Hello! 
I recently switched to Debian 6.x from another distribution for my "business" 
pc's operating system and am very pleased with it. I had been using Mandriva 
2010.0 with a few upgrades from source, but the leadership of Mandriva, KDE (v. 
4) and Gnome (v. 3) have disappointed me.

DESKTOP PREFERENCES: I really liked the Gnome 2 desktop and would quit Gnome 
altogether if they don't bring back the panel functions and layout of version 
2. Get the date and time out of the center of the panel and let users put icons 
there. I hope that you will continue to include Gnome 2 (or it's fork) in your 
future releases. Likewise, I was very pleased with KDE 3 and very much dislike 
the cycle-wasting useless bloat of KDE 4, and like LXDE as an excellent light 
alternative.

PROBLEM 1: The partitioning code of the installer doesn't do Linux Volume 
Manager setup right. The setup should first allow partitions of a disk to be 
created or added as part of a Linux volume, and then the volume should appear 
as a disk space to be partitioned. The SECOND STEP CANNOT OCCUR the way your 
software is presently written. After the desired partitions are assigned to a 
Linux volume, the partitioning software complains that the root partition does 
not exist. Of course not! It is supposed to be in the Linux volume that is 
being created. If the Linux volume were then shown as a disk space to be 
partitioned, THEN I could put the root partition and other partitions in that 
Linux volume which spans the two disks I would assign to the Linux volume. See 
how Mandriva does it in v. 2010.0, first assigning physical partitions to a 
Linux volume and then showing the Linux volume as a space to create partitions 
like /, /swap and /home in. This is what your
 partitioner should do, so Linux volumes can be created without grief.

PROBLEM 2: Your hardware setup is generally very good, but recent changes in 
video detection and setup by Linux developers mess up in handling older video 
cards/chips and monitors. As a result, Debian 7.1.0 has a correct-resolution 
correct-refresh setup for my monitor for installation, but sets my video 
improperly for regular use. I think the video refresh is set too high. It 
produces some "snow" on my CRT monitor and just doesn't look right, and there 
doesn't seem to be any graphic tool in Gnome 3 to change these settings. Some 
code in the installation to let the user select the desired screen video 
settings would be nice. If that isn't available, upgrading to Debian 7 isn't 
such a good idea. You can do the right video settings---the installation 
display proves it. Just leave it as is if it's satisfactory.

PROBLEM 3: The boot code should set up the firewall according to user choices 
during installation, and then should run automatically, with an administrative 
tool to change those settings if desired. The following is a minor 
inconvenience to me, and there may even be a good reason why you do it this 
way. The firewall I've been using is Firestarter, nice and simple, but required 
to be run manually by a regular user after logging in and entering the root 
password. A user who starts Firestarter (and has automatic rights to run other 
root-only programs) can't simply log out, but must re-enter the root password 
to log out or shut down. This is silly. On a multi-user system, a person should 
be free to log out, and if there's only a single regular user who started 
Firestarter as root, that user should be free to shut down the whole system. 

John Tellefson
Salina, KS    USA

mailto:debian-boot@lists.debian.org

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