If we had that IRC channel we discussed earlier in this mailing list, it
should have helped a lot. Some one would be able to find help directly from
another user. What do you guys think?

cheers

On 7/9/07, member greenarrow1 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

On 7/8/07, Matthew Flaschen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Jacob Maynard wrote:
> > Agreed, but not a workable option in the case of someone new switching
to
> > GNU/Linux. Not enough people are interested in learning on their own
by
> > messing around with it. You have to give them a resource to use for
their
> > information. Something simple and straight forward.
>
> I agree.  The most straight-forward way to start someone out is to point
> them to a very detailed tutorial for installing a particular distro.
>
> Matt Flaschen
>
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And this is the area we are lacking in.  No one wants to open a
tutorial and read something that looks like it came from a engineering
programmer.  In teaching individuals that want to try or switch to
Linux I found that using "Show Me's" with written instructions work a
lot better than just words.  Words are dull to a newbie but if they
see a picture or illustration that tends to catch their eye.

I could write a general Linux article, what to look for in Distro's,
how to search, the difference between a Window OS and a Linux distro,
etc but to get it to new users would be the problem.  I would need
screen shots of non-proprietary distros and actually others that do
not include proprietary in their base install.  I can say this even if
they use an all OpenSource distro if they want to play certain songs
or DVD's they are still going to find a way to install proprietary
code to use what they want.  This is one area people are not going to
give up and until we create programs that can do this within Linux we
are not going to be able to stop it.

This is a area I have been talking to Google about and seeing if this
is a anti-trust violation.  It seems to me it is because Microsoft is
trying to lock all this in their windows base.  Being that codecs and
Dvd's are universal locking them into one operating system would be
monopolizing them.  So far looks good as they are gong to further
study this area.  I went the Google route because they are already
filing anti-trust violations against MS and even though it is like
using the lessor of 2 evils at least it is against MS.


George
greenarrow1
InNetInvestigations-Forensic
SuSe 10.2/TriStar/Apache
GoBoLinux

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