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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: tlug: diald (was: mouse fixed; now what about email)
- To: tlug@example.com
- Subject: Re: tlug: diald (was: mouse fixed; now what about email)
- From: Karl-Max Wagner <karlmax@example.com>
- Date: Tue, 2 Jun 1998 23:23:45 +0000 (GMT)
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- In-Reply-To: <022b01bd8e31$7fe508a0$18d8ebca@example.com> from "Jonathan Byrne" at Jun 2, 98 11:19:48 pm
- Reply-To: tlug@example.com
- Sender: owner-tlug@example.com
> In some areas that is certainly true, but not all areas. > Don't get me started about the primitive, mainframe-era > printing system that gives you practically no control over > your printer. The (!')'#! Ghostcript driver doesn't even > let you choose which print quality level you'd like, even if Go for max resolution.....What is the rest good for, anyway ? > your Deskjet has three different ones (mine does), nor does > the Unix printing system allow for setting your paper size > in the application, etc. Even MS-DOS was never this bad in This definiteley isn't Ghostscript's task. It's the task of the application. In LyX, for example, you can select paper size. So where's the problem ? Actually, my Lasejet 2p prints wonderful printouts that really leave nothing to be desired. > The GUI is a problem area too, in terms of being fragmented > with no real standard, in terms of widgets sets that start This actually is good and everybody can have the look and feel he wants. I for one wouldn't like to be pressed into a Procrustes' bed a la Windows or MacOS. Maybe stuff under X is less flashy, but it's made to work with, not to be flashy. Again, I also have tried Windows in the past, but I like the free X style a lot more. Much of the stuff really is INTUITIVE, that Windows stuff is just confusing. > niceties and smoothness that you get from some other This is the stuff that's actually in your way if it comes to the brunt of daily life ! > >What is difficult with PPP ? > > A great deal, on Linux and FreeBSD. Lots of people have > lots of difficulty getting a connection established. That's Very funny. It takes me a few minites and up I am..... > manage than Linux, especially if you want to have multiple > connections (yes, X-ISP apparently solves this problem for ...which means hardcore routing, and here you are touching one of the most difficult areas of networking. The you better know exactly what you're doing or you're in for trouble. > Linux is designed with networking through an Ethernet card > in mind, not dial-up stuff. The configuration software for Wrong. Linux networks just with anything that transfers data with an ease that always stuns me. You can do real networking acrobatics with it without even knowing the details. just consider IP masquerading, protocol tunneling, radio networking etc. etc. Unbelievable. With Linux you can even use shoestrings for networking ( almost ). > interface of the software is *done right* (yes, I know how > rare that is), all you should have to do is type in the > information your ISP gives you for your DNS servers, userid, > password, etc., and hit the Connect button. And you should Good. Then tell the modem manufacturers to stop interpreting the standards in their way etc. Actually, most do, I rarely met modems that don't work with the standard init string of Minicom. However, it may happen that you want your modem to do special tricks, e.g. ignoring a dialtone, leaving the speaker connected all the time etc. etc. It's exactly there where you're hosed if you have no idea of init strings. Let's face it: either you restrict your choices for simplicity, or you go for the power. In the latter case you have to learn the language to sing the incantations. Quite simply. > this problem. Modem init string? If you know what it is > and how to use, yes, it's good to know. But more than a few > modem makers don't even put this in their documentation They do. Just they are not in the booklet they provide, but on the diskettes that come with the modem. > anymore. And it shouldn't be something you *have* to know; > the init string should be something that can be/is looked up > in your system's modem database, or provided by the driver > that comes with the modem. Right now this is still See above. And about DOS: in the good 'ol times of Fido Modem incantations used to be a big issue. Well, with most good Modems an at&f atz puts you in business anyway. So what ? > printers be the one after that, but I expect printer support > on alternative OSes to continue to stink for a long time to Let's face it: the problem are printer manufacturers. Why don't they agree one (1) either a common standard for printer command language or (2) use Postscript ? The latter is long overdue because that would actually remove all problems. > come. I'm just lucky that my home printer is sort of > supported under Linux (that is, it works, but most of its > capabilities are ignored by GS). It won't take long until a suitable driver comes along. However: due to the fact that many printer manufacturers choose not to cooperate with free developers and provide them with prototypes for development, it takes a while until a developer gets hold of one to develop a driver. I always tell people not to buy the latest stuff and not be the manufacturer's beta tester. Older stuff is even cheaper. > That's true, which is why this is an area where developers > need to really excel. MacOS and Windows95 are most of the > way there on this. A person with some experience should Oh yes ? I was more than once tempted to throw one of these boxes out of the Window. In most cases no telnet, no nslookup, no ping, no traceroute. So if you suspect network trouble you are exactly helpless to track down the trouble. Aaarghhhh!!!! And the last PowerPC I worked with froze every 15 minutes if you did heavy surfing. GRRRRRRRRRRRR!!!!!!!!!!!! > use their computer they would have 90% less trouble. But > since we know a lot of people won't, we need to make Yes I know, because they always find a knowledgeable idiot who solves the problem for them. That's what happens in reality. I always fight that. Let them sit in the shit and rot there until they decide to move their asses themselves ! > software that is as hard for them to screw up as possible. Optimist. There is absolutely NOTHING an idiot is unable to screw. Don't even try it or you can as well go out and buy yourself a rope to hang yourself. At least my experience. I have seen people doing things where I just could bang my head against the wall. > the business/enterprise phase. As it penetrates into that > area further and further, there is going to be more and more Guess why ? Because users are loath to reboot their computers all the time, fed up with constantly loosing their data and with being held up with tiny little flashy pictures by the dozen they have no f****ing idea what they are good for > companies that make them are going to make money (PHT and > Red Hat seem to know this very well). I'd like Red Hat a helluva lot better if they weren't so darn sloppy. > Right now in the business/enterprise phase Linux is > primarily being used as a server platform, and is slowly > making progress toward becoming a business workstation, but > is still hindered by the relative lack of business apps Applixware, Star Office, Wordstar etc. etc..... > and - importantly - the inability of those apps to exchange > files with popular offices suites for other platforms. But No problem: Star Office takes what you throw at it. And it makes wonderful HTML - quite contrary to that M$ junk. > begins to get looked at by companies as an alternative for > desktop use, there will be a lot of demand for things to > make it very usable for end users. Not very astonishing: Some users want to work with their computers and not constantly reboot and untrash their data ! > One point that seems lost on most of the current Linux > community is that hacking on shell scripts, recompiling > kernels, and the various other things that a lot of Linux > users take for granted as a daily activity is *not* using Daily ? Nope. To compile your kernel, you configure that using a nice GUI tool ( xconfig ) and then run it. Total effort invested: 15 min worktime. And then you7re set until you decide to go for another kernel ( maybe three months ). Scripts ? You make them once and drag them from installation to istallation. Setting up a new Slackware on one of my boxes takes me two hours or so and then everything is set and running smoothly ( actually, most of the time spent is watching the computer doing the installation work ) > everyone else, it is in reality something you have to do to > your computer to make it so that you can actually *use* it. Well, there ain7t such a thing as a free lunch..... > A computer is a tool. A business tool. An academic tool. Academics have lots of time :-)))) > A tool for killing lots of monsters and blowing up > everything in sight :-) If auto mechanics had to spend a Warmonger !!!! Yuck !!!!! :-))))) > large amount of his time working on their tools to make them > function instead of actually using their tools to fix cars, > they would be unhappy. When they were working on their > tools instead of working on cars, they wouldn't be making > any money. Hmmmm....that's a bit beside the point: Windows / Mac: Mechanics have a collection of poppy tools, but when a bolt is rusted in a bit, they break most of the time. They spend most of the time replacing broken tools. If they have to repair an unusual car model they have to buy new expensive tools Unix/Linux: They have a huge amount of dirty looking ugly tools that almost never break and which they can combine like LEGO to make new, more powerful tools to repair practically everything. The masters in the shop have developed this into an art and they even get that occasional Jumbo Jet that finds its way into their shop repaired with the tools they have - despite being car mechanics. Everybody wonders how they manage doing this and considers them wizards. Now which mechanics are the happier ones ? > A computer is no different. It needs to be low/no user > maintenance to the greatest extent possible, so that the > user can spend time *using it*, not fixing it. IS staff See above. > will say the same thing about it: they want to be able to > maintain and update it easily, with minimal fuss. This is No. They want to be indispensable. If everything works they are redundant and will eventually lose their jobs. So.... They also are stupid and unflexible ( not all, but many ). They proceed according to that "what the farmer doesn't know he doesn't eat" principle or why do you think that mainframes are still in use - despite the fact that network clusters are practically always the better solution. > The fact that NT and Windows 95 provide a lot more of this > end-user ease of use stuff and still have a much shorter > learning curve is a big reason (other than the clout that MS ????? I remember when they started at OberlandNet they did that under NT. They had no end of trouble and soon threw it out and switched to Linux and had much less trouble then. > these days as an alternative to the low end of the > workstation market, despite the fact that a Linux > workstation can actually be put together for less money, Particularly it is much faster and rock solid. > the ease of use. The idea that "of course a computer is > supposed to be hard to use" is strongly rooted in the UNIX > community, and Linux is no exception. Indeed, because of Again that problem: Inorder to make it simple, you have to take away choices. If you want all the choices, it's complex. Example: I am not a native eglish speaker. I could have said: "Well, learn just basic English and the English speakers have to scale down their language so that it fits withing my knowledge. And they ought to throw out all those sophisticated words and constructs to make things easier." If I came up with such nonsense you'd probably nuke me, and rightly so. The same applies to computers. In order to exploit all the capabilities it is inevitable that you learn the words and the grammar to tell the machine what you want it to do. > its hacker background, Linux might be even worse :-) As an > ex-mainframer, I've been there and done that, too. I still > have a soft spot in my heart for a big honking IBM 3090 :-) With VM/CMS ? And YOU find Linux complicated ? The problem with that is that this stuff is UNNECESSARILY complicated, while Linux is not. Never was. > Apple saw that, and the Mac was a huge success despite > Apple's common incompetence in business. People really want Hmmmm....they don't sell their stuff very well and are at death's door now..... > a computer like that. Linux can be a computer like that. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\ YUCK !!!! > Best of all, underneath all the nice tools, the config files > are all still there, and like you said, you hack on > TurboLinux that way yourself. That's a best-of-both-worlds Know why ? Before I go ahead and learn using the GUI tools I already have hacked it up the old fashined way. Pure laziness. Even under TL, you have first to LEARN how to use all those nice tools. On the long run it sure pays off. If you know what's under the hood, you just grab there and throw a switch to get things moving that way instead of learning how to make that computer at the front panel to throw said switch. Moral of the story. Whatever you use, it finally comes down to throwing that switch and it's YOU who has to instruct that because the computer has no means to read your mind ( however, somewhere in the Net I heard that some hackers already work at it. Maybe next year. Stay tuned.... ). > but for "where we wanna go tomorrow" :-) M$: What do you wanna crash with today ? > Right now Linux is still an OS that I wouldn't recommend to > anyone who isn't an advanced user, or at least somewhat You can. If a local guru is around and the user is ready to learn, no problem. In fact, that applies to ANY system. > forward to the day when it will be very much a case of "just > pour it in and it works." That's one of the reasons I want It is already too much like that. The problem is much the same like Windows, MacOS etc.: if real problems crop up, these users are quite clueless because they NEVER learned the ropes. In the end they are going to learn them anyway. They have to. It's only deferred. Let's face it: Knowledge is power. In the computer case it means: power over your computer. What do you want ? Have power over your computer or the computer having power over you ? It's your choice. Already Goethe knew it: "Was du ererbt von deinen Vaetern, erwirb es, um es zu besitzen" (What you inherited from your fathers, acquire it in order to posess it). Good. Maybe my views are a bit extreme. I have been tinkering with electronics already in my earliest youth, have been an active ham for 22 years (DB8CO, ex 7J1ADO), built more than half of my equipment myself, including my first computers ( yes, I single stepped my first 8085 experimentation kit in order to find out why that f*****ing thing recalcitrantly refused to work just to find out that my CPU chip had a most weird bug ), did lots of packet radio ( using CP/M and DOS ), learned networking there and learnt Linux when trying to set up a Freenet a few years ago etc.....in short, I am a total techno junkie. Ah, yes, back in the times of that 8085 kit computer I always wondered why people always gave instructions those funny names and didn't simply use their hex code instead. I had never heard of assembly back then. Now that were times....... Karl-Max Wagner karlmax@example.com -------------------------------------------------------------- Next TLUG Meeting: 13 June Sat, Tokyo Station Yaesu gate 12:30 Featuring Stone and Turnbull on .rpm and .deb packages Next Nomikai: 17 July, 19:30 Tengu TokyoEkiMae 03-3275-3691 After June 13, the next meeting is 8 August at Tokyo Station -------------------------------------------------------------- Sponsor: PHT, makers of TurboLinux http://www.pht.co.jp
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