Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-06-29 Thread Zack Gilburd
On Sunday 29 June 2003 08:42 pm, Jerry McBride wrote:
> As a true linux follower I'm always looking for ways to get potential linux
> users to jump the Microsoft bandwagon. Whenever I get a chance. Until


Please be careful with converting people... Linux is not for everyone. :)

-- 
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 http://tehunlose.com
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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-06-30 Thread Gavrila
Il lun, 2003-06-30 alle 06:37, Zack Gilburd wrote:
> On Sunday 29 June 2003 08:42 pm, Jerry McBride wrote:
> > As a true linux follower I'm always looking for ways to get potential linux
> > users to jump the Microsoft bandwagon. Whenever I get a chance. Until
> 
> 
> Please be careful with converting people... Linux is not for everyone. :)

It should be, and I think we're very close. :)

Regards.


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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-06-30 Thread Zack Gilburd
On Monday 30 June 2003 12:33 am, Gavrila wrote:
> Il lun, 2003-06-30 alle 06:37, Zack Gilburd wrote:
> > On Sunday 29 June 2003 08:42 pm, Jerry McBride wrote:
> > > As a true linux follower I'm always looking for ways to get potential
> > > linux users to jump the Microsoft bandwagon. Whenever I get a chance.
> > > Until
> >
> > 
> >
> > Please be careful with converting people... Linux is not for everyone. :)
>
> It should be, and I think we're very close. :)
>
> Regards.

It should be: maybe.  Are we close?  No.  The day my grandmother can get over 
the learning curve of managing her own Gentoo box, then we're "close."

I do not entirely agree with the opinion that it should be, however.  I do not 
want Linux to be so user friendly that I can no longer use it properly (think 
Redhat, Mandrake, et al).

I still believe Linux is _not_ for everyone and will never be for everyone.  
There is a difference between being a Linux zealot and a Linux enthusiast.  I 
am the latter.

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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-06-30 Thread Janne Johansson

> The day my grandmother can  get over the learning curve of managing
> her own Gentoo box, then we're"close."

??
Can your grandmother manage her own windows computer? Without help?
Without some preinstalled, preconfigured system?

Wow, what a grandma...

-- 
Janne

"So act that your principle of action might safely be made a law for
the whole world." - Immanuel Kant

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RE: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-06-30 Thread Mark Knecht
> > The day my grandmother can  get over the learning curve of managing
> > her own Gentoo box, then we're"close."
>
> ??
> Can your grandmother manage her own windows computer? Without help?
> Without some preinstalled, preconfigured system?
>
> Wow, what a grandma...

My mom, who is 73+ and is a grandma, manages her on Windows box just fine.
She installs her applications herself, (mostly bridge games and genealogy
stuff) does her own backups, writes letters and emails to people. Grandpa
does the same on his Windows box using Outlook and IE. He runs Excel a lot,
and does his banking online. They both have a copy of PC Anywhere running in
the background, but I haven't had to help them in the last year.

In my small recording studio I run two Windows boxes, one win ME and the
other XP Home. Both run fine and never seem to get messed up, but I am very,
very careful about what I install and use Norton Ghost a lot to protect
myself.

On the other hand, I'm mid-late 40's, a computer hardware professional, and
I cannot manage a Gentoo or Redhat Linux box very well at all. Most
web-based multimedia types down work in any other browsers I've tried. Alsa
based sound is VERY spotty. Java doesn't work very well for me. Email really
does work pretty well, but I have no virus protection so I partition email
in it's own private account with limited access to the drive.

Please don't get me wrong. I run Linux every bit as much on most days as I
run Windows. I have run Wine for a few apps, hoping to give up Windows
completely, but it's not ready for prime time so I haven't been able to do
that. (Yet!)

If there was ever an attempt to have a concerted effort of making a real
desktop, user friendly, version of Gentoo, so that right out of the box it
did the things grandma and grandpa expect, then I'd love to jump in and help
define and test it. Unfortunately, it's not there yet.

- Mark




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RE: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-06-30 Thread Condon Thomas A KPWA
Mark Knecht wrote:
> If there was ever an attempt to have a concerted effort of making a
> real desktop, user friendly, version of Gentoo, so that right out of
> the box it did the things grandma and grandpa expect, then I'd love
> to jump in and help define and test it. Unfortunately, it's not there
> yet. 
> 
> - Mark

You might want to look at Knoppix.  On CD (only one) it boots directly from
the CD.  Determines hw and sets up appropriately.  Makes a great recovery
disk for just that reason.  Need to demo Linux to a Windozer?  Pop Knoppix
into their machine and boot.  Comes up in KDE as a default, lets them test
drive Linux and doesn't mess with their install because it doesn't mount the
hard drive.  You can work around this for recovery purposes, but it isn't
automatic.


In Harmony's Way, and In A Chord,

Tom  :-})

Thomas A. Condon
Barbershop Bass Singer
Registered Linux User #154358
A Jester Unemployed

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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-06-30 Thread dsoper
On Mon, Jun 30, 2003 at 12:35:43PM -0700, Zack Gilburd wrote:

> It should be: maybe.  Are we close?  No.  The day my grandmother can get over 
> the learning curve of managing her own Gentoo box, then we're "close."
> 
> I do not entirely agree with the opinion that it should be, however.  I do 
>not want Linux to be so user friendly that I can no longer use it properly 
>(think > Redhat, Mandrake, et al).

Folks might want to qualify the term "ease of administration," because
this term depends more than somewhat upon the person using it.  I chose
Gentoo for what I perceive to be its ease of administration.  That is,
no funky GUI administration tools.  I much prefer doing system
administration at the command line with vim being my preferred
administration tool.

Cheers,
Dennis
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Facilities Services-- The University of Oregon
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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-06-30 Thread Janne Johansson

> Please don't get me wrong. I run Linux every bit as much on most days
> as I run Windows. I have run Wine for a few apps, hoping to give up
> Windows completely, but it's not ready for prime time so I haven't
> been able to do that. (Yet!)

What my point really was, was that for example my parents (my
grandparents are all dead, or well on their way...) don't really know
what a computer does, and they don't even care enough to learn. 

What that means is that they really couldn't buy a computer without OS
installed, if I wasn't there to install it. When it is installed, they
couldn't care less what OS it really is, as long as they have the nice
looking button that opens the web-browser, the other button that opens
e-mail client and the one that opens word processing software (actually
they don't even know that those are the real names and not internet,
mail and writing program).

My mom has managed to get an anti-virus software installed by herself,
following instructions from her ISPs website, but I doubt if it was
easier than: emerge f-prot (not taking into account that linux doesn't
really need a anti-virus software).

I don't see how Windows could be any easier. And since I'm already
acting as a helpdesk over the phone, on a linux box I could just log in
to their computer using ssh and do the needed adjustments/updates
(unless of course, the help request was about some feature in the
'writing program'). How easy would that be for me and for my parents?

Well currently they are still using Windows, and I've totally stopped
using it (except in my work as windows developer because I really
don't have a choise). Still I keep thinking about installing linux on my
parents machine also, since they are already using mozilla etc.

-- 
Janne

"So act that your principle of action might safely be made a law for
the whole world." - Immanuel Kant

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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-06-30 Thread Gavrila
Il lun, 2003-06-30 alle 21:35, Zack Gilburd ha scritto:
> > > Please be careful with converting people... Linux is not for everyone. :)
> >
> > It should be, and I think we're very close. :)
> >
> > Regards.
> 
> It should be: maybe.  Are we close?  No.  The day my grandmother can get over 
> the learning curve of managing her own Gentoo box, then we're "close."
> 
IMHO your grandma shouldn't get a gentoo linux, rather I'd point her
towards Mandrake and drakrpm. She would be able to install e uninstall
properly as well, if not even better, as on windoze 

> I do not entirely agree with the opinion that it should be, however.  I do not 
> want Linux to be so user friendly that I can no longer use it properly (think 
> Redhat, Mandrake, et al).

Goof thing about linux is that you can choose. It exists in many
falvours, it's up to you choosing the one you prefer. "Using it
properly", often refers to managing servers which is a differnt issue
than using it as a desktop. Gentoo IMO is a distro for a power user,
having to deal with compilations flags, and things like these.


> I still believe Linux is _not_ for everyone and will never be for everyone.  
> There is a difference between being a Linux zealot and a Linux enthusiast.  I 
> am the latter.

Perhaps it isn't already for everyone (if only hardware houses would
release native drivers for all their products...) but I still think
we're on the right way and soon we will have a desktop breakthrough of
linux.

Regards


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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-06-30 Thread Zack Gilburd
On Monday 30 June 2003 02:51 pm, Janne Johansson wrote:
> What that means is that they really couldn't buy a computer without OS
> installed, if I wasn't there to install it. When it is installed, they
> couldn't care less what OS it really is, as long as they have the nice
> looking button that opens the web-browser, the other button that opens
> e-mail client and the one that opens word processing software (actually
> they don't even know that those are the real names and not internet,
> mail and writing program).

Yes, they would.  They would ask you why on earth is it so hard to use and why 
can't I open XYZ.doc that my friend sent me?  It works just fine for 
[him|her]!

I've tried getting my father to use Linux.  The drawbacks and the reason why 
he went back to Windows was because of compatibility with other computers.  
He's a business man, he needs to receive docs, etc on a regular basis.

> My mom has managed to get an anti-virus software installed by herself,
> following instructions from her ISPs website, but I doubt if it was
> easier than: emerge f-prot (not taking into account that linux doesn't
> really need a anti-virus software).

What a terrible assumption.  A well thought out and planned attack can be 
executed and completed sucessfully against Linux than it can Windows.  
However, your box is not being rooted every five minutes because virus are 
not developed against Linux due to the fact that a very small percentage of 
people use Linux.

> I don't see how Windows could be any easier. And since I'm already
> acting as a helpdesk over the phone, on a linux box I could just log in
> to their computer using ssh and do the needed adjustments/updates
> (unless of course, the help request was about some feature in the
> 'writing program'). How easy would that be for me and for my parents?

Windows XP has a form of their terminal services client/server out of the box.  
How easy would it be to instruct your grandmother on how to install, 
configure, and run a VNC server?  It's just easier with Windows in that 
aspect.

> Well currently they are still using Windows, and I've totally stopped
> using it (except in my work as windows developer because I really
> don't have a choise). Still I keep thinking about installing linux on my
> parents machine also, since they are already using mozilla etc.

LOL they are using Mozilla so now they are ready to take on a command line 
with nothing being familiar to them? HAHAHAHAH... I only ask that you open 
your eyes.  Linux is NOT the best choice for everyone, and god help us the 
day that it is.

And if you think I am a Windows supporter or troll, tell that to my 4 Gentoo 
boxes.

There is a huge difference between being a Linux zealot, as you are, and being 
an open minded individual, thus seeing the situation as a whole.

-- 
Zack Gilburd
 http://tehunlose.com
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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-06-30 Thread Owen Gunden
On Mon, Jun 30, 2003 at 03:58:11PM -0700, Zack Gilburd wrote:
> Yes, they would.  They would ask you why on earth is it so hard to use
> and why can't I open XYZ.doc that my friend sent me?  It works just fine
> for [him|her]!

When was the last time you used office software in Linux?  

> I've tried getting my father to use Linux.  The drawbacks and the reason why 
> he went back to Windows was because of compatibility with other computers.  
> He's a business man, he needs to receive docs, etc on a regular basis.

Give another example, beyond .docs, because linux has that covered.

> What a terrible assumption.  A well thought out and planned attack can be 
> executed and completed sucessfully against Linux than it can Windows.  

I'll believe it when I see it.  Where's your evidence that Linux is even
remotely as vulnerable as Windows?

> Windows XP has a form of their terminal services client/server out of the box.  
> How easy would it be to instruct your grandmother on how to install, 
> configure, and run a VNC server?  It's just easier with Windows in that 
> aspect.

???  Why would she need to do that?  ssh works "out of the box", with far
fewer security problems then terminal services.  VNC what??

> And if you think I am a Windows supporter or troll, tell that to my 4 Gentoo 
> boxes.

I think you're giving yourself too much credit for knowing how to run a
linux box.  It's not that hard, 13 year old kids do it, and some are
probably better than you at it.

> There is a huge difference between being a Linux zealot, as you are, and
> being an open minded individual, thus seeing the situation as a whole.

You've got this about as backwards as you can.  I can't stand it when
people who have been running windows for 10 years say that it's easier to
use "by nature".  Open up /your/ eyes, man.  If you were open-minded about
the situation you'd give linux as much learning time as you've given
windows (and encourage others around you to do so as well).  

Owen
Linux advocate, linux user, not smart enough to figure out windows

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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-06-30 Thread Richard Kilgore
On Mon, Jun 30, 2003 at 03:58:11PM -0700, Zack Gilburd wrote:
Content-Description: signed data
> On Monday 30 June 2003 02:51 pm, Janne Johansson wrote:
> > What that means is that they really couldn't buy a computer without OS
[snip]
> 
> Yes, they would.  They would ask you why on earth is it so hard
> to use and why can't I open XYZ.doc that my friend sent me?  It
> works just fine for [him|her]!

Because it is a carefully guarded, proprietary data format, that
a malicious monopoly protects like a pack of wild dogs,
specifically so we /won't/ have a choice.

Yes, the unfortunate fact is that a large percentage of the
computer-using world is clueless about the issue of proprietary
data exchange vs. open document formats, and yes, most of these
types are mindlessly producing .doc after .doc.

But in no way is it a shortcoming of Linux that it has difficulty
opening these pieces of s*#t!  It is not a good example of why
"Linux is not ready yet".  By this ridiculous standard, Linux
will not ever be ready, unless Microsoft completely loses on
other fronts and finally sells Word for Linux.

But also worth noting is that one version of Word can't even read
a document created by another version of Word half the time
without crashing.  Sometimes it can't even read its own documents
without crashing because they're so convoluted and forked up!

> I've tried getting my father to use Linux.  The drawbacks and
> the reason why he went back to Windows was because of
> compatibility with other computers.  He's a business man, he
> needs to receive docs, etc on a regular basis.

There is never going to be a superior alternative to reading
specifically proprietary Microsoft Word documents to Microsoft
Word.  But if things are to _ever_ improve, we need to send .doc
the way of the dinosaur, and quickly!

We demand interoperability already in almost every other product
arena - save the other completely out-of-control monopolies.
If I buy a bolt from company A, I am not also forced to by the
nut from them.  All games vendors are not forced to write their
games to the Nvidia or ATI video card (OpenGL, DirectX, SDL).  If
I browse the web, i can _usually_ view a given web document with
whatever HTML/javascript/etc.-supporting browser I choose:
although Microsoft is trying like hell to change that one.

> > My mom has managed to get an anti-virus software installed by herself,
> > following instructions from her ISPs website, but I doubt if it was
> > easier than: emerge f-prot (not taking into account that linux doesn't
> > really need a anti-virus software).
> 
> What a terrible assumption.  A well thought out and planned attack can be 
> executed and completed sucessfully against Linux than it can Windows.  
> However, your box is not being rooted every five minutes because virus are 
> not developed against Linux due to the fact that a very small percentage of 
> people use Linux.

For those that choose to take great care against script-kiddies,
it looks to me as if you are better off with an open source OS.
Plugging known security holes is the kind of thing that the open
source model does quite well.  You can wait around weeks, months,
or forever for Microsoft to decide that a particular exploit is
important enough to address, all the while simply praying for
luck, or you can receive e-mail every day about the latest
security holes that someone found, and oh, by the way, fixed and
distributed the fix in the time since you last checked your
e-mail.

[snip]
> LOL they are using Mozilla so now they are ready to take on a command line 
> with nothing being familiar to them? HAHAHAHAH... I only ask that you open 
> your eyes.  Linux is NOT the best choice for everyone, and god help us the 
> day that it is.

Again, I simply do not agree that Linux is significantly harder
to use.  Keep in mind that you have lived with the horrors of
Windows for going on 13 years or more now (depending on when you
started).  You may have lived with Word and Excel for longer.

These programs are a BITCH to learn.  They don't do what you
expect often.  They crash when you try to do things in an unusual
way (try messing with figures, floating, wrapped text, jpegs,
captions - you're guaranteed to crash and have trouble modifying
the document in any way before long).

And if I have to trouble-shoot one more problem in that damn word
processor where it is trying to correct my "mistake" and I have
to find a way to tell it, "No!  That is really what I want!"
(e.g., I don't want a capital letter at the start of that bullet
or table box!  I don't want to move that figure 5 pages further
up in my document!  I don't want to talk to your anti-christ
spiral wire thing AGAIN!).

And if you're answers to these questions are, oh, that's easy to
fix, just ..., then think about it as if you didn't find the
answer each of these problems sometime during the last 15 years,
but instead this is the first time you've ever seen this
exasperating, behemoth, vat of softwar

Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-06-30 Thread Zack Gilburd
On Monday 30 June 2003 07:42 pm, Owen Gunden wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 30, 2003 at 03:58:11PM -0700, Zack Gilburd wrote:
> > Yes, they would.  They would ask you why on earth is it so hard to use
> > and why can't I open XYZ.doc that my friend sent me?  It works just fine
> > for [him|her]!
>
> When was the last time you used office software in Linux?

Insert an image into a .doc.  Try to open that .doc with OpenOffice.  Open and 
shut case.

> > I've tried getting my father to use Linux.  The drawbacks and the reason
> > why he went back to Windows was because of compatibility with other
> > computers. He's a business man, he needs to receive docs, etc on a
> > regular basis.
>
> Give another example, beyond .docs, because linux has that covered.

See above, no we do not have it covered.

> > What a terrible assumption.  A well thought out and planned attack can be
> > executed and completed sucessfully against Linux than it can Windows.
>
> I'll believe it when I see it.  Where's your evidence that Linux is even
> remotely as vulnerable as Windows?

When was the last time that the TSC could control a Windows desktop merely by 
talking to it?  Think about the bomb that was dropped on OpenSSH and the CRC 
exploit.

> > Windows XP has a form of their terminal services client/server out of the
> > box. How easy would it be to instruct your grandmother on how to install,
> > configure, and run a VNC server?  It's just easier with Windows in that
> > aspect.
>
> ???  Why would she need to do that?  ssh works "out of the box", with far
> fewer security problems then terminal services.  VNC what??

 I wasn't aware the Linux kernel came with SSH.   Linux is 
a kernel, not an operating system.

> > And if you think I am a Windows supporter or troll, tell that to my 4
> > Gentoo boxes.
>
> I think you're giving yourself too much credit for knowing how to run a
> linux box.  It's not that hard, 13 year old kids do it, and some are
> probably better than you at it.

I am 15.  Do you run SELinux?  I have a Linux+ certification and am en route 
to receiving a RHCE.  I think I deserve a little credit.

> > There is a huge difference between being a Linux zealot, as you are, and
> > being an open minded individual, thus seeing the situation as a whole.
>
> You've got this about as backwards as you can.  I can't stand it when
> people who have been running windows for 10 years say that it's easier to
> use "by nature".  Open up /your/ eyes, man.  If you were open-minded about
> the situation you'd give linux as much learning time as you've given
> windows (and encourage others around you to do so as well).

I wouldn't touch Windows with a *barge* FFS.  I would give Linux as much 
learning time?  I first started messing with Linux at age 7 when I obtained a 
boxed set of Slackware 7.1.  I have been using solely Linux for the passed 8 
months.  Please do not assume that I do not know Linux.

-- 
Zack Gilburd
 http://tehunlose.com
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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-01 Thread Patrick Marquetecken
On Mon, 30 Jun 2003 12:35:43 -0700
Zack Gilburd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> On Monday 30 June 2003 12:33 am, Gavrila wrote:
> > Il lun, 2003-06-30 alle 06:37, Zack Gilburd wrote:
> > > On Sunday 29 June 2003 08:42 pm, Jerry McBride wrote:
> > > > As a true linux follower I'm always looking for ways to get potential
> > > > linux users to jump the Microsoft bandwagon. Whenever I get a chance.
> > > > Until
> > >
> > > 
> > >
> > > Please be careful with converting people... Linux is not for everyone. :)
> >
> > It should be, and I think we're very close. :)
> >
> > Regards.
> 
Well i'm about 40 years and using Unix (solaris) for more than 15 years now, i have 
used linux when Slackware 3 came out, and used it some times, trying Suse, RH and some 
others. This year when i bought a new laptop, I dit the switch give up on windows, and 
installd Gentoo, it hurt at start, but i can do now just the same as in windows and 
mutch more !!.

The only 'problem' i got with Linux or should i say the community that there is no 
standard or developers the keeping them, every dist uses /etc config files different, 
and this was the most dufficult part of switching.
I think distro's like RH, Suse, and Mandrake are good for beginners but they should 
use the config files all in the same way.

In September i'm starting to write a paper about switching a windows company to *nix 
and opensource (for my degree).
Everything i shall write about, i'm going to try at home in my testlab, and place it 
on my web-site so i can get some feedback from you all.
 

Patrick

-- 
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 "No... but it is... interesting..." -- Spock 

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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-01 Thread ueberlamer
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On Tuesday 01 July 2003 05:04, Richard Kilgore wrote:
[snip]
> Obviously I'm having some fun here, and exaggerating Windows
> shortcomings and avoiding Linux shortcomings, but in my
> experience, it is simply NOT the case that Linux is harder to
> use.  It's just not what everyone is used to in this particular
> country.  Yet!
>
> - richard

I was visiting a (german) police station a few weeks ago. They use GNU/Linux 
with the windowmaker WM, I guess SuSE is their flavor. I asked the 
fifty-something-year-old officer if there where problems regarding usability 
and the GUI. He said "No, there are no problems, it is just like any computer 
should be." I am sure he didn't have to install it by himself, but there seem 
to be no problems with everyday use of Linux in german police stations. 

I think that's cool. Police officers are not geeks in general...

- - ueberlamer
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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-01 Thread Dan Fairs
Hi,

> I was visiting a (german) police station a few weeks ago. They use GNU/Linux 
> with the windowmaker WM, I guess SuSE is their flavor. I asked the 

That's an interesting point. I keep reading that Europe is ahead of the
US in Linux adoption, and the Far East and Asia are ahead of both. Does
anyone have evidence to corroborate that? 

Public sector adoption in particular is interesting. Here in the UK, it
looks like the government are a Microsoft shop, with the Government
Gateway and all. Has anyone been involved in a Gentoo deployment in the
public sector?

Cheers,
Dan

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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-01 Thread Janne Johansson
On Mon, 30 Jun 2003 15:58:11 -0700
Zack Gilburd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Hi!

Your mail was sooo full of (intentional?) misunderstandings that I
couldn't believe it. Others have addressed most of them, but lets take
this as a another example...

> > Well currently they are still using Windows, and I've totally
> > stopped using it (except in my work as windows developer because I
> > really don't have a choise). Still I keep thinking about installing
> > linux on my parents machine also, since they are already using
> > mozilla etc.
> 
> LOL they are using Mozilla so now they are ready to take on a command
> line with nothing being familiar to them? HAHAHAHAH... I only ask that
> you open your eyes.  Linux is NOT the best choice for everyone, and
> god help us the day that it is.

??
Who said anything about command line? They don't use it in windows
either, and propably don't even know what it is. If I was to set up a
linux-box with gnome/kde and a graphical login, with mozilla,
balsa/sylpheed/evolution (pre-configured of course) and openoffice
buttons in the workspace/toolbar, why would the ever need to touch the
command line? All they ever do is use those applications, but because
it's linux everybody needs to do some hacking in the command line?

-- 
Janne

"So act that your principle of action might safely be made a law for
the whole world." - Immanuel Kant


-- 
janne

"So act that your principle of action might safely be made a law for
 the whole world." - Immanuel Kant


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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-01 Thread Janne Johansson
On Mon, 30 Jun 2003 15:58:11 -0700
Zack Gilburd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> > (not taking into account that
> > linux doesn't really need a anti-virus software).
> 
> What a terrible assumption.

No it's not.

> A well thought out and planned attack can be executed and completed
> sucessfully against Linux than it can Windows.

Yes it can, but I wasn't talking about it. What I said was, that
under linux, you do no really need an anti-virus program.

Since my parents_do not_ download spyware, or any other software for
that matter, the only source for viruses is virus infested emails. And
as I see it, linux email-clients do not have nearly as extencive
'run-a-virus' or 'spread-a-worm' support as say OE.

> However, your box is not being rooted every five minutes because virus
> are not developed against Linux due to the fact that a very small
> percentage of people use Linux.

Yes, and if more people used linux, more viruses would propably exist,
but even then a regular user could only hose his/her own files, and not
the whole computer.

If more viruses existed, anti-virus program _might_ be needed, but in
that case I could easily set it up for them.

-- 
janne

"So act that your principle of action might safely be made a law for
 the whole world." - Immanuel Kant


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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-01 Thread dsoper
On Tue, Jul 01, 2003 at 04:58:09PM +0300, Janne Johansson wrote:

> If I was to set up a linux-box with gnome/kde and a graphical login, 
>with mozilla, balsa/sylpheed/evolution (pre-configured of course) and 
>openoffice buttons in the workspace/toolbar, why would the ever need to 
>touch the command line? 

Because it's fun ;-)

Cheers,
Dennis

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 Update your address book to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  

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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-01 Thread Jens Mayer
* On Tue, Jul 01, 2003 at 17:38:42 +0300, Janne Johansson wrote:

> Yes, and if more people used linux, more viruses would propably exist,
> but even then a regular user could only hose his/her own files, and not
> the whole computer.

With more and more people using linux, you will have more and more
idiots using linux - as root. Check IRC for evidence. And of course
you do not have those strange /dev/dsp and cdrecord problems as
root!!!1!

Regards,
Jens

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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-01 Thread dsoper
On Tue, Jul 01, 2003 at 11:19:04AM +0100, Dan Fairs wrote:

> Public sector adoption in particular is interesting. Here in the UK, it
> looks like the government are a Microsoft shop, with the Government
> Gateway and all. Has anyone been involved in a Gentoo deployment in the
> public sector?

I've got 1 Gentoo server here, soon to be 2 (migrating from SuSE), and a
laptop I use for LAN analysis.  Everything works great-- as a server, I
think Gentoo is *much* better than Red Hat Advanced Server, but then I'm
not a big Red Hat fan.

Cheers,
Dennis
-- 
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Facilities Services-- The University of Oregon
1276 University of Oregon   phone:  541-346-2286
Eugene, OR  97403   fax:541-346-2299

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RE: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-01 Thread Rex Young

>
>Insert an image into a .doc.  Try to open that .doc with 
>OpenOffice.  Open and 
>shut case.
>
>> > I've tried getting my father to use Linux.  The drawbacks 
>and the reason
>> > why he went back to Windows was because of compatibility with other
>> > computers. He's a business man, he needs to receive docs, etc on a
>> > regular basis.
>>
>> Give another example, beyond .docs, because linux has that covered.
>
>See above, no we do not have it covered.
>

Just what is open and shut about this case.  I just did it.  No Problem.
Don't get defensive when somebody refers to a 13 year old kid as
inexperienced.  It's generally quite true.  The clearest memory I have of 15
was that I was a cocksure little bastard sure that I knew all there was.  It
didn't take very much longer to realize that I knew nothing.

-rex

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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-01 Thread Chris I
On 2003.07.01 13:56, Rex Young wrote:
Just what is open and shut about this case.  I just did it.  No
Problem.
Don't get defensive when somebody refers to a 13 year old kid as
inexperienced.  It's generally quite true.  The clearest memory I have
of 15
was that I was a cocksure little bastard sure that I knew all there
was.  It
didn't take very much longer to realize that I knew nothing.
I was the same way when I was 15. Boy was I silly! 
I can see this, looking back now, since I'm 20 and _now_ know 
everything.

-Chris I

The wind doth taste so bitter sweet,
Like Jaspar wine and sugar,
It must have blown through someone's feet,
Like those of Caspar Weinberger.
-- P. Opus

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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-01 Thread Norberto BENSA
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~ $ date ; echo ${Chris I}
Tuesday 01 July 2003 06:02 pm

> On 2003.07.01 13:56, Rex Young wrote:
> > Just what is open and shut about this case.  I just did it.  No
> > Problem.
> > Don't get defensive when somebody refers to a 13 year old kid as
> > inexperienced.  It's generally quite true.  The clearest memory I have
> > of 15
> > was that I was a cocksure little bastard sure that I knew all there
> > was.  It
> > didn't take very much longer to realize that I knew nothing.
>
> I was the same way when I was 15. Boy was I silly!
> I can see this, looking back now, since I'm 20 and _now_ know
> everything.

Heh, wait 'til you're 32 like me. Then you'll know you know nothing yet :-)

Regards,
Norberto


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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-01 Thread Ernie Schroder
On Tuesday 01 July 2003 05:53 pm, Norberto BENSA wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] ~ $ date ; echo ${Chris I}
> Tuesday 01 July 2003 06:02 pm
>
> > On 2003.07.01 13:56, Rex Young wrote:
> > > Just what is open and shut about this case.  I just did it.  No
> > > Problem.
> > > Don't get defensive when somebody refers to a 13 year old kid as
> > > inexperienced.  It's generally quite true.  The clearest memory I
> > > have of 15
> > > was that I was a cocksure little bastard sure that I knew all
> > > there was.  It
> > > didn't take very much longer to realize that I knew nothing.
> >
> > I was the same way when I was 15. Boy was I silly!
> > I can see this, looking back now, since I'm 20 and _now_ know
> > everything.
>
> Heh, wait 'til you're 32 like me. Then you'll know you know nothing
> yet :-)
>
> Regards,
> Norberto


Then at 54 like me you'll realize that most stuff just ain't worth 
knowin' an you won't care except that you'll STILL want to slap the 
crap out of that 13 year old. :o)
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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-01 Thread Peter Ruskin
On Tuesday 01 Jul 2003 23:19, Ernie Schroder wrote:
> On Tuesday 01 July 2003 05:53 pm, Norberto BENSA wrote:
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] ~ $ date ; echo ${Chris I}
> > Tuesday 01 July 2003 06:02 pm
> >
> > > On 2003.07.01 13:56, Rex Young wrote:
> > > > Just what is open and shut about this case.  I just did it.  No
> > > > Problem.
> > > > Don't get defensive when somebody refers to a 13 year old kid
> > > > as inexperienced.  It's generally quite true.  The clearest
> > > > memory I have of 15
> > > > was that I was a cocksure little bastard sure that I knew all
> > > > there was.  It
> > > > didn't take very much longer to realize that I knew nothing.
> > >
> > > I was the same way when I was 15. Boy was I silly!
> > > I can see this, looking back now, since I'm 20 and _now_ know
> > > everything.
> >
> > Heh, wait 'til you're 32 like me. Then you'll know you know nothing
> > yet :-)
> >
> Then at 54 like me you'll realize that most stuff just ain't worth
> knowin' an you won't care except that you'll STILL want to slap the
> crap out of that 13 year old. :o)

and when you're 65 like me you think twice before wanting to slap the 
crap out of anyone ;-)  Hey, I'm still 15 inside my head.

Peter
-- 
==
Gentoo Linux:   Gentoo Base System version 1.4.3.8p1
kernel-2.4.21_rc8-gss i686 AMD Athlon(tm) XP 1600+
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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-01 Thread Sami Näätänen
On Tuesday 01 July 2003 13:19, Dan Fairs wrote:
> Hi,
>
> > I was visiting a (german) police station a few weeks ago. They use
> > GNU/Linux with the windowmaker WM, I guess SuSE is their flavor. I
> > asked the
>
> That's an interesting point. I keep reading that Europe is ahead of
> the US in Linux adoption, and the Far East and Asia are ahead of
> both. Does anyone have evidence to corroborate that?

The Turku city just decided to convert about 60% of their desktop 
machines to Linux and upgrade the 40% to Win XP from Win 9x.

> Public sector adoption in particular is interesting. Here in the UK,
> it looks like the government are a Microsoft shop, with the
> Government Gateway and all. Has anyone been involved in a Gentoo
> deployment in the public sector?

I think Gentoo would be good candidate for public sector, because it 
could be tailored so that the system contains only the necessary parts, 
thus giving longer life time to the systems. The only down side is that 
there is not enough qualified peoples in the providing companies, who 
can take it in use in the public sector deliveries.



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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-01 Thread MooktaKiNG
Thats mostly becuase those using root are usually looking for help and
asking questions in IRC. while they are in the middle of install or post
install.

I sometimes do that. But i usually use it for like 10-20min. I logout
after i found the answar etc.


> * On Tue, Jul 01, 2003 at 17:38:42 +0300, Janne Johansson wrote:
>
>> Yes, and if more people used linux, more viruses would propably exist,
>> but even then a regular user could only hose his/her own files, and not
>> the whole computer.
>
> With more and more people using linux, you will have more and more
> idiots using linux - as root. Check IRC for evidence. And of course
> you do not have those strange /dev/dsp and cdrecord problems as
> root!!!1!
>
> Regards,
> Jens
>
> --
> Tempt me with a spoon!
>
> --
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
>
>





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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-01 Thread MIKE MacMartin
> and when you're 65 like me you think twice before wanting to slap the
> crap out of anyone ;-)  Hey, I'm still 15 inside my head.

And then you realize that you missed out when you were 19: that you're still 
young enough to think you know all there is while realizing there's more to 
learn still ;)

> Peter
MIKE
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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-01 Thread blade-


Dan Fairs wrote:

Hi,

 

I was visiting a (german) police station a few weeks ago. They use GNU/Linux 
with the windowmaker WM, I guess SuSE is their flavor. I asked the 
   

That's an interesting point. I keep reading that Europe is ahead of the
US in Linux adoption, and the Far East and Asia are ahead of both. Does
anyone have evidence to corroborate that? 

Public sector adoption in particular is interesting. Here in the UK, it
looks like the government are a Microsoft shop, with the Government
Gateway and all. Has anyone been involved in a Gentoo deployment in the
public sector?
Cheers,
Dan
 

In Australia some of our government was looking at open source, last I 
heard they were worried it is effecting our free trade negotiations with 
the U.S.



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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-02 Thread Zack Gilburd
On Tuesday 01 July 2003 03:06 pm, MooktaKiNG wrote:
> Thats mostly becuase those using root are usually looking for help and
> asking questions in IRC. while they are in the middle of install or post
> install.

IRCing as root is never a good idea.  Never.

-- 
Zack Gilburd
 http://tehunlose.com
  GnuPG Key ID: A79A45668240AB6C


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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-02 Thread ueberlamer
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On Wednesday 02 July 2003 00:06, MooktaKiNG wrote:

> > With more and more people using linux, you will have more and more
> > idiots using linux - as root. Check IRC for evidence. And of course
> > you do not have those strange /dev/dsp and cdrecord problems as
> > root!!!1!
> >
> > Regards,
> > Jens

> Thats mostly becuase those using root are usually looking for help and
> asking questions in IRC. while they are in the middle of install or post
> install.
>
> I sometimes do that. But i usually use it for like 10-20min. I logout
> after i found the answar etc.

The least one should do, if not adding a normal user before IRCing, is setting 
the user name to something other than root. Like with irssi:

/set user_name blabla

But of course that only keeps the channel from cheering "root has landed...", 
it doesn't really solve any problems.

- - ueberlamer
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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-02 Thread Terje Kvernes
Dan Fairs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

  [ ... ]

> Public sector adoption in particular is interesting. Here in the UK,
> it looks like the government are a Microsoft shop, with the
> Government Gateway and all. Has anyone been involved in a Gentoo
> deployment in the public sector?

  at the department of Mathematics at the University of Oslo we use
  Linux for both servers and clients, but we have access to a single
  Windows terminal server via rdesktop.  the linux distribution of
  choice around here is RedHat.  we also have some OS9 macs, but we're
  migrating over to OSX slowly.

  the rest of the university has a rather large amount of linux boxen.
  I can't give an exact number, but other departments (apart from the
  obvious Computer Science) are also major linux users.

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Re: [gentoo-user] Windows to linux... What was that app?

2003-07-02 Thread Svein Harald Soleim
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
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On Wednesday 02 July 2003 22:49, Terje Kvernes wrote:
> Dan Fairs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>   [ ... ]
>
> > Public sector adoption in particular is interesting. Here in the UK,
> > it looks like the government are a Microsoft shop, with the
> > Government Gateway and all. Has anyone been involved in a Gentoo
> > deployment in the public sector?
>
>   at the department of Mathematics at the University of Oslo we use
>   Linux for both servers and clients, but we have access to a single
>   Windows terminal server via rdesktop.  the linux distribution of
>   choice around here is RedHat.  we also have some OS9 macs, but we're
>   migrating over to OSX slowly.
>
>   the rest of the university has a rather large amount of linux boxen.
>   I can't give an exact number, but other departments (apart from the
>   obvious Computer Science) are also major linux users.


Here at the department of computer science (University of Bergen) we are Using 
Just Linux. Currently RedHat 8.0 ;(
I would rather have another distro, but as a student its not my choice.
The engineers are going to upgrade to RH9 this summer. At lower grade we have 
about 45 computers. For master grade students I don't have the numbers. The 
Whole faculty for Mathematics and nature science was going for linux, but of 
cause people protested (biology girls and such ). "We need M$ Office" ARG! 
But the new 4-year plan for IT says that open software shall be used  at the 
university at whole, as often as possible. ;)
 
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