

Linux-Mandrake best product of the year @ LWCE 120
Daniel Stone writes "Linux Mandrake won the best product of the year award at LinuxWorld. It's bound to be a contentious discussion about what deserves the awards-but Nick Petrely's comments speak for themselves.
ready for prime time? (Score:1)
Caldera was also the only distribution which painlessly supported 1600x1200 on my ATI Expert and Matrox G200.
While I recognize that tweakability is one of Linux' features, it isn't one which most users really want to trip over on their first experience with the OS.
Key items for any distro should be:
1. Quick and painless install, free from techno questions.
2. Easy internet config.
3. Easy ethernet config.
Once those issues are resolved, most people will be prepared to back off and learn how to tweak the rest.
Correct (Score:1)
I like it though. The upgrade procedure is indeed pretty nice. Although I managed to completely screw up the installation by trying to upgrade 2.1 to the unstable 2.2 via ftp. Had to reinstall.
BTW, does anybody know when 2.2 will be released? Will it come with something better then dselect? And the toughest question -- what the hell does the word Debian mean???
Re:I don't get the Gtk score... (Score:1)
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Re: KDE/GNOME: which is preferred? (Score:1)
Check out the results: http://www.borland.com/linux/survey/
Currently using: KDE 50.1%, GNOME 27.5%
Interested in developing for: KDE 41.0%, GNOME 28.3%
Re:Linux Mandrake rocks.... but... (Score:1)
Interesting. Is it your assertion, then, that blind people using emacspeak are stupid and unworthy? (And don't even try to convince me to use w3. lynx is much better.)
If your comment is moderated down, I can only suggest that this is justice in action.
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Re:/. still anti-KDE (and Borland poll results). (Score:1)
Re:KDE/Qt sweeps the awards!!! (Shame on Slashdot! (Score:1)
Shame.
Using C to create extendable GUI toolkit ??
Stupidity!
KingBob == CrackHead? (Score:1)
What the hell are you talking about? How is RedHat a monopoly? How are they even SEEMING to attempt to monopolize the market? Do you even realize you posted this under an article about a slightly modified copy of RH 6.0 winning an award? What monopoly reacts with pleasure when someone takes their product, sells it, and wins an award for doing so?
I'm not pissed off at RH for making money, I'm pissed off at them for bastardizing someone else's work, and presenting it in a substandard form to the general public, and doing it successfully...
Again, I say, huh? Ok, first off, whose work is RH "bastardizing?" The FSF's? Check the license, bro. By definition the GPL says that THERE IS NO SUCH THING as "bastardizing" free software. Second of all, while it's become really trendy lately to lambast RedHat because it's popular (the horror!), how do you think it became popular? That massive RedHat media blitz before 4.2? (By the way, that last sentence was sarcasm. They seem to not have that on your planet, so I thought I'd point it out). RedHat's popular because they usually release a solid product (with the exception of 5.2, which of course is all most people who complain about how "bad" RH is have used). 6.0 works like a dream for me. Have you tried it?
Basically, I gotta agree with the "evil" AC in the other thread attached to your first moronic diatribe. Just go away. You run linux because it's "alternative" don't you? Can't stand that a lot of people are getting into your "alternative" thing? I bet you liked Nirvana "before anyone else had heard of them".
Oh yeah, and this whole obsession you seem to have with AC's being actually cowardly or something is just plain silly. If you sincerely believe that people without accounts never have anything worrthwhile to say, just set your threshold to 1. Fool.
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"This moon-cheese will make me very rich! Very rich indeed!
Re:Debian installation difficult? (Score:1)
Now if they'd only let me have that Sparc box at work... ;-)
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"This moon-cheese will make me very rich! Very rich indeed!
IMPORTANT LINK! (Score:1)
Re:If this isn't a troll, then you're an idiot... (Score:1)
It also appears that you cannot see what is happening in the Linux and the business world. You can lie about your credentials (Mr "93") all you like, but if you're too stupid to see the recurring (and documented) trend that many of us do then quite frankly, you are an imbecile. But then you already know that don't you?
Let me guess, you're pissed off because you paid full price for Redhat, eh?
Applix is better . . . (Score:1)
Re:Debian installation difficult? (Score:1)
Who the fuck designed it ??
I have tried to install one fricking package, spent almost hours messing around with dselect
Funniest post of the month so far! (Score:2)
It was technically interesting (if a bit perverse), and it was totally legal.
Now, do you think
Want to know what they *did* carry? An article about Rasterman's work, and then an article about a new screenshot of Rasterman's work
Of course Rasterman's work deserved every story it got, I had lots of fun with it, but don't try telling me
Then again, it is
BTW: do you think posting each GNOME article as from the "extremely-cool-things-you-want-to-die-for-depart
Re:Debian installation difficult? (Score:1)
- I installed everything on the $2 CD from LinuxMall. (I assume Caldera only adds PartitionMagic to the commercial version.) Tried to boot from the CD, had to fix an IDE cable, tried again, and it eventually installed perfectly. Had this been a "normal" box, it probably would have gone right the first time.
- Wanted to set up Samba using SWAT. SWAT is the excellent web-based configuration tool that's *supposed* to come with Samba 2. It was nowhere to be found. Mildly irritated, I edited smb.conf by hand. Samba worked but not flawlessly.
- I set up PPP then started to work on IP masquerading. Guess what--masquerading had not been enabled when the kernel was compiled. So I decided it was time to learn how to compile a new kernel for myself. OpenLinux 2.2 comes with kernel version 2.2.5 and I downloaded kernel version 2.2.10. I thought there would be nothing wrong with an upgrade.
- Read HOWTO's until I finally got the kernel configured and compiled. After reboot, everything seemed okay except for Samba. Went to the Samba Web site and downloaded 2.05a. I didn't mind doing this anyway since I would finally get SWAT with it.
- Compiled Samba and got it running but discovered that it would not accept *any* passwords. Searched around a lot and discovered that PAM had not been enabled in the compile. I figured PAM was standard enough that all distro's would use it by now.
- Even with everything installed correctly, could not get PAM to work with Samba because of something different about the way PAM works on Caldera. Tried to revert to the usage of the Unix crypt() call. Had to grab libcrypt from the RadHat 6 installation on my laptop, and by sheer luck it worked.
- Had to install a second network card. Spent an entire day playing with "make xconfig" only to discover that for some reason, if you compile two types of network interfaces into the kernel (rather than make at least one modular), the kernel will detect only one of them. Or so it would seem. Admittedly, this problem had nothing to do with Caldera.
- Tried to install the linuxconf package from the RedHat 6.0 distribution. Wanted to be able to point and drool to configure the machine since I'd already spent more than a week on it. DO NOT TRY THIS AT HOME. Linuxconf is very, very nice IMHO. It should be integrated into KDE and GNOME. But after installing it, the machine would barely boot. Fortunately, rpm --erase restored my rc.d files.
Only two days ago I had to install a new server that would serve similar functions. I used Mandrake 6.0. No major problems, no need to recompile the kernel, NO MISSING LIBRARIES... and in fact, I got Netatalk working on Linux 2.2. According to the Netatalk FAQ, it doesn't compile on 2.2. But it did! I spent only a few hours too.
Conclusion: if all you intend to do with the Linux box is already on the Caldera CD, you've got a winner. Otherwise, use something else!!
Time for a dedicated logo on Slashdot??? (Score:1)
Re:Correct (Score:1)
Potato is supposed to ship with deity, the replacement for dselect -- it is a front-end to apt. Apt itself is going to gain much new functionality, including a very useful 'build from source' option.
I'm very looking forward to the deity/improved apt combo -- apt is a wonderful tool already in Slink, and much nicer than dpkg.
Finally, Debian is a contraction of the names "Deborah" and "Ian" -- check the website.
If this isn't a troll, then you're an idiot... (Score:1)
Do you actually use Linux, or are you a "blissful" Windows user? One of the reasons why Linux has become so popular of late is that the very Windows users you seem to think exist in such "utter bliss" are looking for something better, there's nothing wrong with having viable alternatives, and I can assure you - Redhat would not be my distro of choice, it's a crap distribution - there are plenty of distro's out there vastly superior to RH. Not to mention that they are selling the fruits of someone else's labour for their own corporate gain, mainly to fools like you! And the scariest part is you are proud to admit you are dumb enough to help fund their attempted monopoly.
You can't compare UNIX to Linux, they are as different (ideologically) as chalk and cheese. Linux was designed from the ground up as an open source alternative, not a commercial O/S. It's companies trying to monopolize Linux for their own ends that will screw us, not the distro's giving away their work on it purely for the betterment of Linux itself.
You should take the time to remember, where the hell would Linux be without the GPL, and open source??? You want to go back to writing your own drivers, eh?
Now Redhat is getting rich on the unpaid work of the thousands of volunteers worldwide who have put so much of their lives into improving Linux for everybody, and fools like you want them to close their (poached) source for their own gain - are you intellectually impaired in some way?
Re:Oh please... to you too (Score:1)
At Comdex back in April, Bob Young was asked this sort of question during one of the panels, he basically said this same thing, I don't have an exact quote is all. But for a more recent quote (yesterday), visit LinuxWorld [linuxworld.com]'s web site. When Nick Petreley asked:
Donnie Barnes replied that Mandrake had asked Red Hat if they had a problem with this, and they do not. Red Hat is actually pleased, because under the GPL, Red Hat can incorporate the improvements. This is an example of the open source model working, and it is the responsibility of companies using the model to help new companies coming into the open source community. Larry Augustin voiced his agreement and added "this is a credit to the (open source) culture." Giving up control, which would drive a traditional company crazy, actually results in better products. (Donnie Barnes is from RedHat.)
I can't say it better myself. Once you leave that, "I'm being cheated" attitude and realize all of what Open Source means, you'll get it too.
Re:Flaimbate (Score:2)
Give me a break! Are you expecting me to believe that Mandrake OUTSPENT SuSE and Redhat in bribes? Have you thought about returning your Mandrake package, or are you more interested in pouting? Did you even try out the installation support you paid for? Grow up and learn to spell.
(I didn't know that there was a Netscape for KDE. When was that announced?)
Re:Linux Mandrake rocks.... but... (Score:1)
Worked great after that.
I guess they messed up on the compile or something.
Or you can use the source rpm too.
Did you also email mandrake with a bug report???
I have come to expect it (Score:1)
Re:If this isn't a troll, then you're an idiot... (Score:1)
Oh, your rapier wit just cuts me to the bone... (Score:1)
Yeah, I got trolled, I will freely admit that...but it was pretty bloody subtle humour, and I'll bet I'm not the only one! The sad part is what led me to get caught out in the first place - Let me illustrate: the Linux community is gradually "dumbing down" (you're a good example of that!) to a point where it won't be long before comments like that are completely devoid of satire - some people I have met actually think like that - and that scares me.
I thought we were getting over the M$ monopoly when along comes RH and tries the same stunt again...this is beneficial for no-one, except of course RH! What really frightens me is that they are succeeding - largely due to the same uninformed (dumbed down) users I spoke of earlier.
If you can honestly say this doesn't frighten you then you are either a fool or a liar!
I'm not pissed off at RH for making money, I'm pissed off at them for bastardizing someone else's work, and presenting it in a substandard form to the general public, and doing it successfully...forget about Debian, there are plenty of better distro's out there than RH. I'm also pissed off at the Linux community in general, for being stupid enough to allow RH to get as far with this charade as they have, it doesn't say much for us as a group of so called "intellectuals" now does it?
All I can say to you is that at least you had the intestinal fortitude to post as yourself, not AC, as do many other frightened children!
PostgreSQL doesn't work, either (Score:1)
But still, this is a minor bug compared to the problems I had with Windows NT4. Sheesh...
--Tom
Nick Petreley is a GNOME user. (Score:1)
Or you mean he is a KDE fan, but uses GNOME for some hidden reason?
Or perhaps that even though he likes GNOME better, he understands that currently in some situations KDE is more suited?
Or what in heaven are you talking about, (that is not in your own mind, I mean)
Re:Disappointing (Score:1)
Re:Linux Mandrake rocks.... but... (Score:1)
Mandrake is MY favorite (for now) (Score:1)
Re:Can it browse *yet* (Score:1)
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"This moon-cheese will make me very rich! Very rich indeed!
YMWV (Score:1)
Hard drive failure.
Fuckshitcrapdamnhell.
goto( store ); buy( new_hard_drive );
Reinstall, reinstall, reinstall.
Linux from same disks, apps from same disks, GNOME from same disks (made backup).
Identical SW situation, identical HW situation (except for hard drive).
Crash.
Damn
rpm -ev gnome*; rpm -Uvh gnome*.rpm
Crash
Arrghhh
repeat ad nauseam
Maybe I'll try KDE...
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- Sean
Linux Mandrake rocks.... but... (Score:1)
metamail: can't open temporary file...
Arrrgh! I need my LYNX!!!!!!!!!!
Mandrake kinda broken? (Score:1)
Might have been my fault, could have been the packages that were automatically selected, but I started over with RedHat 6.0 and encountered zero problems.
They didn't even tried SUSE! (Score:1)
Also, it believe it's quite pointless to give opinions on religious wars subject (like KDE/GNOME) or (EMACS/VI). Whatever they say, they will end up having about half of the Linux community disagreeing with them.
The only to find out (in one way or another) what is the prefered distro or the prefered product (and I use the word prefered instead of best) is through a big vote...
Re:Mandrake kinda broken? (Score:1)
But LYNX doesn't WORK!
best? (Score:1)
being a novite, i bought mandrake pkg.. wouldn't even boot kernel on my PC after install. ntm frigging up my old dos files.
then, i bought SuSE pkg.. works fine. netscape for kde being the lamest app incl., as ALL others work WELL.
far as i'm concerned, mr drake owes me 25$.
undoubtedly, A LOT of wallstreetofdeceit polticking to be experienced fromnowon. read about VAlarry's claims to be bigger than the net now. oh well.
Mandrake like windows.... (Score:1)
They try to cram a bunch of cool stuff into it... but it doesnt always work properly.
Lynx didnt work...
I had problems with the compiler...
DHCP didnt work...
Was way slower than other distroz on the same box...
Dont know if something like this deserves product of the year though....
-LoungeAct-
Re:Disappointing (Score:1)
Linux-Mandrake Award (Score:1)
I love using Linux and I've learned a lot about it. The problem is: RedHat wins and award, Mandrake wins an award, Caldera wins an award... so what. If Slackware, TurboLinux, SUSE, or any other distro won an award there would be people complaining about that too. The point here is "YOU HAVE A CHOICE".
Not that I never have a complaint with Linux from time to time, but if I can't make something work, instead of blaming the distro, I blame my lack of knowledge.
Maybe people should stop complaining and start working on their problems... everything would be much better.
I love Linux, but day after day I have a new reason to like the Linux community less and less. Lack of a sense of humor and constant complaining makes communicating with others here really tiresome. Long live Linux and the people who care enough to learn it.
Mandrake like windows.... (Score:1)
They try to cram a bunch of cool stuff into it... but it doesnt always work properly.
Lynx didnt work...
I had problems with the compiler...
DHCP didnt work...
Was way slower than other distroz on the same box...
Dont know if something like this deserves product of the year though....
Re:Linux Mandrake rocks.... but... (Score:1)
Lynx rules....
My guess is most of the problems with mandrake are solved like this....
Re:Linux Mandrake rocks.... but... (Score:1)
.:watches comment get moderated down to -12:.
Re:If this isn't a troll, then you're an idiot... (Score:1)
Thank goodness for that - I was starting to worry that Redhat might have gotten hold of the source code for the Micro$oft Subliminal Message Wizard and begun using it to assimilate unsuspecting users...
Phew, but I still won't be letting my guard down!
Re:Microserfs (Score:2)
Hint - if you see an "Astroturfer", you should reply to them directly instead of posting a random, worthless comment.
That is, unless this is a Linux advocacy robot posting -- I've had my suspicions.
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Re:ROTFL, What an idiot! (Score:2)
The person who's bitching the loudest about people using Free Software fell for this one hook line and sinker! I guess all that self-righteousness about Debian blinded you to any form of humor.
It's called satire. Look it up in the dictionary. If you're pissed at Redhat for making money, why don't you point the blame at the GPL! After all, it's the GPL that allows people to sell GPL'd software. It's the GPL that opens up sourcecode so that other, less-enlightened, folks can use it.
If I didn't know better, I'd say you're pissed at Free Software being Free! IF YOU DON'T WANT PEOPLE USING YOUR CODE, DON'T MAKE IT FREE!!!
Wipe that egg off your face. It looks silly.
Free clue (Score:2)
It can even be said that the web is really about text, which Lynx handles beautifully. But people who say that probably prefer reading books to watching TV, and are thus obviously crazy, and their opinions should be discounted.
(Sarcasm: OFF) I will admit that Lynx doesn't fit every situation. Online banking is one example. For these few purposes we can fire up some bloatware like Netscape. But Lynx is great for a general purpose browser.
Re:Debian installation difficult? (Score:1)
Re: KDE/GNOME: which is preferred? (Score:1)
I started using KDE at beta 1. Flakey, a couple of X server crashes a month. Everything worked as advertized, there just wasn't much advertized. At the time, however, I was ready to give up on Linux rather than learn m4 to configure fvwm. KDE B1 was a breeze to customize. Everything I wanted in my menus was there in minutes.
But the license really bothered me. I was very excited at the announcement of gnome and tried 2-3 betas. I couldn't keep it up for an hour at a time. OK, patience, let's see what 1.0 brings....
What an amazing disappointment! I loaded 1.0 with Great Anticipation. It crashed X 3 times while exploring the control-panel. Several more X crashes, and I gave up. I know this is NOT a universal experience, many people are happily using GNOME, so maybe it's a Video card/Xserver/Gnome compatibility thing ('tho I tried 2 very different machines).
I am truly grateful for QPL2, and the efforts of BOTH the KDE and GNOME developers. The coopetition breeds better software. And I wish GNOME the best of luck. But for someone who X's to Solaris & HP boxes to do real work, including critical admin work that had better not be dropped by a hung/trashed X session, KDE gets my vote. KDE Beta 1 was better than GNOME 1.0. The only time I have problems with KDE is when I play with themes (which are still experimental anyway). Swap themes a few times to check them out, and it's best to log out and back in when you're ready to start working again.
I'll play with GNOME at home as new releases come out, but it has lost any change of being put on my production machine until it proves itself worthy. None-the-less, I believe it WILL prove itself one day. Then, we'll have to vote again.
Re:Fixing the Lynx Problem (Score:1)
/root/tmp,
Check http://home.knUUt.de/tom.be/faq.html for more info.
Good luck.
Re:Free clue (Score:1)
Re:Free clue (Score:1)
Plus, in Lynx I can read a slashdot page as it loads. What a novel idea! And when I'm going BACK to a page, it doesn't even need to reload the whole thing like Netscape does.
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Should they really compile it all with pgcc? (Score:1)
Re:Flaimbate (Score:1)
Maybe you misunderstood something though. KDE has the browser Konqueror, which is missing certain features but crashes less than Netscape and requires almost no time to load.
Of Lynx, Konqueror, and Netscape, I use all three. It depends on what kind of site I'm going to.
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Re:Debian installation difficult? (Score:1)
Re:For those using it to make free software it's f (Score:1)
IMHO the people claiming that Qt is far superior to gtk+ is just showing their bias towards C++ and haven't used Gtk--.
Re:Should they really compile it all with pgcc? (Score:1)
I find Gnome not even close to comfortable, and decided to try Mandrake to get a Red Hat with KDE. I find KDE to be hugely more polished, and less flaky.
I like Caldera, which is also KDE, and is the only one which has been able to fully configure X for 1600x1200.
I like that Mandrake doesn't support less than a Pentium, as I no longer have anything running which is not at least a Pentium.
My only problem with Caldera is that it doesn't support SMP out of the box. And each time I tried to recompile the kernel, it failed. Probably I need to install some source RPMs, but how would I know?
I like Linux, but it desperately needs documentation work, and Caldera is miles ahead of the others on installation. For now, I can't afford the time to school myself in it.
Re: KDE/GNOME: which is preferred? (Score:1)
KDE Beta 4 was my first KDE, and I was mucho impressed. Not only was it just worlds better than fvwm95, much better looking/more functionality than WindowMaker (Ok, before the flames start-- this was from the perspective of an M$ refugee. I have since used WM for long stretches and once you understand The Window Maker Way, it's a really nice window manager), etc. So I stuck with it for a while.
Gnome betas started coming out, and, being a Linux type person by now, I was always willing to try out the newest thing. Tried 'em, didn't like 'em. Frankly, on a 15" monitor, Gnome took up way too much space. Plus it was extremely unstable. So I went back to KDE, and all was well.
Then the big Gnome 1.0 uproar went up. So I just had to try it again. And, just like you, I was shocked at how unstable it was. The panel pretty much NEVER started up right (and every time it failed, I had to manually reconfigure it all over again), etc., etc.
But a funny thing happened. I fell in love, somehow. Despite it's instability, and problems, it was just so much prettier than KDE that I couldn't go back anymore. And luckily, those really were just first-release flutters. The vast majority of those problems have been fixed, and my gnome/E desktop is stable as a rock for long stretches on end. In fact, I can't recall the last time gnome has crashed on me.
I recommend all those who stuck with KDE cause gnome 1.0 was such a disappointment, get the latest rpm's or whatever (and seriously, get ALL the latest ones!), reinstall, and try out Gnome one more time. It really is pretty, and works extremely nice.
As always, this is my preference and my experience, and YMMV :-)
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"This moon-cheese will make me very rich! Very rich indeed!
Re:best? (Score:1)
2) I don't know what you did, but Mandrake never touched my Windows drive. I'm guessing you did something wrong when partitioning.
3) You can get a Mandrake CD at Cheap Bytes for like $3. No reason to waste money...
Re:Disappointing (Score:1)
Redhat packages a bunch of OSS utilities. Mandrake takes that package and plays with it until it doesn't suck anymore. I've got no problem with that.
Furthermore, Mandrake should be enough proof to all those people out there who believe that RedHat is going to become Linux's MS, that that isn't going to happen.
Fixing the Lynx Problem (Score:1)
KDE/Qt sweeps the awards!!! (Shame on Slashdot!) (Score:3)
The significance of the Linuxworld Editors' Choice Awards lies not so much in that Mandrake won product of the year, but in that KDE and Qt swept all relevant award categories:
1. Product of the year.
Both Mandrake 6.0 and the runner-up Caldera 2.2 put heavy emphasis on KDE; Caldera's installation lizard is built with Qt (with help from Troll Tech). So KDE/Qt win both 1st and second place;
2. Distribution/Server.
Mandrake wins again! (OK, this award has less to do with KDE directly but still, the term `Mandrake' inextricably invokes KDE);
3. Distribution/Client.
This time Caldera 2.2 wins with Mandrake second! Again, not directly related to KDE but see 2 above; a KDE-oriented distribution wins both places;
4. Desktop Environment.
Winner: KDE 1.1.1
Runner-up: GNOME 1.0.9/Enlightenment 0.15
Need we say more? Well, as a matter of fact, yes:
"KDE is what Microsoft's Active Desktop should have been. It has all the power of Active Desktop and much more -- but without the inconsistencies and instability of Windows 98. KDE 1.1.1 is unsurpassed for simplicity and ease of use. And while it isn't the fastest desktop
available, it's no slouch in the speed category, either. "
5. Programming Library/Tools
Winner: Qt 2.0
"Qt 2.0: Qt 2.0 is a library of functions and widgets for creating intuitive, easy-to-use applications. The strength of Qt 2.0 is in how much it simplifies the task of programming graphical applications for Linux. The KDE desktop was built using Qt 1.4. Qt 2.0 adds several new classes and extends the flexibility of the libraries. GTK is the primary competitor to Qt, and although GTK is an excellent library that is arguably more flexible than Qt in some respects, Qt has by far the more elegant object-oriented library of classes. Qt excels because it is a more abstract class library than GTK, which minimizes the amount of work the programmer must do in order to write applications."
6. Productivity Application/Suite
Winner: StarOffice 5.1
Runner-up: WordPerfect 8
Neither of these awards are directly related to KDE, but StarOffice is well-known for being KDE-compliant, and the makers of WordPerfect 8 for Linux are making a KDE(and Debian)-based distro!
The significance of this should be obvious to any reporter worth his salt. If GNOME (which I wish all success) had had a similar day at the awards I am sure Slashdot would have been quick to point the obvious significance on the front page!. In this case, however, Slashdot shamelessly ignores this on its front page. I cannot help but think that the KDE/Qt success may have deterred a front page story listing the awards. Too bad: I thought that we had matured past these kinds of slights.
Debian installation difficult? (Score:1)
Has anyone installed both Debian and Caldera recently? I would like to know if the differences in installation are as significant as the Editors seem to think they are; they claim Debian is "one of the most difficult distributions to install" while Caldera "coddles you through the most pleasant installation experience available."
Is this true? What do users experienced with both think?
/. still anti-KDE (and Borland poll results). (Score:1)
The relevant questions:
10. The Linux desktop environment that I currently run is?
50.1% 11638/23209 KDE
27.5% 6380/23209 GNOME
11. Which Desktop environment are you interested in developing for?
41.0% 9527/23221 KDE
28.3% 6565/23221 GNOME
Re:Debian installation difficult? (Score:1)
But the package management is godawful. First, pick a role for your computer. Or if you don't like that, pick tasks. You'll still have no idea what you're picking, or how much space it adds up to. After that's done, try to use that ugly excuse for an application designed by someone who truly hates users - dpakg or whatever its hateful name is. And then it segs and drops a core somewhere halfway through the install. Debian seems to be a nice distribution, but that ugly package manager needs to die.
Of course, my favorite installers are a dead tie between Slackware and FreeBSD, so...
Re:Debian installation difficult? (Score:2)
(I use SuSE at home, though.)
Isn't this a bit hypocritical??? (Score:1)
The obvious question then is why the hell are you waving Redhat's flag??? They are trying to become the next M$, on the coat-tails of Linus and the rest of the genuine Linux community.
This should make you more upset than Mandrake pulling a bit of a "Redhat" trick on Redhat, eh?
Re:Flaimbate (Score:1)
why would a pkg. (oh excuse me DISTRO) be product of the year, if it doesn't work?
netscape came with the SuSE pkg.. sorry if my terminology isn't up to snuff.
there was no support, other than e-mail, that was not answered.
y'all is mighty touchy. i'm about as groan as i want to be. i expressed an experience, and an opinion, pardon me all to haites.
Re:KDE/Qt sweeps the awards!!! (Shame on Slashdot! (Score:2)
Debian is torture (Score:1)
But once you want to start putting packages on, or X or a window manager, good bloody luck. I find it impossible to believe that anyone thought it was a good design. I think it's a test - if you can't figure it out, you're too stupid to use this product anyway, so go away.
LJS
Re:Linux-Mandrake Award (Score:1)
Re: KDE/GNOME: which is preferred? (Score:1)
Alright, let's have a (completely unscientific, informal) vote to determine preference.
Seems there's two ways to determine preference to me. One can look at the number of apps developed with GNOME in mind versus the number of apps developed with KDE in mind, or one can ask everybody to vote for either GNOME or KDE.
You'd think the first would be relatively easy to determine. Unfortunately, I haven't the slightest idea how to go about finding out. Any ideas?
Now, the second is a lot harder--"everybody" is a lot of people. But we can conduct a nice informal poll whose results mean nothing quite easily (a la the /. poll). Fun fun fun.
Interestingly, the Editors picked KDE as their winner over GNOME because "KDE is as stable as a rock, [but] the GNOME panel and file manager have a few bugs left to iron out." In your experience, are the KDE launch panel and file manager more stable and robust than their GNOME counterparts?
Not including Suse was silly.
Slight mistake in entertainment comments (Score:1)
Re:Disappointing (Score:1)
And now that RedHat has bunches of millions from the IPO, they should take everything and put it under a no-source-code-no-modifying license. They don't need any of this stinkin Open Source stuff. And they will get the awards they truely deserve. The stock owners will love it when they get all the awards, and the stock will go even higher!
And while they're at it, they should buy out every other distribution. Why are there 4300 distributions? That's anarchy! Unix split into a bunch of different versions, and look at it now. You can't go to Best Buy and buy a computer with or a box of HP-UX or AIX. Do we want to end up like them?? This is chilling proof that this anarchy must be reigned in. If there is only one choice, users will be happy, stockholders will be happy. Just look at Windows; those people are in utter bliss.
That's the only way to solve this. Which world would you want to live in?
Re:Debian installation difficult? (Score:1)
I've never tried Debian v-anything, but the very box that COL 2.2 won't run on, currently runs RH 6.0, Slack 4.0, and w95, and has run FreeBSD and OS2 so I don't think it's a hardware problem. Since I've put boxes together with OSes since xenix on 286-AT days I don't think it's the installer either.
Re:Debian installation difficult? (Score:1)