On Sat, 2009-12-26 at 06:23 +, Martin Owens wrote:
Isn't laziness a good thing? If the OP is willing to pay for the
development of tools to speed or make easier the setup of these systems,
then we should support them, not ridicule them as being lazy.
The target of computing design is
On Fri, 2009-12-25 at 22:22 +0530, arshad wrote:
hi all,
not sure whether this is the right place to ask.
but asking in other places didn't help me much or at all.
my apt-get update is not working.
here is the output:
$ sudo apt-get update
[sudo] password for arshad:
Hit
On Sat, 2009-12-26 at 16:20 +1000, Chris Jones wrote:
I'm still a little shocked that F-Spot is still included by default. Any
software developer or any geek with a basic understanding of software
development and programming knows that F-Spot is one of the worst
examples of programming
Am 26.12.2009 um 07:23 schrieb Martin Owens:
The target of computing design is to make the very complex, simple
to operate.
Unfortunately, many software designers think that way. The more
demanding, but technically superior way is to reduce complexity.
Markus
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On Sat, 2009-12-26 at 12:00 +, Chris Jones wrote:
I'm a photographic imaging professional and I use too many imaging apps
to list here, but F-Spot is not one of them, for the simple reason it is
slow, clunky and has crap file format support for anything outside of
JPEG format.
The
On Sat, 2009-12-26 at 13:58 +0100, Markus Hitter wrote:
Am 26.12.2009 um 07:23 schrieb Martin Owens:
The target of computing design is to make the very complex, simple
to operate.
Unfortunately, many software designers think that way. The more
demanding, but technically superior way
While we are getting more and more philosophical about the origin
question, I am wondering if the Cyber Cafe as we used to think of is
not dying anyways. At least the fact, that somebody is renting out
hardware that runs with a specific operating system and you as
customer are charged by the time
The Ubuntu Developers clearly have no understanding of this sector of
technology and the IT industry and that sector being
digital/photographic imaging. And if they did, they would ditch F-Spot
and replace it with a suitable and real image management package.
First of all, I think you are
I ran into a problem with my log files growing really huge. I went to launch
pad to file a bug about it and found that it had already been filed.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/sysklogd/+bug/71870
Under status it is listed as won't fix. Why would this be?
Please forgive me if i
Am 26.12.2009 um 17:50 schrieb paul Hartman:
I ran into a problem with my log files growing really huge. I went
to launch pad to file a bug about it and found that it had already
been filed. https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/sysklogd/+bug/
71870
Under status it is listed as
On Sat, 2009-12-26 at 17:15 +, Jonathon Fernyhough wrote:
2009/12/26 paul Hartman 276...@gmail.com:
I ran into a problem with my log files growing really huge. I went to launch
pad to file a bug about it and found that it had already been filed.
Am 26.12.2009 um 15:13 schrieb Martin Owens:
On Sat, 2009-12-26 at 13:58 +0100, Markus Hitter wrote:
Am 26.12.2009 um 07:23 schrieb Martin Owens:
The target of computing design is to make the very complex, simple
to operate.
Unfortunately, many software designers think that way. The more
2009/12/26 paul Hartman 276...@gmail.com:
I ran into a problem with my log files growing really huge. I went to launch
pad to file a bug about it and found that it had already been filed.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/sysklogd/+bug/71870
Under status it is listed as won't fix. Why
On Sat, 2009-12-26 at 18:37 +0100, Markus Hitter wrote:
That's what I often do. As a rule of thumb, if there's more than one
way to achieve a goal, there's too much functionality.
Not exactly mainstream, I know. By profession I'm a mechanical
designer and there the cost of redundant
Am 26.12.2009 um 18:47 schrieb Martin Owens:
On Sat, 2009-12-26 at 18:37 +0100, Markus Hitter wrote:
That's what I often do. As a rule of thumb, if there's more than one
way to achieve a goal, there's too much functionality.
[...]
What did you think I was saying? that we should repeat
On Sat, 2009-12-26 at 19:57 +0100, Markus Hitter wrote:
To get back to the initial topic, instead of paying people to write
tools for taming complexity, paying people for getting rid of unused
stuff would be even better.
Culling is a valid job, it's just not valid to remove functionality;
Am 26.12.2009 um 20:18 schrieb Patrick Freundt:
why do people write free software. And I believe they do that
because its fun. And terms like minimum redundancy or cost
effectiveness do not really fit into that context.
Cost isn't only about money. It's also about the time people have to
On Sat, Dec 26, 2009 at 9:51 PM, Markus Hitter m...@jump-ing.de wrote:
Cost isn't only about money. It's also about the time people have to invest
to pick the right choice.
[...]
If you want to see people having fun in reducing complexity, watch out for
projects like [...]
You are not
On Sat, 2009-12-26 at 10:11 +, Mohammed Bassit wrote:
I'd really love to know more about the alternatives that have been
mentioned a 100 times if you don't mind. I can't find any personally.Not
that I like F-Spot, but I can't see much of an alternative.
Cheers,
Mohammed Bassit
Am 26.12.2009 um 22:33 schrieb Patrick Freundt:
You are not removing complexity by reducing choices, at least not
in my humble opinion.
Such statements make me feel like I want to run away and kiss Apple's
Snow Leopard, which removes a lot of old cruft while maintaining full
usability.
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