they've seen Mandrake's new "Penguin and Star" logo on software boxes in other Wal-Marts around the U.S.

Another thing on those boxes is this quote:

"Linux users have dozens of choices; after testing the most popular ones, Mandrake... seems best for a first timer."

--Robin Miller, The Washington Post, June 2000

Hey! That's me!

Back in June, of course, I was talking about Mandrake 7.1, and the version I was using was the "deluxe" package that came complete with virtually every free -- as in either speech or beer -- piece of software you could possibly want to run in Linux. I installed 7.1 glitch-free on a number of desktops and laptops, set up my printing, my networking and my dialup connections with no problem, and away I went, doing anything and everything I -- or almost any home or small office computer user -- could possibly want to do in the course of the average workday. I didn't need all the packages that came with the big 7.1, not by a long shot. But it was nice to know they were there if I did need them, and when code-developing friends stopped by I had their favorite compilers and other tools handy on my machines for them to use, which is nothing more than straight-up, down-home hospitality in the social circles in which I seem to move these days.

"Complete" 7.2 comes with none of these tools. In fact, it is so stripped and bare that it offers little more functionality than Windows. Perhaps that is the point: to be as Windows-like as possible; to offer nothing more than a low-cost desktop operating system alternative for Wal-Mart shoppers who might otherwise buy Windows ME. If so, this distro is a qualified success; a new user can probably get it installed and running without a whole lot more work than it takes to do a Windows install or upgrade, and with about the same (zero) amount of command line use.

This is good.

What is not so good is that the GUI installer seems less than totally stable. Three LUG-buddies and I have now installed retail 7.2 Mandrake on a total of four desktops and three laptops, at least three times on each computer, and our results have been inconsistent -- and generally unrepeatable, in that niggling problems we had with one install didn't crop up in the next one, even on the same machine. We also found that some of the things new users might think the installer will let them do -- like back up a step or two in the installation process -- are bad ideas. Indeed, one thing we learned early in our testing was that if we had any problem at all with an installation attempt, it was best to give up, shut down, and start over from scratch.

Our attempts to update previous Mandrake installations using the "upgrade" option presented in a handy dialog box were total failures. Perhaps this feature looked good in Mandrake's labs and caused no problems for MacMillan's quality assurance people, but we couldn't get it to work reliably.

The funny thing is, the downloadable version of Mandrake 7.2 that has been available since last weekend gave us no major problems with either raw installs or upgrades, and as long as we stuck to clicking "okay" on the defaults, the installation process was just as simple as with the retail version -- and we got a lot more usefulness for our efforts. Like Pine, and through Pine, Pico, the simplest and most basic text editor around for fast script or shell modification. Yes, I know the average Wal-Mart Linux buyer probably won't do a whole lot of CLI work, if any, but the second that theoretical person calls for help from a Linux-knowing friend or neighbor, he's going to hear, "Where's Pico? Or Emacs?" (At least vi is there, which is going to warm some hearts even while it leaves others a bit cold.)

When compared with Windows for stability and overall utility, there is no question that the retail "desktop" version of Mandrake 7.2 is a winner; it comes with and automatically installs StarOffice and other packages that will make Windows users feel right at home, including a whole stack of cool little games. But not all of these packages install on their own if you select the "normal" install. For some reason, the only way to get most of the included packages onto your hard drive during the installation is to use the "custom" option instead of the "complete" option, which doesn't seem to make much sense. (The official Mandrake justification for this is that Mandrake adjusts to available hard drive space and root partition size, but I found the same glitch even on a 30 GB hard drive with a 4 GB / partition, which ought to be more than enough space for every piece of user-level Linux software you could ever want to own.)

The only important thing (for an ordinary user) the boxed set included that we didn't find in the downloadable version was StarOffice -- because it isn't GPL-licensed, as is every single package included in the download. I had a copy around (on my 7.1 CD set), and almost every LUG probably has StarOffice CDs hidden away somewhere. If not, it can be downloaded from many mirror sites, and say what you will about StarOffoce, it is one of the easiest pieces of Linux software to install that has ever been released, so the fact that it isn't included in the Mandrake download is not a major inconvenience.

But one thing the boxed set did lack was KDE 2.0; the version it came with, no matter what the manual said, was one of the last prerelease betas, not the real thing. I don't know if this made much difference; I detected no flaws that affected my work in any way, but it still left a bit of a bad taste in my mouth.

There are a number of other silly little problems in both boxed and downloadable 7.2. One is with DrakSync, a GUI wrapper for rsync that allows point-and-click updating of files or directories between two computers, in my case the desktop I use at home and the laptop I carry when traveling. I could not get DrakSync to work. Steve Killen, one of the freshmeat appindex maintainers, couldn't get it to work. All-around Linux stud Nick Kosten couldn't get it to work. Mandrake developer Chmouel Boudjnah got it working after several tries, and claimed that he did nothing that we couldn't have done on our own. Perhaps this is true; with better onscreen instructions and a useful help file or man page, neither of which was provided, we probably would have had no problems.

Personally, I believe that including broken, incomplete or badly documented software in a commercial distro is wrong, even if you are rushing to meet a contract shipping deadline set by a retail giant like Wal-Mart. Like a Web site with broken links, it makes you wonder about the reliability of the rest of what you get. A contributed package that doesn't work quite right might be marginally acceptable, but a utility that has the company's name on it, and supposedly has the company's reputation behind it? It should work without problems, especially if it is a GUI utility aimed at simpleminded point/click users (like me).

CUPS, the Common Unix Printing System, was perhaps the greatest frustration. The only reason it works on my network at all is because Mandrake developer Chmouel Boudjnah sat here, in my home, and messed with it for several hours. And he had to call headquarters to get help. Without this level of support (which is only available to people who are quoted on the product box), I doubt that a typical user-level person would be able to configure CUPS across a network that runs on a server that also functions as a 'net gateway, which is a common home or small office network configuration. This may not be a big deal for a Wal-Mart shopper who only has one computer, but more and more of my neighbors have multiple computers in their households -- and this is in a blue-collar trailer park, not an upscale housing development, where multicomputer households are probably even more common than they are in my humble neighborhood.

The largest benefits Mandrake 7.2 offers over 7.1 at this point are KDE2 and the lovely KOffice. It also has more security options -- probably the widest range available to point and click Linux users -- a bunch of cool new games, and default 3-D acceleration support, something Chmouel says is currently offered by no other commercial Linux distribution.

If you are using a standalone computer (or don't need network printing), and you are eager to play with these new features -- and to get one of the prettiest bootup sequences you ever saw -- you may want to install 7.2 in its present state.

Otherwise, you'd be better off waiting until a more mature version is available for download. And if you prefer to get your software on CDs in factory-packed boxes, you will want to wait -- not long, Chmouel says -- until an updated version of the current 7.2 or the about-to-be-released "Power Pack Deluxe" set, hopefully with most of the current bugs and documentation problems repaired, is available either in stores or directly from Mandrake or MacMillan.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Mandrake 7.2 in Wal-Mart: A Good Idea?

Comments Filter:
  • Maybe by next year i can pick up the newest copy of debian when i go to get groceries. Free redhat cd's with a $20 fillup at the local shell station!
  • with a cool desktop :-) I think it's a really good choice for newbies.
  • by TheKodiak ( 79167 )
    Heh. I never thought I'd see the phrase "at least vi is there."
  • I think this is a great idea, where else can you target an audiance that has pretty much no exposure to linux. The end users are hearing more and more about Linux in the mainstream media. Especially in light of the microsoft trial. The more linux is in the limelight, even for the most basic of users, the more it will start to catch on.
  • There are 24/7 Wal-marts in my area! That means I can get a Linux CD at 4:00 AM. WOO HOO, oh how I've waited for this moment.

    Now if it were just Debian.

  • Just one more reason for me to love wally world...
  • by minus23 ( 250338 ) on Thursday November 02, 2000 @01:33PM (#654367)
    I have tried 3 different disto's and still can't configure linux to work with my internet connection over the past 6 months.. nor can I figure out how to install much more than a simple KDE theme.

    While any windows app will have install instructions equaling 2 sentances... (if any are given at all).. the standard Linux app install instructions usually go... "click here" ... "here" then is a *full* page saying you must make sure you update 3 other parts of your OS. -- Usually somewhere in the install instructions it says something like "I had a problem and did this to fix it..." Honestly after the first paragraph of install instruction I am intimidated.

    Add to this that the whole linux comunity doesn't seem to concerned about the desktop market anymore.. seems most people don't want to answer "newbie" questions anymore because they answered em already n to the 10th times. Now I hear... "Screw the desktop market." ... Makes for getting new reqruits kinda hard.

    I'd love for linux to be *my* OS... so far I feel linux doesnt want it to be that way tho. -- I'm sticking to Win2k here. (Sadly.. KDE and GNOME really rock... Litestep can only emulate so much :)

    None of this was meant to be a flame btw.. (seriously)

    easier,

    minus

  • by Lostman ( 172654 ) on Thursday November 02, 2000 @01:33PM (#654368)
    Now, I dont know about the Walmart's that everyone ELSE has been to, but every one around where I live has a few different linux distro's. I remember seeing both Redhat and Corel linux distro's there...
  • according to the cooker list the walmart version was snapped on 20001011 and the downloadable version was snapped on 20001027
  • by Skruffy ( 170067 ) on Thursday November 02, 2000 @01:36PM (#654370) Journal
    I hate to say this, but your average Wal-mart shopper is going to be in for an unpleasant surprise if they try to install this on their system. You can say what you like about the Linux revolution, but your average Joe Punter really hasn't got a clue... This isn't pessimism, this is my experience. Even if they do buy it (because of some weird media hype they've read), it just isn't going to do what they think it does... If you can't install Microsoft Wank v8.4.4 they'll think they've been ripped off.

    I've had a long day. I'm sorry.

  • I don't know aout elsewhere, but I know that Target in Stuart, FL has been carrying a copy of Corel Linux for several months now... which of course was to my surprise. Anybody spot copies of anyhtign else anywhere else?
  • We've had RedHat and Mandrake on the shelves of our local Wal-mart for a LONG time (in upwards of six months to a year.)

    Is that really that odd?
    -C
  • by bconway ( 63464 ) on Thursday November 02, 2000 @01:39PM (#654373) Homepage
    As discussed recently on Mandrake Forum [mandrakeforum.com], this isn't actually the final release of Mandrake 7.2. Walmart required any products to be stocked for the Christmas season to be released at a certain time, and the final 7.2 release would not have made that, so instead they used the final Release Candidate of 7.2. It futures all the functionality of the final release, with only a few bug fixes implemented since then. I'm not sure it was the optimal choice, but if money's concerned, they really had to go with it.
  • why wouldn't it be? RedHat is in "major" chains around the US. Why would it be bad to have another major distro that is apparently even easier to install/use too? This is coming from a Linux user's prospective :)

    Now, from an IRC helper prospective...
    Not a good thing. We already have enough idiots coming in there babbling about their "PCI modem that works fine in Windows" not working in Linux, or the fact that they can't do this or that. This isn't like Windows! Yeah no shit...

    I am glad to see things making a move towards more public acceptance I just hope that people realize that it is NOT windows, it will NEVER be Windows, and most of us don't want it to be...

    at some point in time people will have an understanding of Linux as they do of Windows (except the fact that it is MUCH less expensive :)) But until that point in time we are going to have to deal as a community w/newbies (we were all newbies once), I just wish their questions weren't as weird as they are becomming :)

    Just my worthless .02
  • by Ken Broadfoot ( 3675 ) on Thursday November 02, 2000 @01:40PM (#654375) Homepage Journal

    I can now get a shotgun, barbeque, some coveralls, and a copy of Mandrake all in the same store!

  • The average Wal*Mart shopper isn't going to have too much luck with some of the stuff he can buy in the sporting goods, automotive, gardening or sewing department, either. It's odd that operating systems should be viewed differently, but you're right - they are.

    "Hmm. An overlock sewing machine. I've heard good things about these - I should probably get one."
  • Actually my local Wal-Mart has been selling Linux distros for a while now. They've had several boxes of RedHat 6.1 sitting right on the shelf in the computer aisle.

    It might be important to note that they haven't been sold and they've been there for at least six months.

    Will the typical Wal-Mart shopper - myself excluded - actually give a darn about Linux being on the shelf?

  • This is a little interesting...about a month ago I saw a Madrake boxed set at Wal-Mart along with books and stuff for around 30.00. I considered buying it till I realized I could go home and download it for free...or I could download redhat...and then I went and pretended I was twelve to get free popcorn and forgot about the whole ordeal. I love those smiley face stickers.

  • Thing is, is this really news? I've seen copies of various flavours of Linux at Best Buy, Electronics Boutique, and I think I saw a copy at Sears. (I was kinda scared to take a second look.)

    Wal-Mart is one of the bigger chains of stores. Why is it so newsworthy that they choose to carry a product that has a 5+% OS market share?

    Or maybe I'm just looking at this wrong... You can already get damn near everything else at Wal-Mart. Why not OSes? (Windows only sorta counts in my book.)

    When they start selling cars, let me know... I'll pick one up when they're on special...

    Kierthos
  • by Beowulf_Boy ( 239340 ) on Thursday November 02, 2000 @01:43PM (#654380)
    I know atleast 3 people who have bought linux at OfficeMax-BestBuy-CompUSA with no clue what it is, just a look at the pictures on the back and they thought it was a Text-editor or something.
    2 wanted refunds after they called me asking what it was (do you know how hard it is to actually explain to a newbie what an os is?
    "It is an perating system, you use it instead of Winblows"
    "heehee, your making fun of microsoft aren;t you"
    "Yes"
    "so its kind of like Mac OS"
    "Yeah, exactly"
    "So it runs on a Mac"
    "No"
    "But windows runs on a pc"
    "So does Linux"
    "Yeah right, seriously, what is Linux"
    "Its an OS, you use it in place of windows"
    "Yeah right, you can't take windows of a computer"
    -continue for 10 minutes

    The other guy left his CD in, and forgot about it when it didn't work. The next day I got a call when he turned on his computer and got the Set-up screen.

    Seriously, its kinda cool their selling Linux at Wal-mart, but how many people that shop their will actually be able to figure out what its for?
  • Does this mean that dear hunter will be ported to linux? oh yeah thats what we really want :(

    Ode to the SSB (Sadistic Sardonic Bastard)
  • Yeah, I've seen Red Hat at my Walmart as well. I thought it was great -- Not that I would buy it from Walmart, but that more people could become familiar w/ the the term "Linux." All it takes is for some curious shopper to see it, and there may be a new linux user in the world.
  • True, true

    I fear for the Walmart Customer Service Dept. All day they get calls about the sell-by date on fish fingers and then people start calling asking why the product they bought last week seems not to have sendmail in runlevel 5.

    Who buys an OS on a supermarket trip?

  • I've seen Red Hat, Mandrake, Corel, and a while ago one of the Debian box sets at Sam's Club. Don't go to Walmart alot but same parent company.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Confuscius say "Who walk through airport doors sideways going to Bangkok"
  • I dunno... it's not THAT big a deal... I don't think I've ever even looked for software at wal-mart... if I'm gonna go get software I'll go to a software store or get it online... and how well is it really going to sell? not that well in my opinion. No offense to wal-mart shoppers ( hey I shop there too) but Wal-mart would be about the last place I would expect somebody to shop for linux... most people hear of linux online or from a friend I would assume and can get it online or from a friend. I dunno... just my 2 cents...
  • ...then you can't be saying where it should and where it shouldn't be distributed.

    At least at Walmart you know you'll get it for free for less than any other major retailer ;-)
  • At least since mid-1999, for about $10 with no manuals.
    --------
  • You've got to give Linux-Mandrake publisher Mandrakesoft credit; their distribution deal with MacMillan Software is spreading their latest release to places Linux has never gone before, including Wal-Mart and other major retail chain stores.
    I bought my first copy of Mandrake (6.0) at Wally World over a year ago. What am I missing here?

  • Honestly after the first paragraph of install instruction I am intimidated.
    Add to this that the whole linux comunity doesn't seem to concerned about the desktop market anymore.

    Hmm, I think that "Linux community" is getting harder to define as we pass 15 million (estimated) users.
    As to your "newbie" problems, you should try the friendly faces of your local Linux Users Group [linux.com]. If you get someone to help you with an initial install of Debian [debian.org] GNU/Linux, you will find installing and updating software on it a breeze.
    - Derwen

  • Is it just me or are we seeing more and more unstable default installs of linux Redhat 7.0 had all that trouble with gcc then i seem to remember something about a couple of debian releases that were unstable and now this mandrake problem? why are the developers rushing to get these releases out the door? do they not care about stability anymore? well at least we still have lfs [linuxfromscratch.org]
  • I just installed 7.1 (not 7.2) and it's got a lot of rough edges. Harddrake segaulted in some CD-ROM detect routine (I installed off CD), Sounddrake failed to detect my sound system, or correctly configure it when I specified everything (sndconfig worked though). The KDE/GNOME menu update/sync stuff fails miserably (best to disable it). The emacs provided has been patched to hardcode Alt=Meta (I downloaded a normal version)...and plenty of other minor inconveniences that would probably be a huge pain for someone new to Linux. It may be a pretty nice distro, but IMO not yet ready for Windows weenies...
  • No, the bad thing is that ma' and pa' will buy that "lunix[1] thingie" and pop-it into their win9x without even reading the text on the package (manuals, what are those ?) and waiting for an autostart window to pop up and mindlessly clicking next next next until they will wipe all their windows partitions, will install all the mandrake and the result will be an "broken windows" which does not show the nice logo at startup and asks them about some "sername" and "passwor" and the start button looks funny but all their icons and games and documents are gone from the screen and they can't find from where to "start the internet"

    This "lunix thingie" is a virus or something - will they conclude as the pc is send back to the vendor because "windows don't work"

    [1]lunix really exists and it's a micro-unix-like OS for commodore 64 & 128.

    --
  • Micorsoft Wank v8.4.4??

    Since when has microsoft used decimals in their version numbering let alone coherent numbering at all. The deepest numbers I remember were 3.11 and 6.22, but those were many years ago. Lately it's just 95, 98, 2000, etc.
  • ... The KDE v2 is definitely not 'stable', and they went and changed RedHat's switchdesk mechanism without warning. I think most of the problems I've had are with the KDE subsystem. I've converted to XFce and have been pretty happy, though there are issues there too (placement of icons on and in panels is broken as compared to CDE, which did it right).

    Also, I was doing a clobber-upgrade (keep my home, /vol partitions unformatted but clobber the rest and start from scratch on /usr, /var, /, etc..) and ran into lots of little things, like the installer was broken because it failed to format my format-target-designate /usr before allowing me to select other packages and thus limited me to the free space available for all new packages..

    I would most definitely not call this a wal-mart-ready distro, unless you go with XFce or one of the more stable desktops. At least they didn't go with an unsupported compiler.. And inetd comes disabled by default, which is IMHO a feature..
    Your Working Boy,
  • "Dear Hunter" is that some kind of dating game? Bass fishing games are what you really need to own the desktop market.
  • [Best southern accent imitation]

    Get your email about weekly NRA meetings faster, and more efficent with Linux, vaule priced at wal-mart!!

    ACT NOW and get 5 pounds of beef, absolutely free!

    "Ma ma, I want Lanix!"
    "Shut up Jed."
  • It frustrates most at first... you just have to know where to find answers.

    A good first source is the Linux Documentation Project:
    www.linuxdoc.org [linuxdoc.org]
    This site has lots of good info... check out the HOWTO's in particular.

    For more esoteric questions, I like to search Usenet postings. A good Usenet search can be found at Deja.com (for now, at least):
    www.deja.com/usenet [deja.com]

    While these still require reading more than 2 sentences, if you want to get Linux running, and have some time to spend, these will answer 90% of your questions. Posting to Usenet will often clear up the rest.

    Everyone Linux user was once a newbie. When I was starting out, these sites were invaluable for me. I hope they can help you too.
  • Well, I dunno. It looks very good on paper: the hardware detection and Drak(whatever) are very reassuring to the suit: it makes it seem like there're enough drivers so that driver incompatibilities won't be a problem (e.g. "I have a Sound Blaster compatible card - why doesn't this Sound Blaster driver work with my Crystal Sound C4181?")...

    But I dunno... somehow I'm of two minds with this - on one hand, Linux'll end up in Podunk, Arkansas. But on the other hand, the numbers of frustration calls on it being released into the general public too soon might undermine its growth.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday November 02, 2000 @01:54PM (#654401)
    and that, my friend is one of the reasons why most sensible home users wouldn't touch linux with a 10 foot pole. You & I may be able to sit here smugly telling anyone with trouble to RTFM because we have our PPP connections up and running, but what about the poor sod who just bought his first PC/first modem and just wants to get connected? Why the hell should someone who just wants to browse files have to search through linux man pages when page 3 of the modem instruction booklet explains how to get setup in 5 minutes under windows. Why on earth would anyone choose to wade through man pages, howtos & config files when they can just put the free CD into their machine and type their name? It is this elitest, superior, smug and downright unpleasant attitude that is keeping a lot of people on windows.
  • 7.2 is pretty much unusable for me at this point. I get this message when trying to run KDE2, or any of the Mandrake utilities (MandrakeUpdate, DrakeFont, etc.):

    DYNAMIC LINKER ld.so: dynamic-link.h: 57: elf_get_dynamic_info: Assertion `! "bad dynamic tag"' failed!

    If anybody has any comments, ideas, or whatnot, I'd like to hear it. I've submitted it to bugtraq. Hopefully they'll be able to get it resolved because 7.2 looks nifty.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    confusius also says "man who stands on toilet, high on pot"
  • by Lord Ender ( 156273 ) on Thursday November 02, 2000 @01:55PM (#654404) Homepage
    I have seen RedHat 6.2 at Wal-Mart. That was quite a while ago. This guy must never go to the software section of Wal-Mart if he thinks Linux being there is something new.

    Geeze.
  • You laugh, but on my last trip to the supermarket I bought floppy disks, and could have picked up an Epson printer and a UPS if I had wanted to.

    Give it a year. Linux will be there on the shelf.
  • I fail to see why being able to buy Linux distributions at retail chain stores should be innovative. In Germany where I live one could buy the DLD [www.dld.de] distribution [now acquired by Red Hat, so the URL doesn't really make sense] in markets like Real [www.real.de] or Novo (no link for them, sorry) as early as three years ago, and SuSE is spreading virtually anywhere at the moment.

    BTW regarding the "deluxe" package that came complete with virtually every free -- as in either speech or beer -- piece of software: I think that free-as-in-beer software includes free-as-in-speech software, since free-as-in-speech software comes to you at no price, hence it's free-as-in-beer as well and it's superfluous to mention the two together. Any comments?

  • It also has more security options -- probably the widest range available to point and click Linux users -- a bunch of cool new games, and default 3-D acceleration support, something Chmouel says is currently offered by no other commercial Linux distribution.

    Well, the caveat is that it is not XFree4 acceleration thru DRI. Which, if they're gonna throw in a beta KDE, then why not a beta X system for good measure? Along with a beta kernel to get it working...
    Your Working Boy,
  • by BluedemonX ( 198949 ) on Thursday November 02, 2000 @01:59PM (#654408)
    ...are massive install parties (tailgate parties?) at each WalMart!

    Tell people to bring their PCs on down, and if they're having problems with their Mandrake and/or RedHats they're installing, just bring their PC with em to the parking lot!

    YES it would have to be with a purchase from Wal-Mart - we'd be trying to help them, not compete with them... and it might put some cash back into the pockets of Mandrake, RedHat, etc... because in all fairness, they DO contribute to Linux development...
  • I found it kinda cartoonish but then again it's been a long time since I've used it. It's an os not a cartoon leave it basic and let the user customize it I dont like that distro's put their little graphics all over the console and desktop. Not that it's impossible to remove that stuff but it's an attempt to brand the product. It's OK guys all you need to do is put your little graphic on the box it comes in and the docs you provide it wouldnt feel half as newbish if it wasnt plastered with cartoon looking "enhancements" anyhow just my opinion.

  • I've a friend working for a Linux company that's preparing a distro based on Debian. Many of you might know of it, Progeny Linux [progenylinux.com]. My friend tells me this will be a full GUI distro, with GNOME interfaces for practically everything (installer included). It's gotten my attention.

    ps. For the record, I run WinNT/Win9x dual booting. So far, I've no need to switch operating systems.

  • Forgot this little tidbit too:

    "Want to email your cousin and your mom BOTH at the same time? You can do it Linux! Who cares if they're both the same person, hell email her twice!"

    hehe
  • by Enahs ( 1606 )
    It's news that Red Hat and Linux-Mandrake are on Wal-Mart's shelves, but, hahahehehehohohohahaha, MacOS is not. =)
  • I know that most of us dont have to deal with this, but for a lot of people wal-mart IS the computer and software store. There is NO Compusa or Bestbuy right down the street. The closest one of those are 50+ miles away.

    While it probably is true that in most places, it will probably sit on the shelf, or ignorant people will buy it thinking that its a wordprocessor, Alot of us dont have the option to download it, nor do they partically want to order it.

    I grew up in a small town, so I know. most places in america wal-mart IS the department store.

    BTW, Wal-mart been selling Redhat since 5.0, and Mandrake since 6.1. That is, at least the 24-hour supercenters.
  • Really! If you can, find help for that install. Most people understand that it's not easy to install for the first time, because they did it. Talk to someone in your local Linux Users Group (LUG). Drag your box and an extra hard disk to an install fest. If you seek, you will find.

    Don't think this is a linux problem and don't give up. Windows only seems easy because it is familiar. I know that I needed help figuring all of the usefull things like shortcuts for Windows, which were not documented with all of the manuals that came with my first GUI box. Linux documentation, by compairison rocks. Get help with your install, learn "man command" buy a book and enjoy. Once you get over the hump, you'll find that many things are much easier to do and you will wonder how you ever got along with Windows.

    If you really can't find any help, try the red hat 6.0 that came with Linux Unleashed. It works, unlike the 6.1 and 6.2 installs that I've tried and it's not that hard. Your miliage may vary I got CDs from LinuxCentral.com as soon as I read about the releases on Slashdot, so 6.2 might work great now. If you can install a windows box, you can make this one work. As a bonus, you get a helpfull book that works anywhere there is enough light to read. As pointed out above, Mandrake 7.1 works well too and it is easier, but I can not vouch personally for the documentation. It looked OK.

  • Nope..using a cable modem with a Linksys nic.

    ISP is @home.

    Have tried Redhad 6-something, Madrake 6-something and the initial Corel releases of Linux.

    easier,

    minus
  • Windows seems easy because:

    1.) Microsoft has cut deals with hardware manufacturers to keep APIs secret
    2.) In most cases, it's pre-installed
  • Does this mean that dear hunter will be ported to linux? oh yeah thats what we really want :(

    I happen to like Deer Hunter! And, yes, I actually make patches for the kernel every so often. Not everyone who likes to hunt is a person of low intelligence. Hey, after all, at least I'm not killing real animals if I'm playing Deer Hunter on the computer :-)

  • I've just installed 7.2 and it still has lots of rough edges too. The installer is by far the best I've seen so far, the the software it installs is buggy. I have reported a list of ~10 bugs to the mailing list after the 3rd beta and I've found that very few of them were fixed.

    What's probably pissing me off the most is that KLyX, the document processing I use all the time is simply umusable (impossible to open a document!). Now, if they had at least tested it, they would have noticed. Maybe it isn't their job to fix it, but please, don't include a program in a completly useless state.

    ...which brinds... testing. I've found that the main weakness of Linux is slowly changing. When I first started using it (in, 1995, with a 1.2.3 kernel), the main problem with things not working was missing features (including unsupported hardware). Now that everything has evolved a lot, the problem is with the testing/QA. The released product has all the features, but is full of bugs, which are even more annoying than missing features. This is especially bad for Mandrake 7.1 and 7.2 and that's why, after trying them both, I'm still back with 7.0.
  • When is this news? I bought Mandrake 7.0 at WalMart in Canada this spring.
  • A while ago, I was trying to go over to the newsgroups semi-weekly and answer 5 or so questions. Sure... most of them had been asked before, and a quick check of dejanews might find the answers... but I thought I'd be friendly, and try to help the obvious newbies.

    You know, it's kinda fun. Sometimes you get an idiot who doesn't know which way to insert a floppy, and you can just ignore them. :) But for the most part, people are really appreciative.

    You gurus want to give it a shot, and gain some penguin-karma.

    On the other hand, places like Helix Code are making installs (or at least upgrades) awfully easy...

    ---

  • You know, I certainly don't want to stereotype your average WalMart shopper...but come on. I used to work at an Office Depot near a WalMart and lemme tell you, the people who would shuffle out of the WalMart and mosey on into our store were not the sharpest knives in the drawer.

    Almost all of them thought AOL

    • was
    the internet. The handfull that didn't were those who'd never logged on at all, and thus had yet to form the impression that AOL == Internet. For christsakes, the crap that my poolskimmer collects had a higher IQ than the average WalMart shopper.

    Does Mandrake honestly think that someone in Tater Tot, New Mexico is going to wander into a WalMart, see the Linux distro and purchase it? Heh. All I can say is that I'm thankful I'm not working in Mandrake's technical support department.

    Maybe Mandrake can also start giving out their CDs at pro wrestling events and monster truck rallies, too!

  • Reminds me of my favorite WalMart commercial:

    "Everything I own, excpet my wife and my cow, I got at wal mart."

    For those for those of you that don't live nera farms, you are really missing out...
  • Hmmm, Walmart selling Mandrake Linux . . . I like this! My least favorite Linux distro sold by my least favorite retailer. They deserve each other. Bah! run Debian like you ought to!
  • Are you using a static IP or DHCP? If your useing DHCP you *must* have it send the host name CB###### to get auth for an IP.

    Life is a disease, sexually transmitted and fatal.
  • I don't know whether to count this as a good thing or a bad :P
    Mandrake showing up in Walmart, I have some stories about Walmart..

    I was in a Walmart one day browsing the computer games and over heard an old lady talking to one of the sales people.. Basically she wanted to return her Caller-id box, because it didn't work..
    When she was asked about service tho, she said that she didn't need to subscribe to anything because her answering machine didn't need any service to work!

    lets see, I was in the same one at another time and overheard some little (8-10yo) kids talking (loudly) about how they would never play anything like quake because they didn't want to shoot people, they'd rather play deer hunter..
    I really wanted to comment on how honorable it is to shoot something that's defenseless vs something that's not...

    And then...
    The day after Thanksgiving last year, when there were all kinds of sells, 24 hour sells and stuff like that.. Me and a friend got up really early to goto a local city (well, 20 min away) to goto the sales, and as it would happen we went to Walmart.
    On our way into town It started to rain, and was still sprinkling when we pulled into a parking space..
    As we were walking up to the store we saw a married couple cart out two of the generic ass computers that Walmart sells, in the rain..
    We made fun of them and they heard us and said "Oh, I'm sure that there's plenty of padding, they won't get wet"
    And then the loaded them into the back of their pickup truck... (It didn't have a shell on it..)

    These three examples are why I think Mandrake might not do too well in Walmart..
    I can only imagine one possible dialog:
    "I want to return this stupid piece of $#%#)"
    "What is wrong with it sir?"
    "I can't get Microsoft Word running on it! This dumb OS sucks"
    "oh, ah, Mandrake can't run Microsoft products.. It runs something called Linux"
    "Well, just gimme my $#%# refund"
    "sorry sir, can't do that"
    "why?"
    "We're afraid you took it home and copied the cd.."

    Actually, I was musing the prospects of selling distro cd's on Ebay at work the other day (I work at a cd replication place)..
    My mostly dumb coworker, who just gotten a computer, called me a pirate for thinking about that...
    He's obviously already attuned to Microsofts software policies.
    (Note: He didn't know what a 486 is.. and he's 26)

    Then again, Walmart is usually in places where they can't get a (semi) decent store..
    -since when did 'MTV' stand for Real World Television instead of MUSIC television?
  • Mandrake is not the first distro Walmart has carried. Redhat has been available for quite some time at my local Walmart.
  • Did you upgrade from some earlier version of Linux? Perhaps you're somehow using an earlier version of the dynamic linker rather than the one that came with 7.2?
  • DHCP ... the link I just followed stated that most have trbl getting Redhad 6.1 to work with this card... This might be my trouble too.
  • by roystgnr ( 4015 ) <roy@stogn[ ].org ['ers' in gap]> on Thursday November 02, 2000 @02:17PM (#654431) Homepage
    They have a distribution which is not Mandrake 7.2 (check the Mandrake mailing lists for details, but I believe it's a prerelease), and they are representing it as if it was Mandrake 7.2.

    I doubt that the particular marketdroid who made this decision thought of it in these terms, but "misrepresentation" and "fraud" are the first things that come to my mind. People's first experience with Linux should not be with a beta release masquerading as a fully tested distribution.
  • Yes, but the point is that configuring this information in Windows is much simpler. Go to Control Panels, Networking, and there it all is.

    How do you do this in Linux (rhetorical, I know how to do it, I use Linux every day)? Either you muck around with command line tools and obscure config files (each with their own crazy syntax), or use a tool like linuxconf, the UI of which was clearly programmer designed (efficient, if you know what you want to do in the first place...near impossible to use if you're not familiar with the innards of what its doing for you behind the scenes in the first place).

  • I picked up a copy of Mandrake at Sam's Club, the "big brother" of Walmart, probably a year and a half ago.

    And I've seen various Linux distributions on the shelves of both Walmart and Target on those occasions I have visited to buy cheap camera film.

  • What a stupid, stupid move.

    From most accounts of people that have touched this thing -- even those with previous Linux experience -- this release contains pretty serious bugs that aren't all that hard to trip over.

    Do we really want the people who might pick this up at Walmart to have their first experience with Linux be a buggy, unlabeled prerelease?

    I understand it might be better for Mandrake in the short term, but in the long term its decisions like this that kill companies' reputations..and in this case, it hurts the reputation of Linux in general.

  • by Tassach ( 137772 ) on Thursday November 02, 2000 @03:12PM (#654452)
    This is why we need the major PC vendors (IE the brands sold at wal-mart & circuit city) to start selling machines with Linux pre-installed. The totally clueless newbie of whom you speak would be just as lost doing a bare-metal install of Windows or Linux. I'd wager that over half the PC's out there still have the OS that they came with. Mandrake, once it's installed, is at least as easy to set up as a windows box.

    There are plenty of people who can't handle setting up a modem or a printer in Windows, as anyone who's worked Tech Support can testify. The need to RTFM is the same regardless of your operating system choice. And, regardless of the operating system, people are going to persist in the notion that they can operate a computer WITHOUT having to RTFM. Hell, many people are too lazy to RTFM for their VCR and still have the flashing 12:00 three years after they bought it. There's nothing arrogant or elitist about it -- computers are complicated machines. If you don't know what you are doing, you're going to screw somthing up.

  • I have read some posts saying that this is a "good thing" for Linux to be this much in the limelite, so mabey people might see it on the shelf at Wal-Mart and give it a try. I agree, to an extent. Rob mentions that he had some setup problems, and not only that, but inconsistant ones.

    Here lies the problem: if 7.2 has an unstable install utility, it may scare people away from Linux for a long, long time. Difficult is a little different, as most will come to the conclusion that it is just to advanced for them, and mabey inspire them to learn, or at least try again when they may become a little more computer knowledgable. But if it has errors, a newbie will look at that as "poor" software, buy ME, and be on their way. This is not good for the Linux community, especially if some boneheaded reporter should happen upon Linux at their local Wal-Mart, and have a nightmarish time installing it.

    So, yes, I think that exposure is good for Linux, but perhaps we should really wait for it to be ready for mainstream before it is made mainstream.

    What needs to be done is make the non-geek community understand what Linux is and why it is better than MS. I know a fair amount of people that have no idea what OS even means, and think that America Online IS the internet, and find it amazing that I can connect to the internet without such revolutionary programs. These will be tough people to convert. It is important to get the message out about Linux, but I'm not too sure we should push too many people to try it. The public and the media can both be very unforgiving when something doesn't work right the first time. Especially if they change their Windows partition to a Linux partition and loose everything on their computer. Linux, undoubtedly, will take the fall for that manuver.

    *note: This is NOT an anti-Mandrake post. Mandrake Linux is a fine Linux distro, especially for newbies. This is only meant to raise the question: "Is Linux ready for this yet?"*

  • This guy must never go to the software section of Wal-Mart if he thinks Linux being there is something new.

    Some people say, "You must not get out much" as a way of saying that somebody isn't "cool." Some people say, "Oh, you haven't been to yet?" to imply that you aren't cool.

    But you know you're a real geek when you say, "This guy must never go to the software section of Wal-Mart..."

    :)
  • This is a true story..

    Girl called Helpdesk with a computer having trouble... would not boot right. Asked if she installed any new software. She said yes, got a new word processor from Wal-Mart. She said she didn't know what to get so she asked counter guy... He gave her software to get. Helpdesk guy asked what the software was.... she said it was something called Redhat.

    She managed to install RH over her Windows install, of course did not back up. Then asked if she had restore disks... didn't know. Tech asked where she got computer... she replied Helig-Meyers (a furniture store, here in the South).

    No I'm not kidding...
  • by Corgha ( 60478 ) on Thursday November 02, 2000 @04:15PM (#654468)
    I suppose it depends on your perspective. For a typical home single-user environment, I suppose Star Office's Previous/Next/Finish wizard installation routine might seem comfortingly Windows-ish.

    From a system administrator's point of view, however, StarOffice has the most bone-headedly stupid install that I have ever seen. This evening, already tired, grumpy, and low on caffeine, I installed Star Office 5.2 on a machine running Solaris 7 (or whatever it is in Sun's current numbering scheme). Let me elaborate (and sorry about the length, but I'm still grumpy and ranty):

    print <<"EndOfRant";

    My first complaint is the stupid java-based and pointlessly-GUIed installation program. If I were to install this on our lab full of workstations, I would have to spend an entire day walking from workstation to workstation clicking "Next." (Maybe we're going to have to write an X version of Expect.) You call that easy to install? I call running a script to ssh into each workstation and run "make install" while I read Slashdot easy to install. This is just a waste of my time. Anyway, I digress.

    The second thing that I noticed about the installation was that it defaults to being installed in a user's home directory. What? That's just insane! In order to get it to install itself in some reasonable place, the directions seem to indicate that I have to run "./setup /net" (which I suppose has something to do with an expectation that you will be using a shared network filesystem among single-user workstations), except that it's not "/net", it's "-net" (Apparently StarOffice was developed under DOS). That is if you can find the setup program, because it's not where the documentation says it is either (looks like they added multiple language support at the last minute -- it wasn't that hard to figure out, just sort of JV).

    The third crazy thing is that the default "-net" install directory is "/office52". What a great idea! I'm just going to stop installing things in "/usr" and "/usr/local", and I'll put them all in one big "/" partition. Anyway, I changed the directory to "/usr/local/staroffice-5.2" because I like descriptive names and don't feel the need to limit myself to 8 characters (there's that DOS thing again).

    At this point it gets a little blurry. I think I remember waiting for some little blue bar to move to the right while some sort of slide show went on. I think the slides were trying to sell me on this something called "StarOffice". It looked pretty neat, and I thought about getting it, but then I realized I was already installing it! What is that all about? Sigh.

    After the little "complete" dialog came up, I thought I was done. "Not so," said StarOffice. Turns out that each of our 20,000 users was going to have to run a setup script for him- or herself that will install over 2.5 MB of files into some user-defined directory. What? I was in shock. Programs that blindly create little ".program" files and directories all over the place are annoying enough, but even Netscape is smart enough to make ".netscape" all by itself (unless you wrap it in a script that makes the directory and preferences files for Netscape).

    This presents new problems:

    First, I am obviously going to have to write some sort of wrapper that makes sure setup is run before Star Office is run. Since the destination directory is user-defined, I would have to create some separate tracking mechanism ("touch $HOME/.so52-setup-done" or some crap like that).

    Second, the per-user install starts with a scary warning that the machine needs to be patched, as well as other messages which are obviously intended for the system administrator. (Yes, the box is already patched.) I can hear the phone ringing already.

    Third, 2.5 MB? Many of our users are already bumping up against their quotas. Another 2.5 MB might just push them and their 99MB inboxes over the edge, and then they'd have to learn how to press "d" in pine or to use gzip, which would surely break their minds. :)

    What right does StarOffice have to take up 2.5MB with user config files, anyway? (And what else is it putting there besides config files?) I can understand the directory growing after use, but 2.5MB right off the bat seems a little weird.

    Fourth, in the process of playing with and configuring StarOffice my test account, I repeatedly came across messages that
    "/usr/local/staroffice-5.2/foo/bar" is not writable. Well of course it isn't! Isn't that what the stuff in the home directory is for? I guess not. Odd. (Clearly this is more hold-over from StarOffice's single-user roots.)

    EndOfRant

    What makes this all so crazy is that this software is (well is now, anyway) from a division of Sun "The Network is the Computer", Inc. and was being installed on a machine and operating system designed and built by Sun, Inc. Why, then, is this software so poorly adapted to a multi-user/shared/distributed environment? It's just weird.

    Anyway, it's not that big of a deal. I just wanted to point out that one person's "easy graphical wizard" is another person's "child of satan that makes me take my hands away from the keyboard to use a rodent."

    Whew. That's a long post. Tomorrow morning I'm going to write some little perl-based installation routine to bypass all of the GUI crap for each user. (I'll be nice and pop up the license, but the rest can be skipped.) By then, I will have probably discovered some "--skip-java-gui" and "--dont-hog-my-home-directory" flags for the install, but for now the "GUI rage" is still fresh on my CLI fingertips.

    Corgha
  • does this mean they'll have to release a "clean" version with fsck censored out?
  • No, they just sell well below the local guys' outrageous markup for the same products. Unless it was for something needed immediately or just a handfull of items, my parents rarely shopped the stores in the small town near our farm. It was cheaper to buy the merchandise at the malls & big supermarkets in the cities 40 to 100 miles away than it was to drive 3 miles into town and buy it there. In the cases where Wal-Mart moves into a town that may be a little too small for one of their stores, the only local merchants that will survive are the ones that are the ones that adapt and offer products & services that Wal-Mart doesn't. In the larger areas, Wal-Mart will usually make the other chain stores get their act together and start having decent prices & service.

  • In other news today, Wal-Mart just introduced its own in-house brand of wine. Customers, however, were confused; they didn't know whether to serve the red or the white with Kraft Dinner.
  • While the time pressure to get stock to Walmart by Nov.1 (NO exceptions) was unfortunate, once installed, the MandrakeUpdate tool will bring the release up to 7.2 final status. The version in stores was a "release candidate" during beta, and was indeed released. I say this to inform, not to apologize for Mandrake, BTW.
  • I've been a linux user for about a year now, so I think even though I don't classify myself as an expert, I can safely say I have much more experience than someone who is picking up a box for the first time from wal mart.

    I tried to install Mandrake 7.2 (downloaded version) And ran into a couple serious problems.

    First, it wouldn't allow me to run X on my V3. Basically horking it up badly. No amount of tweaking and configuration seemed to fix the setup it tried to install. So, no X.

    Even more critical, The installer threw a boot loader on there which wouldn't allow me to get into windows. Just hanging when I tried to select windows instead of linux.

    Bad news.

    So, now I have no linux on this machine. Maybe I just happen to have a configuration the installer didn't plan on seeing, or it was a fluke of some type, but at least in my case, mandrake was a bad experience and I won't be trying again anytime soon.

    My point is, that if someone's first experience with Linux was the same as my first experience with mandrake 7.2, it would be their last experience with linux, and they'd tell their friends how much linux sucks, and would probably not be likely to venture out of the windows camp again for many years.

    ________

  • by jilles ( 20976 ) on Thursday November 02, 2000 @10:26PM (#654532) Homepage
    Hi,

    When mandrake 7.2 was released, I thought. Hell why not! I had a 1.7 GB partition left on my windows 2000 machine which seemed perfect for trying out mandrake. My experience with this distribution up to then had been very good. Mandrake 7.1 is probably one of the best distributions around in terms of usability, configurability and compatibility. However, 7.2 should in my opinion not have been released. What a piece of shit!

    Things that gave me trouble:
    - choosing expert mode disables a lot of stuff (e.g. DrakConf). This is hard to fix afterwards, unless you know the names of the packages you need to install manually.
    - I was presented with the choice of xfree 3.3.6 (3d accelerated), 4.01 (no 3d) or just 3.3.6 without acceleration (i have a matrox g200). I chose 4.01. The install finished, I rebooted and X did not launch. It was complaining about missing libraries. Again, this is probably easy to fix if you know all the packages you are supposed to install.
    - The default install requires over 2.5 Gb (talk about bloat). I really hate the package selection in Mandrake, unless you know what each package does, you are left with no choice other than to slide the bar to get a lower percentage of packages. This needs much improvement. What the hell am I going to do wth these isdn tools for instance? Or how about ppp connection tools, palmpilot synchronization tools, cdrecording tools. I don't have isdn or even a modem. I use a LAN connection. I don't have a cdrecorder. Finding all these packages manually is difficult, especially if you are uncertain about what each package does. Why not group them under 'modem tools' and 'cd recording tools'. The same goes for development tools. The only reason I install them is because I want to be able to compile and install stuff. I have no need for fortran or other obscure languages that are rarely used anymore.
    - The installation 'died' a few times (I was using the ftp install). It then displays a message the installation died and that's it! Tip, if this happens to you press cancel a few times (worked for me, I think there was a problem with the connection).
    - I installed the grub boot loader once (was selected by default). Since my partition is at the end of my harddrive, it had some trouble recognizing it. Unfortunately the install does not detect this problem and you are faced with an unbootable system afterwards! I fixed it by booting from a disk, and installing lilo (which had no trouble with my partition). Note this also happened to me with red hat 7!

    I had other minor complaints about mandrake. However, I'll save those for a later day. My point is that this is not release quality software. This software was rushed out without proper testing. Considering Mandrake explicitly targets newby linux users, there's just too much things that can go wrong. I was able to fix some obvious problems, but then I'm not a newby linux user. If I was not, I would probably have given up.

    If MS releases a piece of shit like this everybody complains. So, I don't see why I should shut up now. Mandrake 7.2 is not release quality. The best they can do at Mandrake now is mark it as beta and continue testing and fixing for a few more months. There's really a few nice, innovative things in this distribution. But things like an installation should be more robust. The expert mode should tell me what is going on and not just silently disable essential packages.
  • This really was a good example of what the guy was complaining about to start with. The "If you can't do it, you're an idiot," attitude.

    Lord knows I've been guilty of it myself on occasion, but it doesn't help and it really isn't fair. I mean, I've been messing around with one type of computer or another for knocking on twenty years now, so, yeah, it pretty much all seems easy to me.

    But not everyone can say that. Remember that things that seem obvious to those of us who've been using computers forever aren't necessarily as obvious to beginners. The really odd part is the fact that the problems beginners have are never the ones you'd think they'd have...

    So be patient with the beginners. If they still don't get it after a few months, then you call them an idiot!

  • Try to find RPM packages of your programs. Their install instructions are _allways_ "do rpm -i packagename.rpm". This is as simple as it can be. If you need to upgrade other packages (highly unlikely), you will be told so in a standard-manner. If you are using Mandrake, you can use urpmi instaed of rpm -i, and it will automatically install what packages are needed from the dist to satisfy the dependencies of your package.

    And if you can not find RPMs, most packages use autoconf, which means that you probably can do "./configure; make; make install" (as root, of course) to install them. This holds true for _a_lot_ of packages. But still RPMs are better, since if they depend on any other program or lib to allready be installed, they will tell you so in a standardised an d nice way, not just resist to work.

    Most windows apps ask you one million of questions from a graphical installer. In addition, you can not do any other work at the same time you are installing an app, and usually have to reboot to be able to use the new app.

    These graphical installations are made by someone. The producer of the software. The same can be said about RPMs. And RPM packaged programs are easier to install, since they will _never_ ask you any questions. My point? Linux is not user-unfriendly. but you are trying to install programs as a developer does. This is clearly not suited for you (since you are not a developer). RPM (Or deb if you are using debian) is suited for you.

    Ok, enought ranting thusfar.

    Here are some questions on the article:

    Could you (the author of the article) please contact me regarding DrakSync on redhog@mandrakesoft.com and explain exactly _how_ it went wrong?

    Regards,
    Egil
  • by deno ( 814 ) on Friday November 03, 2000 @12:48AM (#654543) Homepage
    First, I work for Mandrakesoft, so I'm both biased and know a bit more about what is going on at Mandrake.

    Biased part is: LM version you can buy at WM today is good, in fact it is much better than many other Linux distros out there. Even Roblimo had to admitt that "he had no problems with KDE2".

    informative part is: Primary reason why we continued the developement even after shipping the ISO-s for CD-s was the feeling that people will bitch about KDE2-beta, even if there were absolutely no difference between the version we ship and the "final" KDE2.

    The "RC1" was idea of our marketing: They were afraid that sales of 7.1 version would be gone as soon as we announce that 7.2 is finished, so we called it Release-candidate. Then, when we rolled out what is called "download edition" today (and which should have been called 7.2.1, I suppose), they got all scared that folks will think that we shipped a beta.

    While Marketing drones are marketing drones (and I can tell you one: OUR marketing folks are actaully wery reasonable, and really try hard to somehow put together wishes of users and developers on one and re-salers on other side.), what I don't understand is apparent easines with which Slashdot readers start bashing a Linux distro whenever given a chance to do so.

    OK, let me be completely open: For the first time EVER, one Linux distribution puts updated product for download, even before the distro hits the shops. Is there something really badly wrong with the version you can buy in the shop? NO. Beta-testing period for 7.2 has been extremely long, and while 16 more days helped us clean some more bugs, the product you ca n buy in Wal-Mart today is NOT a "beta" or pre-release quality.

    FYI, I'm running that version right now, Roblimo has run it succesfully, and although one would not say it from multitude of "beautifful" responses one can read here, most of the people whop tried the distro are very happy with it.

    So, one would expect to see a crowd of happy slashdoters celebrating the fact that there actually exists a company which is not afraid of putting a newer version on the net than on CD-s, but instead all I see is "they are trying to frame us", and "LM sux" all over the /. (Thx, I guess you have just ruined everything i tried to build during last months. I guess, marketing was right: doing ir SuSe-way is much better idea than doing the distro in open way, as we do. As soon as you try to open-up, tell the truth, and count on human inteligence to understand that you REALLY do all you can, all you get is lot of bashing. )

    I have been a passionate /. reader for long time, and I must say I am really surprised: what happened with bunch of friendly nerds that once lived here? All gone to greaner pastures, or what?

  • Sorry to nitpick, but...

    "so its kind of like Mac OS"
    "Yeah, exactly"
    "So it runs on a Mac"
    "No"

    Er, actually it *does* run on Macs, along with Alpha, Sparc, MIPS, StrongARM...

    Linux != Intel-Linux.

    typed on an Apple Firewire-PowerBook G3 500 MHz running LinuxPPC 2000

    Ethelred

  • I know this might be off topic, but I have to agree with you on the Helixcode GNOME. It's dead easy. My mom could get Helixcode GNOME running on a linux machine. Now, when is Helixcode going to do a distro (I know, noone has announced plans, but MAN if upgrading a Linux distro could be as easy as the helixcode stuff.... :)) I know Debian has apt (and I am going to be running debian soon) which is close, but the whole Helixcode process rocks!

  • First off, I'd just like to say that LM7.0 is by far the best piece of software I've ever owned, and as a result of my satisfaction I bought 7.1. I did a clean install and just set it off installing in automatic mode. It created one large root directory, not several partitions and didn't install any of the development stuff, even though I'd selected development as the type of system. Then I lost my temper and re-installed in expert mode. Although I couldn't just go down the pub and forget about it, the OS I have now is virtually perfect, the only black mark being that a lot of GTK-based apps will cause a hard X crash which requires switching the machine off, but this isn't Mandrake's fault, as I upgraded to the latest Helix Gnome and the problem is still there.
    All I can say is that LM7.1 is excellent for me, but I think my dad might have been on the phone to me several times a day with his problems.
  • #linuxhelp on EFNet is usually very helpful if you're patient. It's currently 0wned by kiddies though... try #linuxhelp2

    "Free your mind and your ass will follow"

  • Ok, now THAT's cool that somebody's wasting their moderator points on a reply two deep on a, what, 12 hour old article that barely got any replies.

    Here's a hint, moderators, since you're obviously still reading this - modding down a reply to a 0 score post only makes sense if you really think the reply will get modded down to 0. More to the point, in this case, what I was responding to was obviously more worthy of being modded down, which would have gotten my comment knocked out, too.

    But, oh, wait - that wouldn't have hurt someone's karma. So whoever modded this down did it because they don't like ME, and wanted to punish me for writing this reply that four people were going to see, and no one was going to care about.

    I'm starting to see why so many people claim the moderation system is broken.

    Although I'm guessing that the real truth is, I got modded down by the same bloody moron who posted "EMACS BITCH!!!" as AC.
  • linux is, IMHO. this particular distro was not. Perhaps the next one though.. but who in their right mind markets a beta as a fully tested OS?

    //rdj
  • Every popular bookstore in my town, including Borders, Barnes & Noble, and a large local store, have copies of SUSE, Mandrake, Caldera, and several versions of RedHat. There's also a huge section of Linux books, from programming to installation to using The Gimp. I'm talking at least ten shelves of distributions and books in Borders, plus a separate display of distributions.

    Folks, this is mainstream. If you're worried about the impression that poor installation will give, then you should have been worried about the general mass retail acceptance of Linux that's been going on for several years now. Many of the people I've heard talking about a RedHat box in Borders don't seem like they could install Linux without any help.

    Maybe the real question is that why Slashdotters insist that Linux is still an underground movement. It's like someone thinking that The Simpsons is underground--and many people honestly think this. If you can run into a bookstore and buy 50 books on Linux, then it's not esoteric or underground. It makes perfect sense for Wal-Mart to pick up on Linux, because they're into selling what's popular.

    (As a footnote, I still think that most of the copies of Linux sold in mass market outlets are for tinkering or seeing what all the fuss is about. I bought a copy of RedHat through CheapBytes a few years ago for the same reason. I had used UNIX for years prior to that, but never installed Linux. My Linux partition has languished, partially because I tired of being in constant upgrade mode.)
  • Good luck, I had pretty much the same experience as you, no real problems with mandrake 7.1. However, conisdering the problems I ran into when installing mandrake, I must warn you to be carefull with your data. Whatever you do, keep that bootdisk lying around to fix problems.
  • Yes, they've had Linux on the shelves for some time- problem is that they've been pushing the previous version of the distributions they were selling (incl. Mandrake) since they started. To beat everyone else with the latest version of any distribution is something of a coup for Linux and a change of pace for Wal-Mart.
  • Walked in, needing to buy some spray paint for a house project I was going to do. Spotted the box and snagged it.

  • Everyone had to start somewhere. If a friend didn't give me a copy of SuSE Linux 5.3 over a year and a half ago (who was given to him by a person at a booth at comdex vegas previous) I would still be ignorant to Linux.

    I have since fallen in love with the box and have spent every day since using it. I have found ways to replace the tasks that I was used to doing w/Windows and slowly .. one pain at a time learn to due things like recompile the kernel, compile software. Track down and un-install a RPM that is conflicting w/another. Configure packet masquerading, basic networking.. insert a WinModem module into the kernel.. etc etc.

    I am not a Linux 'guru' or 'expert', but I find it a bit childish and just plain arrogant that you believe that the average user doesnt have the curiousity or the plain determination to figure something out. Yes, there are a lot of people out there that don't have the time, energy.. or even care about technology or open source software.. or what it stands for.. but how many people out there are a hell of a lot better than any of us are waiting for the chance. I will bet that there are 12-13'year olds that will get their parents to take a chance and purchase linux .. maybe just because they heard from a friend that it's cool.. and will spend un-counted hours (because at 12-13 you have a LOT more free time than an adult...) and master the system.

    Mandrake is nice.. I have been using it since 6.1 ... there is probably no better community to jump into the learn the foundation of the system and start to move up with.

    Unfortunately it's this 'holyer than thou' attitude that scares off new members of the community that we need.

    Sorry if this sounded harsh, no ill intended, but I guess I can relate with the person standing at wallmart trying to figure out if linux is worth investing in or not. I was there not to long ago.

    .02


    --------------------
  • Well, I don't think it's just about the recruits nor about the publicity, although a news story about a bunch of Linux guys roasting herring over a hibachi while doing an installfest at midnight would be cool.

    Linux can be a pain to install. I know from my own experience as "that guy at work who uses Linux" I get at least two questions a day. And I'm glad that every time something goes awry I know enough how to fix it (also that I started off with Slackware in 1994 so I can appreciate the newer utilities...). I think people's first Linux experience should be "here's your computer. Any questions give us or Mandrakesoft a call. NEXT!" not struggling to find out what "signal11" means and why the install craps out saying that...
  • You're quite right that wading through the complexities of Linux is going to be too difficult for the average non-technical man in the street. But the last two versions of Windows - Win9x and NT 4.0 - with which I have any experience aren't really a whole lot easier to set up from scratch. The only reason that those innocent folks who go down to Best Buy and purchase their first peecee can get any use out of it at all is that that new computer comes all pre-loaded with all that Windows-based software, which works OK right out of the box - at least for a few months!

    After a few months, of course, thanks to the fact that the Win9x registry stays fresh and usable about as well as a dead fish on a hot sidewalk, that naive Win9x user is likely to find his his OS works less and less well, finally deteriorating to the point where you can't even get the stupid thing to start. What happens then? Does that naive user buckle down and figure out how to reinstall the works and learn what all those cryptic dialog boxes in the Windows "Control Panel" do? Hell, no, what he does is he sweet-talks one of his fellow workers or some family friend (whom he refers to, in an attempt to be flattering which merely annoys, as a "computer genius" or a "guru,") into coming over to his house and "fixing," that is to say, reinstalling the entire mess. So rather than going home after work and relaxing with a nice cold beer, instead you go do that, and even then they are never really satisfied, because thanks to MS's registry nonsense, whenever you reinstall the OS in the process you wreck all the applications the user has installed.

    I hate that. Remember when all you needed to do was just backup of all the files and subdirectories under C:\WP51 or C:\ACAD? Then if the OS somehow became corrupted or you upgraded your hard drive, all you would have to do is restore those directories and maybe one or two SET statements in AUTOEXEC.BAT, and you were up and running again, with all your necessary programs working just the way they used to. Even if you hadn't made that backup before you ran into OS problems, a lot of times you could boot the malfunctioning box off a floppy, back up those program files, FDISK/FORMAT /S, restore the various program dirs, and presto, you were back in business! But no more; now everything is tied into the inscrutable, unfixable registry, so when the OS goes South you lose all your apps as well.

    Also, the average PC owned by this sort of user, lacking either a SCSI card or an ethernet card, is damn near impossible to back up anyway, especially from a bootable floppy. Also if the system is hosed to the point where you need to boot off a floppy, you might or might not be able to get to the files on the hard drive, but even if you can, you can't see their long file names at all! So if the user has let his system deteriorate to where he can't even boot anymore, he generally loses all his data files (mainly old emails, nudie pix and MP3s) in the system-rebuilding process too.

    I'd like to see a slashdot poll on this:

    How many times have you personally been shanghaied into fixing for free some work acquaintance's bit-rotted Win9x box?
    ( ) never
    ( ) once
    ( ) 2-3 times
    ( ) 4-10 times
    ( ) lost count

    This is the big reason why AOL, despite all its glaring defects, and despite its premium price for dial-ups, is so popular: because it has this dirt-simple installation program that works successfully 95+ percent of the time off the CD, asking the first-user none of those questions everyone knows he can't possibly answer (e.g. "Please enter your ISP's DNS address(es) in the box below"). The last version of AOL software I saw even sidestepped the moderately hairy installation of the MS TCP/IP stack by coming with its own el-bizarro "AOL adapter". And that dumbed-down, painless-to-install software is the reason AOL is usable by millions of people who would never be able to install Win9x, complete with TCP/IP, on a bare box.

    No, if the average consumer had to install either Windows or Linux on a bare hard drive before using his PC, more than half of them wouldn't ever use PCs at all. The fact is that for the ordinary man in the street, personal computers these days are like cars in 1905 or radios in 1920; right now, at the current state of the art, they're both too complex and too flaky for general use. The technology just ain't there yet. Nowadays, in contrast, almost anyone can buy a car, learn to drive it, and get good utility out of it.

    On the other hand, in 1910, if you liked to play with nuts and bolts, you could have a lot of fun tinkering with your car, with no more investment than a toolbox full of screwdrivers and wrenches; and any bright kid could fool around with radio sets too. Whereas with cars or radios nowadays, even smart people who are mechanically inclined don't mess with all the hermetically sealed boxes and mysterious gadgetry under the hood. Similarly when the computer industry finally cures all the glaring usability failings in home-computer software, I'll bet those computers and that software will be essentially too complicated for most people, even bright ones, to hack around with any more.

    Yours WDK - WKiernan@oncentric.net

Keep up the good work! But please don't ask me to help.

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