On 8/1/11 11:46 PM, Ian Malone wrote:
On 1 August 2011 17:52, Stuart McGraw<smcg4191(a)frii.com>
wrote:
> On 08/01/2011 03:31 AM, Fernando Cassia wrote:
>>
>> On Mon, Aug 1, 2011 at 04:14, Gilboa
Davara<gilboad@gmail.com<mailto:gilboad@gmail.com>> wrote:
>>
>> ... Because if you were actually trying to be constructive, oh man, you
>> chose the wrong way to do it.
>>
>>
>> I always applaud civilized and well-argumented rants. They are good lists of
annoyances (real or perceived) from end users, and people on the list end up learning one
thing or another as part of the exchange of opinions.
> I agree. I always thought it sad and counter-productive
> that user complaints are not more welcomed as indicators
> of where developers' view users' needs and users' view of
> same, differ. But I suppose that is ignoring the reality
> of human nature and the desire to do what one wants, free
> of critisism.
>
Possibly the key phrase there is "well argued". I didn't see any
arguments, just a list of wishes. None of which I particularly
empathise with in relation to F15. (I've have my problems with F15,
but none of those.) As others have said the last two:
* Give us back the assurance of never having to reboot.
This is a silly
requirement. There are always reasons to reboot. What
you mean, from what I gather, is don't make me reboot unless it is
absolutely necessary (major kernel upgrade type stuff...)
* Give us back the legendary reliability that was the hallmark of
Linux and Fedora.
Who are you kidding here. Fedora != reliability. RedHat ===
reliability (I work with RH 5.6/RH 6 servers and they HAVE to be reliable.)
Are simply misleading anyway.
> If complaints were less suppressed here, maybe the situation
> could even be turned into a positive...Fedora could perhaps
Constructive criticism and suggestions are far more useful than just
enumerating grievances.
Amen said the choir. Bellyaching about something you
cannot change is
not going to change it and might just dig the heels in of the developers
more. I've been of that ilk for YEARS. If you have something to say,
say it, but coat it with HONEY. Remember, the song in Mary Poppins "A
Spoon Full of Sugar Make the Medicine Go Down"? That is what we should
be doing. Something like this:
'Hey Gnome devs: I know that you are trying to attract new Linux users
by giving them an easy to use, hard to mess up interface in Gnome3.
Good work and I think you've made great strides in that direction.
However, in the process, you have made things more difficult for me, the
experienced Gnome user. Can you help me out by keeping Gnome2 alive
until I learn all the tweaks and tricks for Gnome3? That would be
really nice on your part and it would give me a fall-back position in
case something goes horribly wrong with my use of Gnome3."
Many of the items originally listed were bugs,
but I don't see bugzilla ids next to them. In any case, this complaint
is hardly suppressed, it's been posted to everyone on the users list,
is in the archive, will sit in my email account till I finally run out
of server space and has generated about a dozen responses.
I'll agree here as
well. Bugzilla is YOUR FRIEND. If they do nothing
else than mark the bug 'Invalid' at least you told them in their forum
that something is not right. Do expect to see the following:
Worksasdesigned. Yep, that's the direction the developers are moving
and you are not going to change their minds.
INVALID. Same as above, or there is no bug.
WORKSFORME. You are just going to have to figure out what the
developers wanted to do here or ask for help from them (or someone else
who figured it out.)
I like the idea of a 'Survived Fedora 15' tee shirt. Add that to the
collection of miscues and broken software that I've worked with over
thirty years. What is happening here, happens to most folks who fiddle
with 'bleeding edge' software. Sometimes the edge is a little too
'sharp' and we get 'cut'. However, what we find will help the overall
project and RedHat and the Linux community in general.
James