The following archives are provided as a public service to the community. Opinions archived here do not necessarily represent the opinions of Open for Business or its contributors.
On Fri, 16 Oct 2009 11:25:54 -0500, l4c <l4c at thelinuxlink.net> wrote: > Sounds a lot to me like SUSE has soured you on Linux altogether. Then you missed my point, and I'll take the blame for that. Were it not for SuSE 6.1, I would have never gotten past the introductory experience of Linux. RedHat clones come second in terms of my work habits -- some of which habits are simply non-negotiable, based on a learning disability. That was my point, in part: Linux is all good, but I doubt I'm the only one with peculiar needs. In my long experience with Linux and BSD (10+ years), SUSE came closest on the long string of used and salvage hardware which was my lot in life until yesterday. That's the other peculiar need issue; I'm called by God to live in such a way my income keeps me below the official poverty line. So folks with LDs and poverty are naturally my special interests in life, the folks to whom I cater in all things. I should have mentioned all that, but it's what's behind my evaluation. The slice of society to which God called me means almost everyone will be dealing with older hardware, and won't carry a typical user profile. SUSE is the best first choice for the simple reason it covers the broadest selection of that hardware, and is usually by far the easiest for newbies to install, so that's the good part. The bad part is Novell/SUSE has rejected the notion of supporting older hardware by not supporting older versions of their distro. That's where RedHat and friends come in, but that requires a lot more work and hand-holding to install. This is my experience helping the folks to whom I'm called. Yes, I loved Debian and friends, but I'm not the only one who noticed peculiar problems. While Etch was, by far, vastly superior to every other release of Debian in my experience, it's pretty much dead now. The Ubuntu stuff has never worked for me, mostly because of hardware issues and what I consider a totally different subculture of expectations, a different mindset and approach to things. I can't recommend what I don't really like, but I have given away plenty of their CDs. What I dislike about SUSE is what disappoints me for Linux in general, but if I have to put with those things, it might as well be SUSE. Please, don't make the mistake of thinking I haven't sampled broadly enough to know at least a little bit about that, to include Knoppix, Kanotix, Mepis, Corel, Mandrake, Fedora, branches of Slackware, and some other, really obscure stuff. By no means an expert, as you surely know, I never intended to be a guru, but to make sure I left no stone unturned in helping my ministry audience. My old complaint remains: While Linux so far comes closest to what I find ideal in a computer OS, it's unlikely to ever get any closer. Most of the folks involved, for good or ill, are hobbyists, and it's reflected in what Linux development emphasizes. It's a compromise, I know and accept. That does not keep me from wishing for something better. -- Ed Hurst ------------ Associate Editor, Open for Business: http://ofb.biz/ Applied Bible - http://soulkiln.org/ Kiln of the Soul - http://soulkiln.blogspot.com/
| Home |