I don't hate Ubuntu. 

Ubuntu has served extremely well, breathing life into a few extremely low-spec 
Pentium IIIs in my EFL school. Those computers have been running Ubuntu 5.10 
since that distro was released; no crash, no smash, and always does what it is 
meant to do.

Having spent days guttering about in the late 90s, in the United Arab Emirates, 
trying to get SUSE and Red Hat to do anything at all (and failing completely) I 
appreciate the Ubuntu Alternate Install CDs like nothing on earth - dead easy; 
and in a relatively short time I can have a system up and running; and in a 
relatively short time more I can tweak GNOME or XFCE around to get the sort of 
GUI I want, or my customers feel conmfortable with. Runtime Revolution 
standalones work a charm on Ubuntu.

However, the other day I bought a Pentium 4, 1.7 GHz, 256MB RAM; popped a stray 
40 GB Hard Disk into it and thought: "That's just what I need for RAD with 
Runtime Revolution in the school." So thought I would bung in Ubuntu 8.10 - - - 
 and ended up with a black screen.

That computer is now "strutting its funky stuff" very well indeed with Ubuntu 
8.04.1.

I suspect that the ".1" may, actually hold the secret of what is happening to 
Ubuntu: they are getting slack, or, in the urge to get a new distro out every 6 
months, their Beta-testing has not been as rigorous as it should be.

No doubt, in a while, we will see a "8.10.1". This however, will make people 
begin to lose faith in Ubuntu; as the idea of bug-fix releases looks like what 
Microsoft has always been about, and Macintosh seem to be becoming. I cannot 
cry about this that much as a Free operating system, inevitably, has a price 
somewhere else. Maybe Ubuntu should stop being quite so arrogant and stop 
shouting from the rooftops, and release a better, more tightly tested distro 
once a year, or, even once every 18 months. After all, upgrading (despite the 
cult of "ever upwards, ever onwards") is a slightly illusory process; it looks 
remarkably like the theories pushed by people who, willingly, misunderstand 
Darwin, and would have humanity at the top of a "great chain of being" that is 
continually improving; another load of old tosh.

Now, I have never bothered to upgrade my school computers as they do what they 
are meant to do - and upgrading is time consuming, requires an internet 
connexion (which I do not have in the school - i.e. herniated discs carrying 
machines up 3 flights of stairs), and unnecessary.

My initial posting under this heading was merely intended as a warning to 
anybody in the Runtime Revolution community who was thinking of either 
installing or upgrading to Ubuntu 8.10 no to.

I am aware that there are all sorts of ways, through exotic terminal commands, 
and so on, to work one's way round the 8.10 problem: Hey, life's to short, I've 
got kids to educate, programs to write, and so on ad nauseam.

Actually GIRARD Damien, I cannot understand why anybody would HATE any
particular operating system. I, personally, dislike Microsoft Windows, mainly 
because it seems resource-hungry, shot full of holes, and pushed by  a company 
with a cynical attitude towards its end-users. However, like it or not, I have 
to use Windows about once a month, and there are some aspects of that system I 
rather like. And, quite honestly, apart from FreeDOS running the GEM GUI, I 
find all systems never quite match up to my expectations; they are shot full of 
inconsistencies and little quirks: but, then, so am I, and so are you: we are 
human, and operating systems are made by human beings. [The reason I like 
FreeDOS with GEM is that it is so obviously a rickety old system with a 
cack-handed attempt at a GUI I have no illusions about what it can do - so we 
get along fine!]

sincerely, Richmond Mathewson.
____________________________________________________________

A Thorn in the flesh is better than a failed Systems Development Life Cycle.
____________________________________________________________



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