On Sun, 24 Jun 2012 15:26:39 -0700, peasthope wrote:

> From: <noela...@gmail.com>
> Date: Fri, 22 Jun 2012 16:38:23 +0000 (UTC)
>> That they stick to the default browser (e.g., Epiphany)?

Side note: when I said "e.g., Epiphany" I meant the default browser that 
comes with your current installation, being Epiphany for GNOME, Konqueror 
for KDE, and so on... of course, I can't list all of the default browser 
available on every single installation, YMMV ;-)

> I just reread http://packages.debian.org/squeeze/epiphany-browser and
> http://packages.debian.org/squeeze/iceweasel .  The first is sub-titled
> "Intuitive GNOME web browser".  Without your advice I would refrain from
> attempting to use it in LXDE.  Neither page addresses the questions of
> "why use this browser?" or "which browser for me?".
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_web_browsers helps but
> something specific to Debian is needed.

The election of a web browser is always based on the users own choice and 
their preferences. I can like Firefox and deeply hate Chrome but others 
can say exactly the opposite. Another users do like Opera even being a 
closed source browser. What I want to say is that there is no one size 
that fits to all here mainly because there are now many browser well 
suited and prepared to deal with the current Internet, when not so long 
time ago there were just a bunch of applications that were really capable 
to manage the sites.

In brief: you, as a web user, have to read the pros and cons of every web 
browser (what they provide, how they look, have confortable are for 
you...) and choose one by your own.

> Also I read http://wiki.debian.org/WebBrowsers .  It gives links but no
> comparisons.  Appears that the page could have a discussion or feature
> matrix to help with choice.  If anyone knows of such a document, please
> give the link.

The best "white paper" is that you try and test (and it's free). You can 
install all the browsers over a secondary computer or inside a VM (to 
avoid messing up your current system) and play with them :-)

>> ... I'm not an aptitude user, I always go with apt-get, ...
> 
> FWIIW you've suggested another possibility for operating Linux from
> Oberon.  Interesting.

I don't recall that :-?

> Two or three years back someone advised me to "get with it" and use
> aptitude.  Everyone has favourite tools.  Certainly the interface of
> aptitude is good in the sense of user oriented and task oriented.

When I arrived to Debian (back to 2009), "aptitude" was indeed the 
recommended tool but I couldn't get used to it, so started using apt-get 
and until now it has been serving me quite well :-)

Greetings,

-- 
Camaleón


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