Le Ven 14 mars 2008 17:05, Michael Schwendt a écrit :
On Fri, 14 Mar 2008 15:55:08 +0100 (CET), Nicolas Mailhot wrote:
For the record: I care nothing for the rpm file name.
The rpm file name is at the frontier. It is displayed to the user
by
the installer, by package tools, and it may need to be input at
the
command-line or in graphical apps.
Nope. You intentionally keep confusing the [...]
I disagree, and I see we don't discuss the same things. Perhaps you're on a mission.
No more than you are.
I don't care about what names people give their software, whether they design shiny logos with glyphs that are unknown to me.
I don't care if they don't publish any web pages and documentation in a language I don't understand. If they don't want to be multi-lingual, that's not my problem.
I don't care whether there is a software package in the Fedora repository that uses only languages I don't understand, provided that it is not in a default install or otherwise tied into the system.
Very reasonable so far.
What I do care about is that the Linux distribution is not subverted with languages and glyphs I don't understand or can't display. I also very much care about the project language that is used on the primary mailing-lists, for example.
Here you take a massive leap into paranoïa land. Most what-if horror cases advanced in this thread already occurred, and the distribution was not subverted, the project primary language didn't change, in fact it was all so little invasive it wasn't noticed at all.
So I don't follow you. The evidence seems to be we cope with UTF-8 & non-English pretty well.
A policy can be revisited/refined, because non-ASCII glyphs in
file
names are a problem in a default setup that doesn't display them
correctly
and that requires extra efforts to enter them.
These are bugs to be fixed.
So, the system is not ready yet, which is a blocker criterion as I pointed out before.
The system is never ready. This is IT. There are problems, they get fixed, and we don't wait for the perfect system before ack-ing a roadmap.
We already ship lots of code commented in other languages than English (for example, OO.o IIRC) so this ship also sailed a long time
ago.
That's still only due to its Star Office history, isn't it?
No.
That's due to the fact Fedora is a *distribution*, built from [...]
When Star Division developed the closed-source Star Office, Fedora did not even exist.
So? We ship a lot of stuff developped before Fedora existed. And not only in historic packages. And I've not such an inflated view of Fedora to believe Fedora existing or not would have changed the slightest bit in the situation.