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- Subject: Bloat & Planned Obsolescence (was tlug: libwcsmbs thing)
- From: Matt Gushee <mgushee@example.com>
- Date: Wed, 13 Oct 1999 22:31:50 -0400 (EDT)
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Stephen J. Turnbull writes: > Matt> Hey, how's this for a radical idea? Just say no to > Matt> RedBloat's planned obsolescence. > > It's not RedHat, this time, it's the upstream vendor. I'll give an > example shortly. Oh. Bummer. > Matt> ... as I get close to switching to Debian ... > > Hate to tell you this, Matt, but XEmacs broke _twice_ as I upgraded my > Debian system from glibc 2.1.2pre3 to 2.1.2pre7 to 2.1.2pre9 to > 2.1.2pre12 to 2.1.2. That's life with an unstable distribution, of > course, and rebuilding XEmacs fixed it every time so far. > > Point is, it's hard to refuse a glibc upgrade, because with Uli > breaking binary compatibility in every release, _something_ will > break. > > But there really is good stuff in the new glibcs, and some of the neat > new apps won't work without it. If you don't like that, you can > always go fork yourself ;-) you'd be in good company: XEmacs, egcs, > all them YAWMs, and opensource.org itself. Hmm, yeah. Actually, I'm not really upset about glibc, in spite of having been burned with RedHat 5.0. When I think about it, what really sticks in my craw is GTK. Seems like every cool GTK app that comes out, without fail, requires the absolute latest version of GTK ... and if I upgrade it breaks every existing GTK app, especially the GIMP. Which is why I'm now using KDE instead of GNOME. > If you're willing to stick with the stable release, you should be OK > with Debian. But it costs you a lot of apps. ?? Do you mean that there's a lack of Debian packages, or some of them just won't work. > And as for bloat ... Debian is up over 4000 packages now .... Yeah, but I thought they had a great package manager ... not to start any distro wars or anything. Matt Gushee Portland, Maine, USA mgushee@example.com ------------------------------------------------------------------- Next Technical Meeting: October 9 (Sat), 13:30 place: Temple Univ. * Linux Internationalisation Initiative (Li18nux) speaker: Akio Kido * Japanese TrueType Fonts speaker: Adrian Havill Next Technical Meeting: November 13 (Sat), 13:30 place: Temple Univ. * Network Security speaker: Steve Baur Next Nomikai: December 17 (Fri), 19:00 Tengu TokyoEkiMae 03-3275-3691 ------------------------------------------------------------------- more info: http://www.tlug.gr.jp Sponsor: Global Online Japan
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