2011/10/3 Hillel Lubman <shtetl...@gmail.com>: > By end user in this case I mean any user, not just [Debian] developer who > wants to shape a new system (Ubuntu, Mint etc.). I.e. if a regular user > wants to use a PC for everyday needs - Debian can satisfy many common use > cases without need of making Ubuntu in the process. > > Understandable, mobile fragmentation is a bigger challenge than supporting > PCs. Having a clearly defined core is alright, but I was trying to say that > ideally there should be some community driven, open and functional Operating > System (for some existing devices), built upon this core. Not just raw core > alone.
That's where the reference vendor stuff comes in. We have the Community Edition work that already today got rebased upon Mer - a open source handset UX. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wcIxHEggADU has a video of the UX (though not sure why it takes a minute to boot) > > There might be not enough people (or no one) to work on it yet, but that's > another question. BR Carsten Munk > > Hillel. > > > On Mon, Oct 3, 2011 at 12:53 PM, Dave Neary <dne...@gnome.org> wrote: >> >> What do you mean by "the end user" in this case? Debian as a community >> targets Debian packagers and maintainers, who are also Debian users, but >> they're hardly your typical users. >> >> Cheers, >> Dave. >> >> -- >> Dave Neary >> GNOME Foundation member >> dne...@gnome.org > > > _______________________________________________ > MeeGo-community mailing list > MeeGo-community@meego.com > http://lists.meego.com/listinfo/meego-community > http://wiki.meego.com/Mailing_list_guidelines > _______________________________________________ MeeGo-community mailing list MeeGo-community@meego.com http://lists.meego.com/listinfo/meego-community http://wiki.meego.com/Mailing_list_guidelines