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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] Auto-detect (Was Option City)
- Date: Mon, 19 Apr 2004 08:38:57 -0400
- From: Josh Glover <tlug@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] Auto-detect (Was Option City)
- References: <40831704.9080806@example.com>
- User-agent: Mutt/1.5.4i-ja.1
Quoth Lyle (Hiroshi) Saxon (Mon 2004-04-19 09:02:12AM +0900): > This brings up an interesting question for me - how radically different > are the different distros? Very, in some cases. Debian and Gentoo are pretty close, in fact Gentoo uses a lot of the Debian tools. Red Hat and Mandrake are somewhat related in that Mandrake is kind of a Red Hat fork. But each distro typically has its own way of doing things, and that can be quite annoying. I have always tried, when working with various Unices, to use the most generic techniques that I could, techniques which should work on any Unix. One of my biggest complaints with Slowaris (sorry) is that Sun traps you into a certain way of doing things with is not quite portable. Relying on GUI config tools is even worse, it you want knowledge gained on one Unix (hell, one distro) to "port" to others. > With SuSE, right from the start (immediately > following the install I mean), it auto-detects USB devices and - as you > put it "...deal[s] with the JPGs on the flash memory just like any other > files on any other file system." Add configuring automount to my list and there you have it. > I take it from your tips (thank you, > I'll file that and it may come in useful at some point), that your > distro didn't auto-detect and didn't deal with .jpg files without the > changes. I use Gentoo, which has the policy of installing only what you need. I compile my own kernels, which exempts me from the everything-and-the- kitchen-sink (e.g. emacs) kernels that most distros (Gentoo included) provide for the users who want things to Just Work. This approach requires that I spend the time to set things up. The advantage to this is that I know exactly how to get a digital camera connected to *any* Linux box. And verily, this is the Unix Way. > I realize that over-automation is one of the more dangerous > aspects to the buggy software from a certain illegal mainstream software > company, but how about with SuSE - does the extra automation offered > "out of the box" cause security issues? Not really, at least in this case. If an attacker gains physical access to your machine (as he would need to in order to "exploit" automounting), you are screwed anyway. I don't really know how good a job SuSE does of being secure out of the box. Gentoo does a great job, as no net-facing daemons run unless you explicitly turn them on. -- Josh Glover GPG keyID 0xDE8A3103 (C3E4 FA9E 1E07 BBDB 6D8B 07AB 2BF1 67A1 DE8A 3103) gpg --keyserver pgp.mit.edu --recv-keys DE8A3103Attachment: pgp00027.pgp
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- From: Lyle (Hiroshi) Saxon
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