Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-05 Thread Peter Cannon

On 04/01/12 23:26, Peter Lewis wrote:
Nice to see that Godwin's Law [1] still applies on "proper" mailing 
lists in 2012 ;-) Happy new year folks! Pete. [1] 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwin's_la


Ahahaha

+1



Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Don Juan

On 01/04/2012 05:11 PM, Jonathan Vasquez wrote:

On Jan 4, 2012 6:26 PM, "Peter Lewis"  wrote:

On Wednesday 04 Jan 2012 16:16:45 Jonathan Vasquez wrote:

Never said the entire community was a democracy, I did say thought
that like a democracy people vote for the packages to be included.
You are right, that the Trusted Users have the final say on what
packages get included, I never said otherwise. We obviously can't let
everyone in the community have read/write access to the community
repo, but the packages that the community members voted for in the

AUR,

are being looked at by the Trusted Users. That's not a problem to me,

and

if anything is a sign of a Representative Democracy. In the AUR aspect
specifically.

Hitler was also chosen because of his intelligence and other
credentials. How does this relate? Just because a person is elected
because of "perceived" credentials that you can obviously prove that
they have, does not mean that the person will continue to act in that
fashion. Hopefully they will.

24+ messages in a thread which itself is a split from its original. Nice

to

see that Godwin's Law [1] still applies on "proper" mailing lists in 2012

;-)

Happy new year folks!

Pete.

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwin's_law


Lol Pete. I was actually speaking to Ross about this law when he brought it
to my attention. I didn't even know it existed and I normally tend to
refrain from bringing Hitler into a conversion. Maybe I should have brought
a politician that always promises things, but once elected changes his
views and attitudes.

Happy new year as well.

Nixon ? LOL ;P


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Jonathan Vasquez
On Jan 4, 2012 6:26 PM, "Peter Lewis"  wrote:
>
> On Wednesday 04 Jan 2012 16:16:45 Jonathan Vasquez wrote:
> > > Never said the entire community was a democracy, I did say thought
> > > that like a democracy people vote for the packages to be included.
> > > You are right, that the Trusted Users have the final say on what
> > > packages get included, I never said otherwise. We obviously can't let
> > > everyone in the community have read/write access to the community
> > > repo, but the packages that the community members voted for in the
AUR,
> > > are being looked at by the Trusted Users. That's not a problem to me,
and
> > > if anything is a sign of a Representative Democracy. In the AUR aspect
> > > specifically.
> >
> > Hitler was also chosen because of his intelligence and other
> > credentials. How does this relate? Just because a person is elected
> > because of "perceived" credentials that you can obviously prove that
> > they have, does not mean that the person will continue to act in that
> > fashion. Hopefully they will.
>
> 24+ messages in a thread which itself is a split from its original. Nice
to
> see that Godwin's Law [1] still applies on "proper" mailing lists in 2012
;-)
>
> Happy new year folks!
>
> Pete.
>
> [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwin's_law
>

Lol Pete. I was actually speaking to Ross about this law when he brought it
to my attention. I didn't even know it existed and I normally tend to
refrain from bringing Hitler into a conversion. Maybe I should have brought
a politician that always promises things, but once elected changes his
views and attitudes.

Happy new year as well.


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Peter Lewis
On Wednesday 04 Jan 2012 16:16:45 Jonathan Vasquez wrote:
> > Never said the entire community was a democracy, I did say thought
> > that like a democracy people vote for the packages to be included.
> > You are right, that the Trusted Users have the final say on what
> > packages get included, I never said otherwise. We obviously can't let
> > everyone in the community have read/write access to the community
> > repo, but the packages that the community members voted for in the AUR,
> > are being looked at by the Trusted Users. That's not a problem to me, and
> > if anything is a sign of a Representative Democracy. In the AUR aspect
> > specifically.
> 
> Hitler was also chosen because of his intelligence and other
> credentials. How does this relate? Just because a person is elected
> because of "perceived" credentials that you can obviously prove that
> they have, does not mean that the person will continue to act in that
> fashion. Hopefully they will.

24+ messages in a thread which itself is a split from its original. Nice to 
see that Godwin's Law [1] still applies on "proper" mailing lists in 2012 ;-)

Happy new year folks!

Pete.

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwin's_law



Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Don Juan

On 01/04/2012 01:04 PM, Jonathan Vasquez wrote:

On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 11:18 AM, Don Juan  wrote:

On 01/04/2012 08:14 AM, Leonid Isaev wrote:

On Wed, 4 Jan 2012 03:25:40 -0500
Jonathan Vasquezwrote:


[...]

Just because a person didn't go to
medical school, doesn't mean that they can research and learn anything
in the field of medicine. That logic is ridiculous, and as we have and
will experience in our lives, applies towards other areas of life.

Those are my worthless cents as well I suppose :).


Please understand that what you are talking about is not research, but an
accumulation of information==noise from dumb bloggers.

What they teach in medschool is to use your brain, not the collective
knowledge. If you are so confident in your self-diagnosis, just talk to
the
doctor and let him challenge your reasoning -- you'll see that even if
your
conclusion was correct, this was a shear luck.

Wikipedia may be good for trivial things (diagnosing a running nose in
your
terms) or reading about the comparison between email clients, but is
completely misleading in more sophisiticated problems. This is because
people
who could actually improve it are way to busy / don't care to do so.


Any chance we can all drop this stuff now and maybe share some advice/help
on the OP question or other ones on the list currently, I know I would
happily take even some flaming now on my battery question :P

@Don Juan

Lol at your House comment.

@Angel Velasquez

It's ok, I perfectly understand that a person can get confused when
similar names come up.
It probably has happened to all of us at least once :).

I also agree that the Linux community repeats the same info over and
over again, and that it gets
annoying. That's one of the reasons I was attracted to Arch. Because
instead of a person having to repeat
themselves, they could easily just write a well written documentation,
and send people to read them. While
at the other end, the asking user could finally find a well written
document, that would actually be able to help
them, because it was well written in the first place. It benefits both
parties. I also do not like to repeat myself,
and strive to write good documentation once, so that people will
understand it better. That's one of the reasons why
I make Youtube videos. Visual learning is a great way to teach
someone. Especially the people that are too comfortable to read,
which they will have to get over it.

I don't believe I am more valuable, or more important than anyone
else. I signed up to these mailing lists about a week ago,
there is no where to signing up to the Arch mailing list where it says
"You must bottom post". Some communities top post by default,
some do inline posting, and some do bottom posting. It's something
that a person has to learn and adapt to while they are in the
community.
If you look at all my posts in the last 3-4+ days, they are all now
written in bottom-post format. There may be 1 or 2 that slipt since
I switch between my phone and computer, and I have to disable top
quotes, etc. Also I didn't pull the "oh look I have more contributions
then
you card". If you look at my post, I said that my comments are
valuable and are not noob-irrelevant-spam-troll like comments because
I'm an
actual Arch linux user. Not just some random person. I showed some of
my contributions so that you can understand that I am an Archer, I am
a contributing user, and I legitimiately card about the future of Arch
Linux, therefore my constructive criticism to not just OS design, but
also
to Etiquette behavior should be heard (Doesn't have to be followed,
but at least listened to). That's how democracy works. By listening to
it's
citizens. Same goes with the AUR, and when people vote for packages
for inclusion into the community repo. So I hope I cleared that I
wasn't trying
to compare my contributions to anybody else. I'm sure, proud, and
happy that we have members like Gaetan and you in our community
because I'm sure
that you also help, want to continue helping, and love Arch linux just
as any other Archer.

I don't know how said Arch is the natural replacement for Ubuntu
either. I did say multiple times, in my videos, and in these posts
that
as long as a person is willing to read documentation, that it doesn't
matter what there starting position is. Doesn't matter if they are a
noob,
or a pro user from another Distro or OS. The important thing is that
they are willing to read the documentation in order to further their
knowledge.
So I completely agree with you as well Angel, and it's exactly what
I'm promoting and have been saying.

I'm glad you have helped a lot of people in this community, and I'm
sure you will continue to do so. I'm not happy that you or anyone else
has
to receive Troll comments. Now I believe that as a person with an
@archlinux domain in your email, you are not just a regular Archer,
but you
of course are an esteemed member in the community. Therefore as a
person with authority, you have 

Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Jonathan Vasquez
On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 4:28 PM, Jonathan Vasquez  wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 4:34 PM, Allan McRae  wrote:
Are you sure TUs pay attention to votes (apart from the minimum required
>> number)?  I always just pulled the packages I wanted...
>>

https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Arch_User_Repository

A good number of new packages that enter the official repositories
start in the AUR. In the AUR, users are able to contribute their own
package builds (PKGBUILD and related files). The AUR community has the
ability to vote for or against packages in the AUR. If a package
becomes popular enough -- provided it has a compatible license and
good packaging technique -- it may be entered into the [community]
repository (directly accessible by pacman or abs).

-- 
Jonathan Vasquez


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Jonathan Vasquez
On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 4:34 PM, Allan McRae  wrote:
> On 05/01/12 07:14, Jonathan Vasquez wrote:
>> On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 4:09 PM, Karol Blazewicz
>>  wrote:
>>> On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 10:04 PM, Jonathan Vasquez
>>>  wrote:
 That's how democracy works. By listening to it's citizens.
 Same goes with the AUR, and when people vote for packages
 for inclusion into the community repo
>>>
>>> Errr, no. It's still up to devs and TUs to include a package in the repos.
>>> Also https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Forum_Etiquette#Respect_The_Staff
>>> Members of The Forum Team have been chosen for their ability to
>>> exercise consistently good judgment and shall have the final say. Note
>>> that this forum is not run as a democracy.
>>
>> Never said the entire community was a democracy, I did say thought
>> that like a democracy people vote for the packages to be included.
>> You are right, that the Trusted Users have the final say on what
>> packages get included, I never said otherwise. We obviously can't let
>> everyone in the community have read/write access to the community
>> repo,
>> but the packages that the community members voted for in the AUR, are
>> being looked at by the Trusted Users. That's not a problem to me, and
>> if anything is a sign of a Representative Democracy. In the AUR aspect
>> specifically.
>>
>
> Are you sure TUs pay attention to votes (apart from the minimum required
> number)?  I always just pulled the packages I wanted...
>

No I'm not sure, but from I've read, I remember it saying that the
packages that the community votes for, are considered for inclusion in
the community repo.


-- 
Jonathan Vasquez


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Allan McRae
On 05/01/12 07:14, Jonathan Vasquez wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 4:09 PM, Karol Blazewicz
>  wrote:
>> On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 10:04 PM, Jonathan Vasquez
>>  wrote:
>>> That's how democracy works. By listening to it's citizens.
>>> Same goes with the AUR, and when people vote for packages
>>> for inclusion into the community repo
>>
>> Errr, no. It's still up to devs and TUs to include a package in the repos.
>> Also https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Forum_Etiquette#Respect_The_Staff
>> Members of The Forum Team have been chosen for their ability to
>> exercise consistently good judgment and shall have the final say. Note
>> that this forum is not run as a democracy.
> 
> Never said the entire community was a democracy, I did say thought
> that like a democracy people vote for the packages to be included.
> You are right, that the Trusted Users have the final say on what
> packages get included, I never said otherwise. We obviously can't let
> everyone in the community have read/write access to the community
> repo,
> but the packages that the community members voted for in the AUR, are
> being looked at by the Trusted Users. That's not a problem to me, and
> if anything is a sign of a Representative Democracy. In the AUR aspect
> specifically.
> 

Are you sure TUs pay attention to votes (apart from the minimum required
number)?  I always just pulled the packages I wanted...



Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Jonathan Vasquez
On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 4:14 PM, Jonathan Vasquez  wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 4:09 PM, Karol Blazewicz
>  wrote:
>> On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 10:04 PM, Jonathan Vasquez
>>  wrote:
>>> That's how democracy works. By listening to it's citizens.
>>> Same goes with the AUR, and when people vote for packages
>>> for inclusion into the community repo
>>
>> Errr, no. It's still up to devs and TUs to include a package in the repos.
>> Also https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Forum_Etiquette#Respect_The_Staff
>> Members of The Forum Team have been chosen for their ability to
>> exercise consistently good judgment and shall have the final say. Note
>> that this forum is not run as a democracy.
>
> Never said the entire community was a democracy, I did say thought
> that like a democracy people vote for the packages to be included.
> You are right, that the Trusted Users have the final say on what
> packages get included, I never said otherwise. We obviously can't let
> everyone in the community have read/write access to the community
> repo,
> but the packages that the community members voted for in the AUR, are
> being looked at by the Trusted Users. That's not a problem to me, and
> if anything is a sign of a Representative Democracy. In the AUR aspect
> specifically.
>
> --
> Jonathan Vasquez

Hitler was also chosen because of his intelligence and other
credentials. How does this relate? Just because a person is elected
because of "perceived" credentials that you can obviously prove that
they have,
does not mean that the person will continue to act in that fashion.
Hopefully they will.

-- 
Jonathan Vasquez


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Jonathan Vasquez
On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 4:09 PM, Karol Blazewicz
 wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 10:04 PM, Jonathan Vasquez
>  wrote:
>> That's how democracy works. By listening to it's citizens.
>> Same goes with the AUR, and when people vote for packages
>> for inclusion into the community repo
>
> Errr, no. It's still up to devs and TUs to include a package in the repos.
> Also https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Forum_Etiquette#Respect_The_Staff
> Members of The Forum Team have been chosen for their ability to
> exercise consistently good judgment and shall have the final say. Note
> that this forum is not run as a democracy.

Never said the entire community was a democracy, I did say thought
that like a democracy people vote for the packages to be included.
You are right, that the Trusted Users have the final say on what
packages get included, I never said otherwise. We obviously can't let
everyone in the community have read/write access to the community
repo,
but the packages that the community members voted for in the AUR, are
being looked at by the Trusted Users. That's not a problem to me, and
if anything is a sign of a Representative Democracy. In the AUR aspect
specifically.

-- 
Jonathan Vasquez


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Karol Blazewicz
On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 10:04 PM, Jonathan Vasquez
 wrote:
> That's how democracy works. By listening to it's citizens.
> Same goes with the AUR, and when people vote for packages
> for inclusion into the community repo

Errr, no. It's still up to devs and TUs to include a package in the repos.
Also https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Forum_Etiquette#Respect_The_Staff
Members of The Forum Team have been chosen for their ability to
exercise consistently good judgment and shall have the final say. Note
that this forum is not run as a democracy.


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Jonathan Vasquez
On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 11:18 AM, Don Juan  wrote:
> On 01/04/2012 08:14 AM, Leonid Isaev wrote:
>>
>> On Wed, 4 Jan 2012 03:25:40 -0500
>> Jonathan Vasquez  wrote:
>>
>>> [...]
>>>
>>> Just because a person didn't go to
>>> medical school, doesn't mean that they can research and learn anything
>>> in the field of medicine. That logic is ridiculous, and as we have and
>>> will experience in our lives, applies towards other areas of life.
>>>
>>> Those are my worthless cents as well I suppose :).
>>>
>> Please understand that what you are talking about is not research, but an
>> accumulation of information==noise from dumb bloggers.
>>
>> What they teach in medschool is to use your brain, not the collective
>> knowledge. If you are so confident in your self-diagnosis, just talk to
>> the
>> doctor and let him challenge your reasoning -- you'll see that even if
>> your
>> conclusion was correct, this was a shear luck.
>>
>> Wikipedia may be good for trivial things (diagnosing a running nose in
>> your
>> terms) or reading about the comparison between email clients, but is
>> completely misleading in more sophisiticated problems. This is because
>> people
>> who could actually improve it are way to busy / don't care to do so.
>>
> Any chance we can all drop this stuff now and maybe share some advice/help
> on the OP question or other ones on the list currently, I know I would
> happily take even some flaming now on my battery question :P

@Don Juan

Lol at your House comment.

@Angel Velasquez

It's ok, I perfectly understand that a person can get confused when
similar names come up.
It probably has happened to all of us at least once :).

I also agree that the Linux community repeats the same info over and
over again, and that it gets
annoying. That's one of the reasons I was attracted to Arch. Because
instead of a person having to repeat
themselves, they could easily just write a well written documentation,
and send people to read them. While
at the other end, the asking user could finally find a well written
document, that would actually be able to help
them, because it was well written in the first place. It benefits both
parties. I also do not like to repeat myself,
and strive to write good documentation once, so that people will
understand it better. That's one of the reasons why
I make Youtube videos. Visual learning is a great way to teach
someone. Especially the people that are too comfortable to read,
which they will have to get over it.

I don't believe I am more valuable, or more important than anyone
else. I signed up to these mailing lists about a week ago,
there is no where to signing up to the Arch mailing list where it says
"You must bottom post". Some communities top post by default,
some do inline posting, and some do bottom posting. It's something
that a person has to learn and adapt to while they are in the
community.
If you look at all my posts in the last 3-4+ days, they are all now
written in bottom-post format. There may be 1 or 2 that slipt since
I switch between my phone and computer, and I have to disable top
quotes, etc. Also I didn't pull the "oh look I have more contributions
then
you card". If you look at my post, I said that my comments are
valuable and are not noob-irrelevant-spam-troll like comments because
I'm an
actual Arch linux user. Not just some random person. I showed some of
my contributions so that you can understand that I am an Archer, I am
a contributing user, and I legitimiately card about the future of Arch
Linux, therefore my constructive criticism to not just OS design, but
also
to Etiquette behavior should be heard (Doesn't have to be followed,
but at least listened to). That's how democracy works. By listening to
it's
citizens. Same goes with the AUR, and when people vote for packages
for inclusion into the community repo. So I hope I cleared that I
wasn't trying
to compare my contributions to anybody else. I'm sure, proud, and
happy that we have members like Gaetan and you in our community
because I'm sure
that you also help, want to continue helping, and love Arch linux just
as any other Archer.

I don't know how said Arch is the natural replacement for Ubuntu
either. I did say multiple times, in my videos, and in these posts
that
as long as a person is willing to read documentation, that it doesn't
matter what there starting position is. Doesn't matter if they are a
noob,
or a pro user from another Distro or OS. The important thing is that
they are willing to read the documentation in order to further their
knowledge.
So I completely agree with you as well Angel, and it's exactly what
I'm promoting and have been saying.

I'm glad you have helped a lot of people in this community, and I'm
sure you will continue to do so. I'm not happy that you or anyone else
has
to receive Troll comments. Now I believe that as a person with an
@archlinux domain in your email, you are not just a regular Archer,
but you
of course are an esteemed member in the community. Ther

Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Don Juan

On 01/04/2012 08:14 AM, Leonid Isaev wrote:

On Wed, 4 Jan 2012 03:25:40 -0500
Jonathan Vasquez  wrote:


[...]

Just because a person didn't go to
medical school, doesn't mean that they can research and learn anything
in the field of medicine. That logic is ridiculous, and as we have and
will experience in our lives, applies towards other areas of life.

Those are my worthless cents as well I suppose :).


Please understand that what you are talking about is not research, but an
accumulation of information==noise from dumb bloggers.

What they teach in medschool is to use your brain, not the collective
knowledge. If you are so confident in your self-diagnosis, just talk to the
doctor and let him challenge your reasoning -- you'll see that even if your
conclusion was correct, this was a shear luck.

Wikipedia may be good for trivial things (diagnosing a running nose in your
terms) or reading about the comparison between email clients, but is
completely misleading in more sophisiticated problems. This is because people
who could actually improve it are way to busy / don't care to do so.

Any chance we can all drop this stuff now and maybe share some 
advice/help on the OP question or other ones on the list currently, I 
know I would happily take even some flaming now on my battery question :P


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Leonid Isaev
On Wed, 4 Jan 2012 03:25:40 -0500
Jonathan Vasquez  wrote:

> [...]
> 
> Just because a person didn't go to
> medical school, doesn't mean that they can research and learn anything
> in the field of medicine. That logic is ridiculous, and as we have and
> will experience in our lives, applies towards other areas of life.
> 
> Those are my worthless cents as well I suppose :).
> 
Please understand that what you are talking about is not research, but an
accumulation of information==noise from dumb bloggers.

What they teach in medschool is to use your brain, not the collective
knowledge. If you are so confident in your self-diagnosis, just talk to the
doctor and let him challenge your reasoning -- you'll see that even if your
conclusion was correct, this was a shear luck.

Wikipedia may be good for trivial things (diagnosing a running nose in your
terms) or reading about the comparison between email clients, but is
completely misleading in more sophisiticated problems. This is because people
who could actually improve it are way to busy / don't care to do so.

-- 
Leonid Isaev
GnuPG key ID: 164B5A6D
Key fingerprint: C0DF 20D0 C075 C3F1 E1BE  775A A7AE F6CB 164B 5A6D


signature.asc
Description: PGP signature


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Tom Gundersen
On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 4:25 AM, Jonathan Vasquez  wrote:
> You are misunderstanding my goals and what I've said.
>
> I said that I'm trying to help people find and use Arch. Whether they
> are expert users from other distros, or they are Noobies who are
> "willing to read documentation". If a person is a noob, that doesn't
> mean that they can't use Arch, they just have to be motivated
> individuals who are willing to seek and learn for themselves. I am
> facilitating resources, documentations, etc, to lower the barrier to
> entry, while at the same time giving information that is in the
> documentation, in a video form.
>
> So we completely agree, the point of Arch, and us, isn't to just go
> around and find noobies that don't want to learn for themselves but
> want others to do the work for them, but to find people that are
> willing to learn, seek for themselves, and contribute back to the
> community. This does not segregate "Noobs who want others to do things
> for them", "Noobs who are willing to be independent and learn for
> themselves", and "Expert users from other Distros who want to learn
> how to use Arch".

Haven't really been following this discussion or read your resources,
but just wanted to add that I think that making information more
accessible and easier to understand is a good thing, so keep it up.

We should of course be wary of leading people into doing things
without understanding them first (which seems to be the way things are
done in e.g. the Ubuntu forums), but I guess that goes without saying.

-t


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Stefan Wilkens
2012/1/4 Angel Velásquez :
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Again, as i've saying before, i don't know who the hell said that the
> natural replacement of ubuntu is Arch .. out community is people who
> like to read, and people who like to investigate .. not people who
> like some magic recipes. Even if somepeople wrote some of these
> recipes for Arch, our distro try to teach the user, if you are willing
> to learn, a couple of troll comments it's part of the scenary,
> whining.. so please stop crying.. and start researching.
>
> That's said, i've been helping a lot of people in this community, i've
> discussed with lot of people too, and i got troll comments several
> times, despite my contributions of i've helped them in the past, i
> don't think in that deeply, i just let it go, my advice.. is when you
> don't like a reply.. just let it go.
>
> I won't say sorry if you feel offended, stop the drama. In fact i
> congratulate that you actually hhave learned something in this
> community (in this mailing list at least).
>
> Cheers.
>
> - --
> Angel Velásquez
> angvp @ irc.freenode.net
> Arch Linux Developer / Trusted User
> Linux Counter: #359909
> http://www.angvp.com
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
> Version: GnuPG v1.4.11 (GNU/Linux)
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The Ubuntu forums had a fairly active Arch Linux related subforum[3]
for a long time, a weird subforum for a distro forum to have wouldn't
you say?. While that is now no longer available, it certainly caused a
flow from Ubuntu to Arch Linux. Add to that the apparent wild growth
of "Arch Linux is awesome" reports on the web[2] and you have your
source of mass-interest as opposed to those looking specifically for
what Arch has to offer.

As a general remark: perhaps we are just suffering a marketing
problem. Many less-experienced Linux users or even first-time Linux
users finding their way to our forums or IRC channels seem to
misunderstand the KISS ("..tries to keep it simple") principle as
prominent on archlinux.org. People seem to think that this implies a
click-and-go-DE-prefab distro, something we certainly are not. I
certainly agree that attempting to portrait Arch as such is bad for
both the user and the distro itself.

And as for the IRC channels: these channels are advertised as
discussion channels[1]. Support may be found there but it's certainly
not the only thing going on in our channels, they are not comparable
to the "Newbie" subforum and shouldn't be treated as such.

[1] https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/IRC_Channels
[2] http://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/linux-unix-bsd-documentations.html
[3] http://ubuntuforums.org/forumdisplay.php?f=321

-S


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Angel Velásquez
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On 04/01/12 09:54, Peter Cannon wrote:
> On 04/01/12 03:25, Jonathan Vasquez wrote:
> 
> Carry on doing what *you* want not what others want you to do. I 
> too joined "The pain of making tea." that is Arch Linux due to the 
> statement that used to be on display;
> 
> *Q)*When I run “pacman –sync” it comes up with “could not open
> sync database:reponame have you used –refresh yet?” but when I run 
> pacman –refresh it does nothing?!
> 
> *A)*This error is due to your inability to read man pages. We 
> recommend you try the pacman man page – it really is very useful.
> 
> I also agree that it's probably not for an absolute beginner, 
> however if you can read a wiki or a forum then I see no reason why 
> a so called n00b shouldn't give Arch a go.
> 
> I see no excuse for arrogance or rudeness people that do that can 
> "Get off my lawn." thank you very much.
> 
> "There is *every* excuse for not knowing, there is *no* excuse for 
> not asking."
> 
> #freedom

Usually when I go to a doctor he doesn't accurate his diagnostic ..
maybe in 70% of the cases (as optimum) he have to ask proper
information, and I have to give him, if I say "i don't know" too him
so many times, he will try to figure out what I have and for sure that
70% of accuracy on his diagnostic will fail.

What I wanted to say with this is, sometimes get bombed by a chain of
mails with some non-sense info which can confuse a lot it's
irrelevant, and as Jonathan and Javier (which I thought they're
related or the same person at some point .. that happens with similar
names, imagine somebody called for example Andrés Velásquez writting
here i'd be confusing.)

The problem is that in my point of view, we're sick of repeating stuff
to somepeople, I usually ignore posts from top-posters since them
confuse me a lot, that's why I said my troll comment, which in fact
was accurated but not on the topic (comparing again with a doctor,
imagine going to the doctor he's doing a complete exam to your body to
determine why .. you have a hurt in your hand .. and he said something
like .. "oh did you injured your knee before?".

Again, the most funny part of this stuff was the thing when Jonathan
believe he is so valuable than the rest of people who have to beg him
to don't do top-posting. Seriously dude, I don't want to play the card
of "see my mail address" or "google my name" in order to compare
contributions, even .. it's funny that you want to compare your
contributions with me or Gaetan .. we didn't that with you, and we're
speaking as a user like you, we are not just developers of the project
we are actually users, so it's totally pointless to play that card.

Again, as i've saying before, i don't know who the hell said that the
natural replacement of ubuntu is Arch .. out community is people who
like to read, and people who like to investigate .. not people who
like some magic recipes. Even if somepeople wrote some of these
recipes for Arch, our distro try to teach the user, if you are willing
to learn, a couple of troll comments it's part of the scenary,
whining.. so please stop crying.. and start researching.

That's said, i've been helping a lot of people in this community, i've
discussed with lot of people too, and i got troll comments several
times, despite my contributions of i've helped them in the past, i
don't think in that deeply, i just let it go, my advice.. is when you
don't like a reply.. just let it go.

I won't say sorry if you feel offended, stop the drama. In fact i
congratulate that you actually hhave learned something in this
community (in this mailing list at least).

Cheers.

- -- 
Angel Velásquez
angvp @ irc.freenode.net
Arch Linux Developer / Trusted User
Linux Counter: #359909
http://www.angvp.com
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Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Alessio 'Blaster' Biancalana
On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 2:52 PM, Lorenzo Bandieri  wrote:
>
> Ignorance should never be an excuse for a rude response, at least when
> ignorance isn't accompanied by the obvious willingness to remain
> ignorant.


Epic quotation, coudn't agree more.
And as Don said, I think that a Linux user doctor with this knowledge ideal
can be a great career man in medicine world. ;)

(And we all will come for a visit, indeed :D)


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Don Juan

On 01/04/2012 05:52 AM, Lorenzo Bandieri wrote:

Think of Doctors. Sometimes when you feel sick, you go online and you
try to do your due diligence. Trying to find out what is wrong with
you (Diagnosing yourself), even though you aren't a doctor. But you
try to do it anyways because searching for information, and finding a
solution tends to be something that us hackers have haha (How can we
be using a distro as great as Arch, and not be used to searching for
information and solutions? :] ). Once you find the information, you
feel pretty good about it. Of course since you know you aren't a
doctor, you clearly know that you might be wrong, and keep an open
mind about your current solution, until you go see the doctor. Once
you go see the doctor and try to explain to them your research and
theories, some of the doctors respond very negative towards you,
basically down playing your intelligence because you didn't go to
eight years of medical school. Just because a person didn't go to
medical school, doesn't mean that they can research and learn anything
in the field of medicine. That logic is ridiculous, and as we have and
will experience in our lives, applies towards other areas of life.

Those are my worthless cents as well I suppose :).


--
Jonathan Vasquez

+1

I can somewhat relate to this situation since I am a med student and I
use linux (currently arch and gentoo). When first installed linux I
was an absolute computer/internet illiterate; today my knowledge is
better, though obviously limited. I admit that in the past I may have
asked really dumb question, but from my point of view, experienced
linux users often forget how difficult is to enter into a field about
which you know absolutely nothing. Yes, there are howtos,
documentation, man pages... but at the very beginning, it's not that
easy.

Ignorance should never be an excuse for a rude response, at least when
ignorance isn't accompanied by the obvious willingness to remain
ignorant. Knowledge doesn't imply nor require arrogance or rudeness.
If not, every person that is knowledgeable in a field could mistreat
everyone else who is not as equally competent in that particular area.
I wonder what these unpolite linux gurus would think if one day I'd
answered them something like "Are you kidding me? Seriously, you are
asking me if your contact lenses can *get lost behind your eyeball*?
If you had RTMF you'd know this is impossible. Now GTFO, and next time
*google it*, for the love of God... noob."

Just the thoughts of a computer ignorant.

Lorenzo


+1

I would love to go to a doctor that is like that, I think more should be 
like house LOL


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Lorenzo Bandieri
> Think of Doctors. Sometimes when you feel sick, you go online and you
> try to do your due diligence. Trying to find out what is wrong with
> you (Diagnosing yourself), even though you aren't a doctor. But you
> try to do it anyways because searching for information, and finding a
> solution tends to be something that us hackers have haha (How can we
> be using a distro as great as Arch, and not be used to searching for
> information and solutions? :] ). Once you find the information, you
> feel pretty good about it. Of course since you know you aren't a
> doctor, you clearly know that you might be wrong, and keep an open
> mind about your current solution, until you go see the doctor. Once
> you go see the doctor and try to explain to them your research and
> theories, some of the doctors respond very negative towards you,
> basically down playing your intelligence because you didn't go to
> eight years of medical school. Just because a person didn't go to
> medical school, doesn't mean that they can research and learn anything
> in the field of medicine. That logic is ridiculous, and as we have and
> will experience in our lives, applies towards other areas of life.
>
> Those are my worthless cents as well I suppose :).
>
>
> --
> Jonathan Vasquez

+1

I can somewhat relate to this situation since I am a med student and I
use linux (currently arch and gentoo). When first installed linux I
was an absolute computer/internet illiterate; today my knowledge is
better, though obviously limited. I admit that in the past I may have
asked really dumb question, but from my point of view, experienced
linux users often forget how difficult is to enter into a field about
which you know absolutely nothing. Yes, there are howtos,
documentation, man pages... but at the very beginning, it's not that
easy.

Ignorance should never be an excuse for a rude response, at least when
ignorance isn't accompanied by the obvious willingness to remain
ignorant. Knowledge doesn't imply nor require arrogance or rudeness.
If not, every person that is knowledgeable in a field could mistreat
everyone else who is not as equally competent in that particular area.
I wonder what these unpolite linux gurus would think if one day I'd
answered them something like "Are you kidding me? Seriously, you are
asking me if your contact lenses can *get lost behind your eyeball*?
If you had RTMF you'd know this is impossible. Now GTFO, and next time
*google it*, for the love of God... noob."

Just the thoughts of a computer ignorant.

Lorenzo

-- 
Nothing is interesting if you're not interested.


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Peter Cannon

On 04/01/12 03:25, Jonathan Vasquez wrote:

Carry on doing what *you* want not what others want you to do. I too 
joined "The pain of making tea." that is Arch Linux due to the statement 
that used to be on display;


*Q)*When I run “pacman –sync” it comes up with “could
not open sync database:reponame have you used –refresh yet?” but when I
run pacman –refresh it does nothing?!

*A)*This error is due to your inability to read man pages. We
recommend you try the pacman man page – it really is very useful.

I also agree that it's probably not for an absolute beginner, however if 
you can read a wiki or a forum then I see no reason why a so called n00b 
shouldn't give Arch a go.


I see no excuse for arrogance or rudeness people that do that can "Get 
off my lawn." thank you very much.


"There is *every* excuse for not knowing, there is *no* excuse for not 
asking."


#freedom


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Ray Rashif
On 4 January 2012 16:25, Jonathan Vasquez  wrote:
> Think of Doctors. Sometimes when you feel sick, you go online and you
> try to do your due diligence. Trying to find out what is wrong with
> you (Diagnosing yourself), even though you aren't a doctor. But you
> try to do it anyways because searching for information, and finding a
> solution tends to be something that us hackers have haha (How can we
> be using a distro as great as Arch, and not be used to searching for
> information and solutions? :] ). Once you find the information, you
> feel pretty good about it. Of course since you know you aren't a
> doctor, you clearly know that you might be wrong, and keep an open
> mind about your current solution, until you go see the doctor. Once
> you go see the doctor and try to explain to them your research and
> theories, some of the doctors respond very negative towards you,
> basically down playing your intelligence because you didn't go to
> eight years of medical school. Just because a person didn't go to
> medical school, doesn't mean that they can research and learn anything
> in the field of medicine. That logic is ridiculous, and as we have and
> will experience in our lives, applies towards other areas of life.

I like this, +1 :)

Once I was in this exact situation, and I couldn't punch the guy
because I didn't have an MBBS to support myself. No offence to you
doctors; you have a respectable profession, but sometimes you have to
realise there are patients who could've joined you in medical school
if they wanted to.

In the same manner, we shouldn't discredit a computer user just
because he's never had much experience with that many operating
systems, that is to say there are actually people who jump straight to
Arch Linux from Windows and face no problems.


--
GPG/PGP ID: C0711BF1


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Keits
On 11:21 Wed 04 Jan , Oon-Ee Ng wrote:
> Splitting the thread (sorry I use gmail, so it won't split for you
> guys on mutt or whatever)...

Nah, it's fine for mutt.


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Ross Hamblin
On 04/01/12 21:25, Jonathan Vasquez wrote:

> 
> Those are my worthless cents as well I suppose :).
> 
Not so worthless I think. Is good to discuss this stuff in the open.


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-04 Thread Jonathan Vasquez
On Tue, Jan 3, 2012 at 10:34 PM, Pham Bao Trung
 wrote:
> @Jonathan Vasquez
>
> I must say that I totally support your point of view. I have seen some
> TU/devs/geeky users showed bad temper, mocking on newb at #archlinux who
> really came there to seek for help and wanted to switch to Arch. They just
> made them go away rudely. Their point is that Arch is not for newb.
>

It's sad it happens, but it happens in every community and I have to
accept that. Just because there are a few bad raisins or arrogant
people in the community, doesn't mean that I should just give up on
the entire distro. All I'm saying is that the people in the distro
definitely have an obligation to maintain the high standards of
conduct (Etiquette) and Morality. So we can all treat each other with
dignity and respect, as fellow human beings, volunteers, contributors,
maintainers, and users.

@Don Juan

Don't forget that Elitism for the most part automatically involves
arrogance. If a person is very smart, they will tend to learn towards
being arrogant. It's not because a person wants to be arrogant though,
but because naturally, as people gain knowledge, they logically
believe that they are smarter than other people in society in that
specific area. A very logical thought. The only thing is that we have
to control and be mindful of our arrogance and elitism when dealing
with each other and others, because other people (even if they aren't
pro), doesn't mean that they don't have anything useful or correct to
say.

Think of Doctors. Sometimes when you feel sick, you go online and you
try to do your due diligence. Trying to find out what is wrong with
you (Diagnosing yourself), even though you aren't a doctor. But you
try to do it anyways because searching for information, and finding a
solution tends to be something that us hackers have haha (How can we
be using a distro as great as Arch, and not be used to searching for
information and solutions? :] ). Once you find the information, you
feel pretty good about it. Of course since you know you aren't a
doctor, you clearly know that you might be wrong, and keep an open
mind about your current solution, until you go see the doctor. Once
you go see the doctor and try to explain to them your research and
theories, some of the doctors respond very negative towards you,
basically down playing your intelligence because you didn't go to
eight years of medical school. Just because a person didn't go to
medical school, doesn't mean that they can research and learn anything
in the field of medicine. That logic is ridiculous, and as we have and
will experience in our lives, applies towards other areas of life.

Those are my worthless cents as well I suppose :).


-- 
Jonathan Vasquez


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-03 Thread Pham Bao Trung
@Jonathan Vasquez

I must say that I totally support your point of view. I have seen some
TU/devs/geeky users showed bad temper, mocking on newb at #archlinux who
really came there to seek for help and wanted to switch to Arch. They just
made them go away rudely. Their point is that Arch is not for newb.

On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 10:27 AM, Jonathan Vasquez wrote:

> On Tue, Jan 3, 2012 at 10:25 PM, Jonathan Vasquez
>  wrote:
> > On Tue, Jan 3, 2012 at 10:21 PM, Oon-Ee Ng 
> wrote:
> >> On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 10:58 AM, Jonathan Vasquez
> >>  wrote:
> >>> I've been doing things to attract users to Arch. Whether they are
> >>> newbs or not, because I want people to learn. As long as you have
> >>> willingness and determination to learn, that is the important thing.
> >>> The resources are out there, people just need to look, and I'm willing
> >>> to add to those resources.
> >>>
> >>> You aren't adding anything beneficial by telling others that their
> >>> comments are equal to troll statements, when this is clearly not true.
> >>
> >> Attracting users to Arch is not a stated goal, this has been repeated
> >> many times in various fora. Arch is only for a certain type of users,
> >> those who are willing and able to learn.
> >>
> >> I'm not knocking your effort, but a quick glance at those resources
> >> you've provided indicate that you're trying to make it very easy to
> >> get to using Arch, and I don't think that's beneficial for Arch or its
> >> community. There are other distributions for 'easy-to-use', Arch
> >> should not be that. Not because of any type of elitism, but because
> >> Arch's niche is about control and simplicity, and making it
> >> 'newbie-friendly' (whatever that means) would compromise that.
> >>
> >> Splitting the thread (sorry I use gmail, so it won't split for you
> >> guys on mutt or whatever) to reduce the 'corruption' of original
> >> thread, not that I think it'll make a difference though.
> >
> > You are misunderstanding my goals and what I've said.
> >
> > I said that I'm trying to help people find and use Arch. Whether they
> > are expert users from other distros, or they are Noobies who are
> > "willing to read documentation". If a person is a noob, that doesn't
> > mean that they can't use Arch, they just have to be motivated
> > individuals who are willing to seek and learn for themselves. I am
> > facilitating resources, documentations, etc, to lower the barrier to
> > entry, while at the same time giving information that is in the
> > documentation, in a video form.
> >
> > So we completely agree, the point of Arch, and us, isn't to just go
> > around and find noobies that don't want to learn for themselves but
> > want others to do the work for them, but to find people that are
> > willing to learn, seek for themselves, and contribute back to the
> > community. This does not segregate "Noobs who want others to do things
> > for them", "Noobs who are willing to be independent and learn for
> > themselves", and "Expert users from other Distros who want to learn
> > how to use Arch".
> >
> > --
> > Jonathan Vasquez
>
> BTW, If you watch the series I made today to help people who are
> willing to learn come and try Arch, I've explicitly explained the Arch
> goals, and who it is and isn't for.
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVx0xOO5tqg @ 1:30.
>
> --
> Jonathan Vasquez
>



-- 
God loved the birds and invented trees.  Man loved the birds and invented
cages.
  ~Jacques Deval

Probability does not exist.
  ~Bruno de Finetti

Brian: "Look, you've got it all wrong! You don't NEED to follow ME, You
don't NEED to follow ANYBODY! You've got to think for your selves! You're
ALL individuals!"
  ~Monty Python, "The Life of Brian"


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-03 Thread Don Juan

On 01/03/2012 07:25 PM, Jonathan Vasquez wrote:

On Tue, Jan 3, 2012 at 10:21 PM, Oon-Ee Ng  wrote:

On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 10:58 AM, Jonathan Vasquez
  wrote:

I've been doing things to attract users to Arch. Whether they are
newbs or not, because I want people to learn. As long as you have
willingness and determination to learn, that is the important thing.
The resources are out there, people just need to look, and I'm willing
to add to those resources.

You aren't adding anything beneficial by telling others that their
comments are equal to troll statements, when this is clearly not true.

Attracting users to Arch is not a stated goal, this has been repeated
many times in various fora. Arch is only for a certain type of users,
those who are willing and able to learn.

I'm not knocking your effort, but a quick glance at those resources
you've provided indicate that you're trying to make it very easy to
get to using Arch, and I don't think that's beneficial for Arch or its
community. There are other distributions for 'easy-to-use', Arch
should not be that. Not because of any type of elitism, but because
Arch's niche is about control and simplicity, and making it
'newbie-friendly' (whatever that means) would compromise that.

Splitting the thread (sorry I use gmail, so it won't split for you
guys on mutt or whatever) to reduce the 'corruption' of original
thread, not that I think it'll make a difference though.

You are misunderstanding my goals and what I've said.

I said that I'm trying to help people find and use Arch. Whether they
are expert users from other distros, or they are Noobies who are
"willing to read documentation". If a person is a noob, that doesn't
mean that they can't use Arch, they just have to be motivated
individuals who are willing to seek and learn for themselves. I am
facilitating resources, documentations, etc, to lower the barrier to
entry, while at the same time giving information that is in the
documentation, in a video form.

So we completely agree, the point of Arch, and us, isn't to just go
around and find noobies that don't want to learn for themselves but
want others to do the work for them, but to find people that are
willing to learn, seek for themselves, and contribute back to the
community. This does not segregate "Noobs who want others to do things
for them", "Noobs who are willing to be independent and learn for
themselves", and "Expert users from other Distros who want to learn
how to use Arch".

Me being one of these Arch n00bs what attracted to me was the RTFM type 
of attitude before you ask something it should be about reading and 
educating ones self first before asking questions. It took me a few days 
to understand installing things properly and only posting one question 
to these boards about a miss understanding I had. Which I though the 
responses I got were great and quickly made me grasp my failure to. I 
learned a little more about the hooks statement that was made, but I do 
have to agree that if others are not allowed to contribute they have the 
same issues with a posting to the boards, then things may lag in finding 
a common cause that may not be obvious on the one single system. Am I 
way off thinking such a thing here?


I also still don't see how his comments were Troll like at all. Maybe 
that's my n00b thinking in things. Elitism is one thing, but arrogance 
is childish and VERY common on most message boards in the Linux world. I 
value and understand Elitism, but throw in arrogance and its just a 
pissing match being started in my opinion. Just my worthless .02 :)


Cheers people its a New Year, don't forget that :)


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-03 Thread Alex Liu
On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 12:21 PM, Oon-Ee Ng  wrote:
> Arch's niche is about control and simplicity, and making it
> 'newbie-friendly' (whatever that means) would compromise that.

The 'whatever that means' part is, I think, the important aspect here.
What does it mean? Is newbie-friendliness providing a user with a
graphical user interface by default and an easy-to-use installer like
Ubuntu does? Many people seem to think so, because Ubuntu is commonly
called a 'distribution for beginners', but actually I disagree.

In fact, I think Arch is very newbie-friendly, if not the most
newbie-friendly distro out there. And that's because of the huge wiki
and the excellent documentation you get. Ubuntu et. al. might be
easier to use for people who switched from Windows, but that's just
because they're used to GUI and the 'out of the box' experience;
however, I don't think that's what newbie-friendliness is all about.
I mean, even someone who has never in his life used any Form of
GNU/Linux or Unix before can install Arch and make it work by reading
the wiki and the documentation -- so that is, in my opinion, very
newbie-friendly. The same is true for, for example, Gentoo, which is
commonly called a very hard to setup distro. I remember doing it ten
years ago with little to no Linux experience and it worked, just by
walking step by step through the instructions.

Maybe Arch is not for everyone (I agree), but I don't think it has
anything to do with being a newbie or not, but with being willing to
learn, read the docs, etc.


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-03 Thread Jonathan Vasquez
On Tue, Jan 3, 2012 at 10:25 PM, Jonathan Vasquez
 wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 3, 2012 at 10:21 PM, Oon-Ee Ng  wrote:
>> On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 10:58 AM, Jonathan Vasquez
>>  wrote:
>>> I've been doing things to attract users to Arch. Whether they are
>>> newbs or not, because I want people to learn. As long as you have
>>> willingness and determination to learn, that is the important thing.
>>> The resources are out there, people just need to look, and I'm willing
>>> to add to those resources.
>>>
>>> You aren't adding anything beneficial by telling others that their
>>> comments are equal to troll statements, when this is clearly not true.
>>
>> Attracting users to Arch is not a stated goal, this has been repeated
>> many times in various fora. Arch is only for a certain type of users,
>> those who are willing and able to learn.
>>
>> I'm not knocking your effort, but a quick glance at those resources
>> you've provided indicate that you're trying to make it very easy to
>> get to using Arch, and I don't think that's beneficial for Arch or its
>> community. There are other distributions for 'easy-to-use', Arch
>> should not be that. Not because of any type of elitism, but because
>> Arch's niche is about control and simplicity, and making it
>> 'newbie-friendly' (whatever that means) would compromise that.
>>
>> Splitting the thread (sorry I use gmail, so it won't split for you
>> guys on mutt or whatever) to reduce the 'corruption' of original
>> thread, not that I think it'll make a difference though.
>
> You are misunderstanding my goals and what I've said.
>
> I said that I'm trying to help people find and use Arch. Whether they
> are expert users from other distros, or they are Noobies who are
> "willing to read documentation". If a person is a noob, that doesn't
> mean that they can't use Arch, they just have to be motivated
> individuals who are willing to seek and learn for themselves. I am
> facilitating resources, documentations, etc, to lower the barrier to
> entry, while at the same time giving information that is in the
> documentation, in a video form.
>
> So we completely agree, the point of Arch, and us, isn't to just go
> around and find noobies that don't want to learn for themselves but
> want others to do the work for them, but to find people that are
> willing to learn, seek for themselves, and contribute back to the
> community. This does not segregate "Noobs who want others to do things
> for them", "Noobs who are willing to be independent and learn for
> themselves", and "Expert users from other Distros who want to learn
> how to use Arch".
>
> --
> Jonathan Vasquez

BTW, If you watch the series I made today to help people who are
willing to learn come and try Arch, I've explicitly explained the Arch
goals, and who it is and isn't for.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVx0xOO5tqg @ 1:30.

-- 
Jonathan Vasquez


Re: [arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-03 Thread Jonathan Vasquez
On Tue, Jan 3, 2012 at 10:21 PM, Oon-Ee Ng  wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 10:58 AM, Jonathan Vasquez
>  wrote:
>> I've been doing things to attract users to Arch. Whether they are
>> newbs or not, because I want people to learn. As long as you have
>> willingness and determination to learn, that is the important thing.
>> The resources are out there, people just need to look, and I'm willing
>> to add to those resources.
>>
>> You aren't adding anything beneficial by telling others that their
>> comments are equal to troll statements, when this is clearly not true.
>
> Attracting users to Arch is not a stated goal, this has been repeated
> many times in various fora. Arch is only for a certain type of users,
> those who are willing and able to learn.
>
> I'm not knocking your effort, but a quick glance at those resources
> you've provided indicate that you're trying to make it very easy to
> get to using Arch, and I don't think that's beneficial for Arch or its
> community. There are other distributions for 'easy-to-use', Arch
> should not be that. Not because of any type of elitism, but because
> Arch's niche is about control and simplicity, and making it
> 'newbie-friendly' (whatever that means) would compromise that.
>
> Splitting the thread (sorry I use gmail, so it won't split for you
> guys on mutt or whatever) to reduce the 'corruption' of original
> thread, not that I think it'll make a difference though.

You are misunderstanding my goals and what I've said.

I said that I'm trying to help people find and use Arch. Whether they
are expert users from other distros, or they are Noobies who are
"willing to read documentation". If a person is a noob, that doesn't
mean that they can't use Arch, they just have to be motivated
individuals who are willing to seek and learn for themselves. I am
facilitating resources, documentations, etc, to lower the barrier to
entry, while at the same time giving information that is in the
documentation, in a video form.

So we completely agree, the point of Arch, and us, isn't to just go
around and find noobies that don't want to learn for themselves but
want others to do the work for them, but to find people that are
willing to learn, seek for themselves, and contribute back to the
community. This does not segregate "Noobs who want others to do things
for them", "Noobs who are willing to be independent and learn for
themselves", and "Expert users from other Distros who want to learn
how to use Arch".

-- 
Jonathan Vasquez


[arch-general] Newbies in Arch [WAS: Suspend seems not to work with nVidia Nouveau driver]

2012-01-03 Thread Oon-Ee Ng
On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 10:58 AM, Jonathan Vasquez
 wrote:
> I've been doing things to attract users to Arch. Whether they are
> newbs or not, because I want people to learn. As long as you have
> willingness and determination to learn, that is the important thing.
> The resources are out there, people just need to look, and I'm willing
> to add to those resources.
>
> You aren't adding anything beneficial by telling others that their
> comments are equal to troll statements, when this is clearly not true.

Attracting users to Arch is not a stated goal, this has been repeated
many times in various fora. Arch is only for a certain type of users,
those who are willing and able to learn.

I'm not knocking your effort, but a quick glance at those resources
you've provided indicate that you're trying to make it very easy to
get to using Arch, and I don't think that's beneficial for Arch or its
community. There are other distributions for 'easy-to-use', Arch
should not be that. Not because of any type of elitism, but because
Arch's niche is about control and simplicity, and making it
'newbie-friendly' (whatever that means) would compromise that.

Splitting the thread (sorry I use gmail, so it won't split for you
guys on mutt or whatever) to reduce the 'corruption' of original
thread, not that I think it'll make a difference though.