Re: Why Ubuntu is not ready for prime time

2009-08-27 Thread Mat Tomaszewski
Nathan Dorfman wrote:



 You're right, I wouldn't expect my mom to be able to RTFM and figure 
 out how to, say, recover a corrupt grub installation or set up LVM. 
 Similarly, I wouldn't expect her to be able to recover a corrupted 
 registry on a Windows box without a lot of help.

I agree entirely, yet the point is slightly different here. I guess the 
issue is with the basic help/support, this reassuring I'm here in case 
you need me, even though you probably never will.

 Documentation simply isn't going to be read by this class of user, 
 regardless of whether it comes from ubuntu.com http://ubuntu.com or 
 microsoft.com http://microsoft.com. When a problem or question 
 arises, the course of action is the same regardless of what OS is in 
 use: first, ask my dad; if that fails, ask me.
We recently run some user tests and one of our subjects turned out to 
have been trying Ubuntu 2-3 times a week, but still wasn't quite ready 
to abandon Windows entirely. Asked why he said with Windows there's 
just so many people you can ask, and so much information on the Internet 
that if anything goes wrong there's always someone who can help. Ubuntu 
user base is still fairly small and for many potential new users (like 
our subject) there simply is no dad they can ask. The importance of 
good basic support online becomes even greater. By the way, I agree that 
official product documentation should not serve this purpose.


M.

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HFS Plus Package

2009-08-27 Thread Saheer Babu
Hi,

 

I am trying to use the HFS plus package for mounting an HFS plus partition.
But it is giving me errors or my partition getting corrupted when I am
mounting in write mode. I know that ubuntu has hfs plus driver now. I see a
similar issue mentioned in the bug area but nobody has replied. 

 

https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/hfsplus/+bug/349488

 

Please let me know whether it will be fixed. 

 

Regards,

 

Saheer

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Re: Why Ubuntu is not ready for prime time

2009-08-27 Thread Dotan Cohen
 Ubuntu may be a very nice OS, but until the average  person can use it,
 it will not amount to much.  Using Ubuntu is like buying a half built
 car. Then you have to guess at how to build the other half. All
 documentation is useless to beginners and you can't even install most
 things without using the terminal.  So, why is it sooo much easier to
 install things in Windows and Mac?  You'll never be more than a
 curiosity until this is fixed.


Jonathan, please provide specific examples of problems, such as
programs that must be installed via the terminal. While I agree with
your assessment that things need to improve, nothing can be fixed
without specific examples. Thank you for taking the time to let us
know how you feel, but please take the time to be specific enough to
help improve the situation.

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Re: Why Ubuntu is not ready for prime time

2009-08-27 Thread Dotan Cohen
2009/8/27 Jonathan Taylor gring...@gmail.com:
 Hello Dotan,

 I have tried Ubuntu several time over the past 5 years.  I usually get so
 frustrated that I go back to Windows XP.  This week, I installed Ubuntu 9.04
 on my Laptop.  I spent yesterday trying to install Flash and Real Player 11.
  I failed at both.  There is a lot of web content that I just can't use, and
 I really don't see why Ubuntu has remained so complicated.  Why am I
 grappling with .bin and .tar.gz?

The problem seems to be that you even tried to grapple with .bin and
.tar! I have installed Flash from the .debs, and had no problems. Same
with 20+ users that I support (Kubuntu, though, that's Ubuntu with the
KDE desktop).


 I'm not a computer scholar, and I'm not as
 young or smart as I used to be.  I hate Windows, because Microsoft treats me
 like a criminal, not a customer.  Mac is ok, because they make things simple
 enough for me to understand, most of the time and I only need to use the
 terminal in emergencies.  But Linix? If I go to one of the libraries of
 programs, how can I tell one from the other?  They are not categorized.  I
 can only find something via word of mouth.

Here you mention my pet peeve of FOSS: the program names. Internet
Explorer is clear, what on earth does Firefox do? Windows Media Player
is clear, what does Amarok do? If I need a replacement for Notepad,
should I open VLC, Kate, Empathy, Pidgin, Kopete, or what else?!?

KDE makes this easier by listing things as Firefox (web browser) but
it still could be better.


 I did, finally, get Evolution
 email to work as I wished.  The Open office and other programs that come
 with the installation are fine, and I have used Open Office for a few years
 now.  The rest, I have not used.  I got so frustrated yesterday that I
 unplugged the laptop and put it on a shelf, before I broke it in anger.

Breaking hardware is _never_ a solution to broken software. When you
feel that you need to break something, take a deep breathe, step
outside, and punch the first big guy you see. Either he will pound you
to bits and the computer will be the least of your worries, or he will
flee in fear of someone who is confident enough to punch him, in which
case you get enough of an ego boost to feel better about the damned
computer problems. Win-win.


 I have read the Ubuntu forums and simply watching the Colbert Report is a
 major challenge, judging from what I have read.  THAT is a prime time
 example and Ubuntu is just not ready.


I do not understand this comment. Is the Colbert Report something that
you are trying to watch on Ubuntu?

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Re: Why Ubuntu is not ready for prime time

2009-08-27 Thread Alan Pope
2009/8/27 Dotan Cohen dotanco...@gmail.com:
 2009/8/27 Jonathan Taylor gring...@gmail.com:
 I have tried Ubuntu several time over the past 5 years.  I usually get so
 frustrated that I go back to Windows XP.  This week, I installed Ubuntu 9.04
 on my Laptop.  I spent yesterday trying to install Flash and Real Player 11.
  I failed at both.  There is a lot of web content that I just can't use, and
 I really don't see why Ubuntu has remained so complicated.  Why am I
 grappling with .bin and .tar.gz?

 The problem seems to be that you even tried to grapple with .bin and
 .tar! I have installed Flash from the .debs, and had no problems. Same
 with 20+ users that I support (Kubuntu, though, that's Ubuntu with the
 KDE desktop).


I guess it might be prudent at this point to point Jonathan at some
documentation which may help him

https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RestrictedFormats/Flash

Jonathan: I would recommend installing the package
ubuntu-restricted-extras which you can do in Applications -
Add/Remove Programs. Just change the 'show' box at the top to 'All
available applications' and type 'restricted' in the search box.
'Ubuntu restricted extras' should be one of the first listed.

This package installs flash, media codecs, fonts and other useful (and
sadly non-Free) apps and libraries which many users these days find
essential.

Cheers,
Al.

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Re: Why Ubuntu is not ready for prime time

2009-08-27 Thread Jonathan Ernst
Hello,

Le jeudi 27 août 2009 à 18:06 +0300, Dotan Cohen a écrit :
 2009/8/27 Jonathan Taylor gring...@gmail.com:
[...]
  terminal in emergencies.  But Linix? If I go to one of the libraries of
  programs, how can I tell one from the other?  They are not categorized.

I guess Jonathan Taylor is joking or trolling here, one of the main
advantage of using Linux distributions for desktops is that every
application is automatically categorized where, on Windows, every
application is NOT categorized...

Start-Programs-Adobe-Photoshop v.x-Photoshop

VS 

Applications-Graphics-The Gimp Image Editor

Using Applications/AddRemove shows the same, logical, categories as
well.

[...]
 KDE makes this easier by listing things as Firefox (web browser) but
 it still could be better.

GNOME does the same; each application has it's purpose appended to it's
name : Firefow Web Browser, Pidgin Instant Messenger.

Regards.


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Re: Why Ubuntu is not ready for prime time

2009-08-27 Thread Dotan Cohen
 I guess it might be prudent at this point to point Jonathan at some
 documentation which may help him

 https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RestrictedFormats/Flash

 Jonathan: I would recommend installing the package
 ubuntu-restricted-extras which you can do in Applications -
 Add/Remove Programs. Just change the 'show' box at the top to 'All
 available applications' and type 'restricted' in the search box.
 'Ubuntu restricted extras' should be one of the first listed.

 This package installs flash, media codecs, fonts and other useful (and
 sadly non-Free) apps and libraries which many users these days find
 essential.

 Cheers,
 Al.


If Jonathan lives in the United States or some other country with no
civil liberties or consumer protection, then he may be breaking local
laws if he does as your suggest.

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Re: Why Ubuntu is not ready for prime time

2009-08-27 Thread Dotan Cohen
 You are the second person to tell me about these .debs, but where would a
 newb find them?  What's the secret?
 I have spent weeks reading all manner of heplful information and
 documentation, but where are these mysterious .deb files?
 If that is the simple solution, why isn't it put out front where new
 adopters can find it?


http://www.ghacks.net/2009/05/04/installing-flash-in-ubuntu-904-with-firefox/

PS: please reply to the list, not to me personally. Thanks.

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Re: Why Ubuntu is not ready for prime time

2009-08-27 Thread Paul Smith
On Thu, 2009-08-27 at 19:23 +0300, Dotan Cohen wrote:
  I guess Jonathan Taylor is joking or trolling here, one of the main
  advantage of using Linux distributions for desktops is that every
  application is automatically categorized where, on Windows, every
  application is NOT categorized...
 
  Start-Programs-Adobe-Photoshop v.x-Photoshop
 
 
 How is one supposed to know to look under Adobe for Photoshop? Why
 isn't it under Graphics or Photo Editors or some such menu?

Exactly.  That's an example of how Windows organizes its menus (in case
you didn't notice the Start menu reference), and it's obviously bogus.

The other example (that you clipped) is how Ubuntu does it, which is
much simpler to understand.

Yet the OP raised menu organization as a thing that Ubuntu does _badly_.


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Re: Why Ubuntu is not ready for prime time

2009-08-27 Thread Dotan Cohen
 Exactly.  That's an example of how Windows organizes its menus (in case
 you didn't notice the Start menu reference), and it's obviously bogus.

 The other example (that you clipped) is how Ubuntu does it, which is
 much simpler to understand.

 Yet the OP raised menu organization as a thing that Ubuntu does _badly_.



In defence, I am familiar with neither the windows nor the Gnome
menus. I do know that the Windows menu starts with Start though.

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Re: Why Ubuntu is not ready for prime time

2009-08-27 Thread Vincent Arnoux
On Thu, Aug 27, 2009 at 18:23, Dotan Cohendotanco...@gmail.com wrote:
 I guess Jonathan Taylor is joking or trolling here, one of the main
 advantage of using Linux distributions for desktops is that every
 application is automatically categorized where, on Windows, every
 application is NOT categorized...

 Start-Programs-Adobe-Photoshop v.x-Photoshop


 How is one supposed to know to look under Adobe for Photoshop? Why
 isn't it under Graphics or Photo Editors or some such menu?

After the application is installed, a bubble notification guides you
to the newly installed program by highlighting the path in the start
menu. This part would be nice to see in our DE's.

Vincent

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Re: Why Ubuntu is not ready for prime time

2009-08-27 Thread Paul Smith
On Thu, 2009-08-27 at 18:48 +0200, Vincent Arnoux wrote:
 On Thu, Aug 27, 2009 at 18:23, Dotan Cohendotanco...@gmail.com wrote:
  I guess Jonathan Taylor is joking or trolling here, one of the main
  advantage of using Linux distributions for desktops is that every
  application is automatically categorized where, on Windows, every
  application is NOT categorized...
 
  Start-Programs-Adobe-Photoshop v.x-Photoshop
 
 
  How is one supposed to know to look under Adobe for Photoshop? Why
  isn't it under Graphics or Photo Editors or some such menu?
 
 After the application is installed, a bubble notification guides you
 to the newly installed program by highlighting the path in the start
 menu. This part would be nice to see in our DE's.

This enhancement would be nice, but I'm sure you'll agree it's in no way
comparable to having sane menus in the first place.  It's great the
first time you install something but what about an application you use
only once in a great while?  The second time you need it the
highlighting will be long gone, and yet you can't remember where in the
heck that program went to!

Also, Windows has it's own fair share of programs whose names are not
very evocative.  If it wasn't one of the most well-known programs in the
world would you guess that Quicken was a program for handling your
finances?

Cheers!


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Re: Why Ubuntu is not ready for prime time

2009-08-27 Thread Vincent Arnoux
On Thu, Aug 27, 2009 at 18:59, Paul Smithp...@mad-scientist.us wrote:
 After the application is installed, a bubble notification guides you
 to the newly installed program by highlighting the path in the start
 menu. This part would be nice to see in our DE's.

 This enhancement would be nice, but I'm sure you'll agree it's in no way
 comparable to having sane menus in the first place.  It's great the
 first time you install something but what about an application you use
 only once in a great while?  The second time you need it the
 highlighting will be long gone, and yet you can't remember where in the
 heck that program went to!

Of course, I agree with you. When using Windows, I have to use an
equivalent of GnomeDo (Alt-F2 for KDE4 guys).

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Re: Why Ubuntu is not ready for prime time

2009-08-27 Thread Nils Kassube
Dotan Cohen wrote:
 Here you mention my pet peeve of FOSS: the program names. Internet
 Explorer is clear, what on earth does Firefox do? Windows Media
 Player is clear, what does Amarok do? If I need a replacement for
 Notepad, should I open VLC, Kate, Empathy, Pidgin, Kopete, or what
 else?!?

You mean non-descriptive program names like outlook, access, excel, 
power point? The problem isn't unique to Linux.


Nils



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Re: Why Ubuntu is not ready for prime time

2009-08-27 Thread Dotan Cohen
 After the application is installed, a bubble notification guides you
 to the newly installed program by highlighting the path in the start
 menu. This part would be nice to see in our DE's.



https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=205388
https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=197604


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Re: Why Ubuntu is not ready for prime time

2009-08-27 Thread Dotan Cohen
 You mean non-descriptive program names like outlook, access, excel,
 power point? The problem isn't unique to Linux.


Certainly not unique to Linux, but an area in which there is much need
and room for improvement.

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Re: Why Ubuntu is not ready for prime time

2009-08-27 Thread Dotan Cohen
 Hey guys,
   Are you all idiots?

Yes, I am. Why?

 Or perhaps microsoft/apple employees?

No, just an idiot.

 Ubuntu is more than ready for everyday users...I know ...I continually
 switch people to Ubuntu and have started a movement to get rid of windows
 and osx  from homes and businesses in the US  just as they are doing in
 Europe.

I have performed *buntu and Fedora installations for over 60 users,
and about 20 still use it daily. That means that for about two-thirds
of users Ubuntu does not perform some critical function, be it no
support for a webcam or printer, or the inability to run a particular
program, or no support for certain disabilities.


   You people who say you have tried Ubuntu and got frustrated  are not an
 average user...you fall somewhere below that.

Where, exactly do I fall? Below a rock?


 My clients know NOTHING about computers or operating systems and ALL of them
 work on ubuntu better than they ever could on windows It is also
 completely free including support...so my only conclusion is that you people
 are like the ones who wont go and get the puppy advertised in the newspaper
 for free but as soon as the same person puts the ad in the paper that these
 same puppies are now $5  dollars each . y ou go out and buy then ALL the
 next day.

Actually, I'm the meanie who eats those puppies. Babies, too.


 Linus will eventually take over in the US  ,, there is no stopping it.


Rock on!


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