That's fine. I think his point is that you shouldn't talk shit about distros you haven't used in a long time. It makes you say dumb things.
I was trying to be as objective as possible. The focus of Fedora and OpenSUSE is to provide testing for their enterprise distros. Ask any Red Hat or Novell dev and they'll freely admit it.
Ubuntu is the closest thing to a fully desktop-oriented distro we have. And they have done great things, like Software Center, Jockey, and Update Manager. I just feel they are going in the wrong direction in terms of stability and need to focus more on making things work as opposed to making things pretty.
Mostly because if Ubuntu works, it's less work for me. ;P
Ubuntu is the closest thing to a fully desktop-oriented distro we have. ... I just feel they are going in the wrong direction in terms of stability and need to focus more on making things work as opposed to making things pretty.
So, basically, you think Ubuntu should be Debian + proprietary drivers + all the custom UI stuff Ubuntu does?
Ubuntu is the closest thing to a fully desktop-oriented distro we have. ... I just feel they are going in the wrong direction in terms of stability and need to focus more on making things work as opposed to making things pretty.
So, basically, you think Ubuntu should be Debian + proprietary drivers + all the custom UI stuff Ubuntu does?
Another post more about his distro and nothing about what he was claiming.
~yawn~
If you want examples of what I'm claiming, look back one page about the issues my friend had with Ubuntu Netbook Remix, look futher up and you'll see the problems I had with native games. Look a few more pages back and you'll see the problem zeeny had with Lucid blank screening, caused by Nouveau.
There are lots of examples. Just because you haven't come up against these issues doesn't mean they don't exist. Get out of your bubble. :P
I have a Mac. I used Mac OS X for 1.5 years then switched to Windows for another 1.5 years.
I used RPM before there was fancy package mangers. I still have awlful memories of installing KDE 3.0 on Mandrake 8.2 and trying to compile Gnome 2.0 (didn't work out).
I then used SuSE and experenced the inflexibility of Yast. I was forced to use apt-rpm so I could have a decent package manager. This was before Ubuntu even existed back in the Debian Woody days.
I used RPM before there was fancy package mangers. I still have awlful memories of installing KDE 3.0 on Mandrake 6.2 and trying to compile Gnome 2.0 (didn't work out).
I then used SuSE and experenced the inflexibility of Yast. I was forced to use apt-rpm so I could have a decent package manager. This was before Ubuntu even existed back in the Debian Woody days.
Man, we had the potential to go an entire page without an avatar there.
I don't have avatars turned on so it's always like that to me. :P I'm thinking of actually turning off signatures as well, but then I'd lose good-looking dude with great hair holding a keyboard.
Man, we had the potential to go an entire page without an avatar there.
I don't have avatars turned on so it's always like that to me. :P I'm thinking of actually turning off signatures as well, but then I'd lose good-looking dude with great hair holding a keyboard.
Whoa, I didn't try to initiate a "this distribution sucks" discussion. I was just disappointed that using the nvidia drivers resulted in me digging through config files figuring out how to get things working. Ubuntu is one of the first distros which enabled compiz by default and now I am left in the rain if I want to enable the pretty effects and run the thing a reasonable resolution. Changing the resolution shouldn't be more difficult than plugging in and automonting an USB drive, something which most Linux distros are able to do for years now. At least I solved the issue.
In order to avoid that the discussion becomes one sided, here are some tibits which I like about Ubuntu:
Linux flexibilty: I love UIDs for mounting partitions. In earlier linux distros you could really mess up your installation by just adding an additional drive. Especially if you had one of those Iomega Zip drives which were considered non-removal if not properly configured. Even inserted zip media during boot could mess up the device numbering. I spend many hours fixing these. It was like living in a street where parked cars would get house numbers over night - rearanging included. Because of this and the "monolith"-like, early kernel (compile for your HW configuration) linux felt inflexible in lots of parts and tailored for this specific system.
A few weeks ago, the mainboard of my backup server died. Bought a new one, put the Hw back in, set the booting device. Ubuntu continued to work, like nothing happened.
I agree that UUIDs and many of Ubuntu's features are great. Software Center, Jockey, Update Manager, and most of all, Ubiquity are Ubuntu contributions that have made the lives of many users much easier. But many of Ubuntu's strengths also come from Debian and this has been often forgotten.
The developers of Ubuntu have to understand that even though they are the largest Linux distribution, they still have to contribute back to the community. I go around and see Debian, Red Hat, and Novell developers everywhere contributing to the core projects and drivers. I have seen VERY few Ubuntu developers. They seem to be on their own little island and have pretty much stopped talking to the general Linux community.
Ubuntu has to understand that even though Ubuntu is the largest Linux distribution, it is not the entirety of Linux. And they have to do more than just backport code.
Wow, apparently the issue I had with bad framerates was due to the x264 codec or something being shit. I'm running Jolicloud from an USB stick and I'm getting sweet performance out of a high quality quicktime file.
It's almost like someone proclaimed Emacs better then Vi or something.
Lets kung fu fight!
.. really, I have emacs-envy.
Also, I just got eminent running on Awesome and dynamic tagging is actually pretty cool. I'm not sure if there's a way you're supposed to keep track of what your tags are named other than remembering, but I don't have a lot, so that's alright.
After a brief jaunt using Windows, I've decided that I like how the Windows cmd prompt inserts a newline before each C:\> prompt. It helps me distinguish between the long lists of errors gcc likes to spit at me.
So I'm all like: echo $PS1
And bash is all like: \[\e]0;\u@\h: \w\a\]\u@\h:\w$
So I go into my .bashrc and put in PS1="\n\[\e]0;\u@\h: \w\a\]\u@\h:\w$ "
Now all is fine and dandy. But when I open a new terminal, it always starts with a newline. This bugs me. Have I erred? Is there a way to remove the newline, but only when it's the first prompt in the terminal? Or am I going about this completely the wrong way?
Well, now your prompt has a newline in it and of course it puts the prompt as you start a terminal. I don't think there's any way to distinguish between a new terminal and just the regular prompt.
I guess you could put a clear in the bottom of your .bashrc and then just put the regular prompt without the newline there kind of like I have a calendar when I open a terminal, but I'm not sure.
Visti on
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
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Apothe0sisHave you ever questioned the nature of your reality?Registered Userregular
edited June 2010
I'm keen on migrating my current machine from Debian to VMWare ESXi so I can do things like run additional machines and OSs as is my wont.
Unfortunately, I have run into the following issue - I'm not sure if it's possible to do an in place upgrade and not lose all of my data.
Does anyone know if I can give a VM access to a physical, EXT3 formatted drive? If so, then I am away. Otherwise, I have to faff about.
EDIT: Argh, looks like I need to purchase myself another external drive.
As an aside, you have everything checked off as far as hardware compatibility and ESXi? It's not nearly as comprehensive as the linux kernel for device support. It's possible to add device support to an extent, and while not hard, is done in a roundabout way.
This is tangental to Linux, but I got a letter published in my paper back home suggesting that the government mandate that all "digital lock" (a.k.a DRM) be based on open source technology.
Society should hold the key to the methods of access to our media.
This is tangental to Linux, but I got a letter published in my paper back home suggesting that the government mandate that all "digital lock" (a.k.a DRM) be based on open source technology.
Society should hold the key to the methods of access to our media.
So, wait. It's just like DRM, except that the customer can potentially start distributing copies of the product at any time? I really see large companies jumping on that.
This is tangental to Linux, but I got a letter published in my paper back home suggesting that the government mandate that all "digital lock" (a.k.a DRM) be based on open source technology.
Society should hold the key to the methods of access to our media.
So, wait. It's just like DRM, except that the customer can potentially start distributing copies of the product at any time? I really see large companies jumping on that.
This is tangental to Linux, but I got a letter published in my paper back home suggesting that the government mandate that all "digital lock" (a.k.a DRM) be based on open source technology.
Society should hold the key to the methods of access to our media.
So, wait. It's just like DRM, except that the customer can potentially start distributing copies of the product at any time? I really see large companies jumping on that.
Regardless of one's agreement or disagreement with darkphoenix22's letter.
Sure, but for the customer to use the encrypted product, they need to have a key. The key itself could be tied to an account or service like iTunes or Stream, but what's stopping the customer from unlocking the software/media with their key and just distributing it?
It has all the flaws of DRM and it's even more trivial to crack.
"Trying to make digital files uncopyable is like trying to make water not wet."
-- Bruce Schneier
"Trying to make digital files uncopyable is like trying to make water not wet."
-- Bruce Schneier
My goal isn't to discourage *reproduction*. It's to discourage *republication*, which is a MUCH easier task.
I'm advocating strict fines for publishing a key or content that is known to have been encrypted without the permission of the author.
The technology would work and be presented as exactly the same as iTunes, Xbox Live, NetFlix and similar services. The only difference is that the technology used would be free and open.
"To the best of publicly available information, there is no known method which will allow a person or group to break PGP encryption by cryptographic or computational means."
I'm targetting public broadcasters at first. Most content produced by CBC and the BBC is funded by tax payers, so it will likely be free if you live in their broadcasting areas.
It would be trivial as well to add a system where you have to pay a "license fee" to get access to the content outside of its original broadcasting area.
"Trying to make digital files uncopyable is like trying to make water not wet."
-- Bruce Schneier
My goal isn't to discourage *reproduction*. It's to discourage *republication*, which is a MUCH easier task.
I'm advocating strict fines for publishing a key or content that is known to have been encrypted without the permission of the author.
That's great. It makes the technical side of republication even easier, just with stricter legal punishments.
Additionally the law this is in response to in general seems like it could have a negative impact on fair-use/dealing type stuff, regardless of how open the DRM system was.
Just installed Ubuntu 10.4 in less than 10 minutes on my old machine
I had been running vista for the last year and it eventually became so slow it took minutes to open programs
core 2 duo 1.6ghz, 2gb ram, 8800gts.
I had scanned it with malware bytes, f-secure etc.., nothing found. Defragged, msconfig, everything I could think of and I found no reason for slowdown at all, except Vista.
Now with ubuntu installed it's back to being a snappy usable machine.
I now come with program recommendations.
Here is what I have so far:
Development: Aptana, mysql server, apache.
Video: VLC (anything else needed?)
Browser: Chrome
Work: Open office
Email: Evolution
What I need:
Any iTunes quality media player that can sync with my iphone. Including podcasts/mp3's/video/etc.. (currently using itunes on my gaming machine).
Image viewer as close to acdsee as possible. e.g. fast and configurable.
Gui FTP client
Native sql db client like HeidiSQL (I know phpmyadmin can do this but is slow as hell)
MSN clone
Twitter app (used tweetdeck but something more nimble would be nice)
Themes! Never had luck with themes. I'm looking for complete overhauls, not just window borders and buttons.
That's great. It makes the technical side of republication even easier, just with stricter legal punishments.
Additionally the law this is in response to in general seems like it could have a negative impact on fair-use/dealing type stuff, regardless of how open the DRM system was.
Well it's primary purpose is for legal, protected content transfered over P2P.
Video: SMPlayer
Music: Banshee (No player supports iPhone on Linux. Sorry )
FTP: FileZilla
MSN: emesene or Empathy
MySQL GUI: MySQL Administrator
Twitter: Pino
Aquaria: Indie Metroidvania. (Commercial)
Unreal Tournament 2004: Best arena FPS of all time. (Commercial)
Quake Wars: Best Battlefield clone. (Commercial) Dungeon Crawl: Stone Soup is a great roguelike. It has a really nice graphical tiled version, too. Getting it compiled can be a pain, though. You may want to reference the Arch Linux PKGBUILD.
As far as random apps go, Gnome Do is one of the better QuickSilver clones we have. Tends to die after my laptop comes out of hibernation, though. Kupfer is similar but way more stable, way less pretty, and has a tendency to switch between programs instead of launch new instances of them.
I can vouch for Pino's superiority. It even uses the Ubuntu messaging menu properly.
Shotwell is a decent lightweight photo management program. There have been rumors that it's going to replace F-spot in future Ubuntu releases at some point.
Shotwell is a decent lightweight photo management program. There have been rumors that it's going to replace F-spot in future Ubuntu releases at some point.
Given what I've read on the mailing lists, it's essentially offical now.
I prefer Kupfer when it comes to launchers. I can basically copy, cut, and paste files from one folder to the other without starting up my file manager. And it's incredibly lightweight.
Wasn't there iPod/iPhone support already? Strange.
Posts
I was trying to be as objective as possible. The focus of Fedora and OpenSUSE is to provide testing for their enterprise distros. Ask any Red Hat or Novell dev and they'll freely admit it.
Ubuntu is the closest thing to a fully desktop-oriented distro we have. And they have done great things, like Software Center, Jockey, and Update Manager. I just feel they are going in the wrong direction in terms of stability and need to focus more on making things work as opposed to making things pretty.
Mostly because if Ubuntu works, it's less work for me. ;P
So, basically, you think Ubuntu should be Debian + proprietary drivers + all the custom UI stuff Ubuntu does?
~yawn~
Essentially, yes. Right on. :P
If you want examples of what I'm claiming, look back one page about the issues my friend had with Ubuntu Netbook Remix, look futher up and you'll see the problems I had with native games. Look a few more pages back and you'll see the problem zeeny had with Lucid blank screening, caused by Nouveau.
There are lots of examples. Just because you haven't come up against these issues doesn't mean they don't exist. Get out of your bubble. :P
This, right here?
Freaking golden coming from you.
I used RPM before there was fancy package mangers. I still have awlful memories of installing KDE 3.0 on Mandrake 8.2 and trying to compile Gnome 2.0 (didn't work out).
I then used SuSE and experenced the inflexibility of Yast. I was forced to use apt-rpm so I could have a decent package manager. This was before Ubuntu even existed back in the Debian Woody days.
I refuse to go back to RPM. Period.
That was what, close to ten years ago? Eons.
I'm quite happy with apt.
I don't have avatars turned on so it's always like that to me. :P I'm thinking of actually turning off signatures as well, but then I'd lose good-looking dude with great hair holding a keyboard.
That would be an unaccountable loss, for sure.
In order to avoid that the discussion becomes one sided, here are some tibits which I like about Ubuntu:
Linux flexibilty: I love UIDs for mounting partitions. In earlier linux distros you could really mess up your installation by just adding an additional drive. Especially if you had one of those Iomega Zip drives which were considered non-removal if not properly configured. Even inserted zip media during boot could mess up the device numbering. I spend many hours fixing these. It was like living in a street where parked cars would get house numbers over night - rearanging included. Because of this and the "monolith"-like, early kernel (compile for your HW configuration) linux felt inflexible in lots of parts and tailored for this specific system.
A few weeks ago, the mainboard of my backup server died. Bought a new one, put the Hw back in, set the booting device. Ubuntu continued to work, like nothing happened.
The developers of Ubuntu have to understand that even though they are the largest Linux distribution, they still have to contribute back to the community. I go around and see Debian, Red Hat, and Novell developers everywhere contributing to the core projects and drivers. I have seen VERY few Ubuntu developers. They seem to be on their own little island and have pretty much stopped talking to the general Linux community.
Ubuntu has to understand that even though Ubuntu is the largest Linux distribution, it is not the entirety of Linux. And they have to do more than just backport code.
Jolicloud
Haha, I was thinking the same thing. Silly argumentative geese need to stop getting jailed, jeez.
In other news: Fedora 13 runs quite well on my netbook. I swear that little machine is destined as distro of the week tester, extrodinare.
XBL:Phenyhelm - 3DS:Phenyhelm
Lets kung fu fight!
.. really, I have emacs-envy.
Also, I just got eminent running on Awesome and dynamic tagging is actually pretty cool. I'm not sure if there's a way you're supposed to keep track of what your tags are named other than remembering, but I don't have a lot, so that's alright.
Why would anybody proclaim the obvious? :P
I wanted to replicate it. Instead of
I want to see
So I'm all like: echo $PS1
And bash is all like: \[\e]0;\u@\h: \w\a\]\u@\h:\w$
So I go into my .bashrc and put in PS1="\n\[\e]0;\u@\h: \w\a\]\u@\h:\w$ "
Now all is fine and dandy. But when I open a new terminal, it always starts with a newline. This bugs me. Have I erred? Is there a way to remove the newline, but only when it's the first prompt in the terminal? Or am I going about this completely the wrong way?
I guess you could put a clear in the bottom of your .bashrc and then just put the regular prompt without the newline there kind of like I have a calendar when I open a terminal, but I'm not sure.
Unfortunately, I have run into the following issue - I'm not sure if it's possible to do an in place upgrade and not lose all of my data.
Does anyone know if I can give a VM access to a physical, EXT3 formatted drive? If so, then I am away. Otherwise, I have to faff about.
EDIT: Argh, looks like I need to purchase myself another external drive.
Rats.
Society should hold the key to the methods of access to our media.
http://infinityos.net/node/47
http://www.thepeterboroughexaminer.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=2616726
So, wait. It's just like DRM, except that the customer can potentially start distributing copies of the product at any time? I really see large companies jumping on that.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerckhoffs'_principle
Regardless of one's agreement or disagreement with darkphoenix22's letter.
Sure, but for the customer to use the encrypted product, they need to have a key. The key itself could be tied to an account or service like iTunes or Stream, but what's stopping the customer from unlocking the software/media with their key and just distributing it?
It has all the flaws of DRM and it's even more trivial to crack.
"Trying to make digital files uncopyable is like trying to make water not wet."
-- Bruce Schneier
My goal isn't to discourage *reproduction*. It's to discourage *republication*, which is a MUCH easier task.
I'm advocating strict fines for publishing a key or content that is known to have been encrypted without the permission of the author.
The technology would work and be presented as exactly the same as iTunes, Xbox Live, NetFlix and similar services. The only difference is that the technology used would be free and open.
It will be based on PGP keys: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pretty_Good_Privacy
"To the best of publicly available information, there is no known method which will allow a person or group to break PGP encryption by cryptographic or computational means."
I'm targetting public broadcasters at first. Most content produced by CBC and the BBC is funded by tax payers, so it will likely be free if you live in their broadcasting areas.
It would be trivial as well to add a system where you have to pay a "license fee" to get access to the content outside of its original broadcasting area.
With the following message:
"09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
All digital locks should be free and open technology. The people should hold the keys to our media."
That's great. It makes the technical side of republication even easier, just with stricter legal punishments.
Additionally the law this is in response to in general seems like it could have a negative impact on fair-use/dealing type stuff, regardless of how open the DRM system was.
I had been running vista for the last year and it eventually became so slow it took minutes to open programs
core 2 duo 1.6ghz, 2gb ram, 8800gts.
I had scanned it with malware bytes, f-secure etc.., nothing found. Defragged, msconfig, everything I could think of and I found no reason for slowdown at all, except Vista.
Now with ubuntu installed it's back to being a snappy usable machine.
I now come with program recommendations.
Here is what I have so far:
Development: Aptana, mysql server, apache.
Video: VLC (anything else needed?)
Browser: Chrome
Work: Open office
Email: Evolution
What I need:
Any iTunes quality media player that can sync with my iphone. Including podcasts/mp3's/video/etc.. (currently using itunes on my gaming machine).
Image viewer as close to acdsee as possible. e.g. fast and configurable.
Gui FTP client
Native sql db client like HeidiSQL (I know phpmyadmin can do this but is slow as hell)
MSN clone
Twitter app (used tweetdeck but something more nimble would be nice)
Themes! Never had luck with themes. I'm looking for complete overhauls, not just window borders and buttons.
Also any other cool apps people are using
Well it's primary purpose is for legal, protected content transfered over P2P.
Anyone have some suggestions for games I should add? Commercial, open-source, whatever... as long as it's a good game. None of that Tuxracer bullshit.
LinCity-NG: SimCity clone
Frozen Bubble: Puzzle Bobble clone
Neverball: Monkey Ball clone
Secret Maryo Chronicles: Awesome Mario clone
StepMania: DDR clone
Wormux: Worms clone
FreeCiv: Civilization clone
Video: SMPlayer
Music: Banshee (No player supports iPhone on Linux. Sorry )
FTP: FileZilla
MSN: emesene or Empathy
MySQL GUI: MySQL Administrator
Twitter: Pino
Unreal Tournament 2004: Best arena FPS of all time. (Commercial)
Quake Wars: Best Battlefield clone. (Commercial)
Dungeon Crawl: Stone Soup is a great roguelike. It has a really nice graphical tiled version, too. Getting it compiled can be a pain, though. You may want to reference the Arch Linux PKGBUILD.
As far as random apps go, Gnome Do is one of the better QuickSilver clones we have. Tends to die after my laptop comes out of hibernation, though. Kupfer is similar but way more stable, way less pretty, and has a tendency to switch between programs instead of launch new instances of them.
I can vouch for Pino's superiority. It even uses the Ubuntu messaging menu properly.
Shotwell is a decent lightweight photo management program. There have been rumors that it's going to replace F-spot in future Ubuntu releases at some point.
Given what I've read on the mailing lists, it's essentially offical now.
Wasn't there iPod/iPhone support already? Strange.