talon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > This being said this is no implicit of explicit criticism of Matt Dillon, > who is an extremely competent programmer, and has every right to do > whatever he sees fit for his project. My own prejudice is that having a > good installer and a good package management system (including a good > upgrade mechanism) is *extremely* important, far more than any kernel > nicety. This is clearly the Achilles heel of all BSD systems.
At the risk of evoking age old debates....please define "good"? :) I'm hacking on the installer now. It's a lot better than sysinstall was (no offense to Bill Hacker intended), and easier to modify. It appears to have quite adequate and appropriate library abstractions...even after working with it for some time. Of course, this is my own subjective viewpoint. I'm also using the package management system. PKGSRC is roughly the same as the FreeBSD ports tree, and both are quite adequate for my needs...but that could be my own subjective viewpoint as well. So...what do you mean by "good"? Do you mean that "most any human on the planet can use it"? Are you looking for so much pre-packaged consumer goodness that 9 million people suddenly adopt DFly as their OS of choice? I'm going to claim that this entire subject is ... subjective. I will cite my own experience looking for the 'perfect' window manager as an example. Yes, I tried everything. I finally went -back- to what I was using in the early 90s...FVWM2. Why? Because it's powerful, it doesn't get in my way, and it doesn't ever presume that I am incapable of handling a computer. Non-computer people, look at this window system and have a heart attack. That's an added feature, in my book. Notwithstanding my claim above, I am actually curious as to what the accepted definition of "a good installer" and "a good package management system" really is. I'm even more curious at the intent behind the wielding of the label "good"...I think what I'm really seeing is people who want to adopt DFly based on the excellent technical work therein but who are frustrated with what DFly does not currently do. ------ Dave Hayes - Consultant - Altadena CA, USA - [EMAIL PROTECTED] >>> The opinions expressed above are entirely my own <<< If at first you don't succeed ... redefine success.
