After getting so many reply from my last post, I finally understand why the post aroused so much agitation.
1. It seems for some people, 'FC3 sucks' is the same as '*Linux* sucks'. But I am very sorry, I did not mean that. I just meant FC3 sucks or FC3 sucks because it is worse than FC1 based on my personal experience.
2. Some young guys (mostly students) or even not-so-young guys (what the hell who are they?) like the feel of calling somebody *troll*, and so they seize every possible chance to show off their *skills* at name calling. That's a dark side I already know about Linux communitiy. But, please note I am not saying the *whole* Linux community is bad, I mean a small part of it.
Okay, let me elaborate why I think FC3 sucks or FC3 is worse than FC1. Note that I did not have experience with FC2.
1. Installation. Well, what can I say? It is not worse, but it not any bettern than FC1. Components selection is still very difficult.
2. FC3 could not start into X in Virtual PC. It spews out tons of error messages complaining something that actually should not have caused its failure. So I have to download a temporary patch from http://vpc.visualwin.com/. See page http://vpc.visualwin.com/Notes/FedoraCore.3.Final.html.
3. After several times of kernel updating (at least 3), I finally can boot into X from the so called official kernel provided by FC3.
4. It is hopelessly slower than FC1! I could run FC1 with only 128mb memory and don't feel much sluggishness. I now run FC3 with 164mb memory, but it is visibly slower than FC1! Application startup time is almost unbearable.
5. I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For example, in gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
6. I have not acurate data to prove this, but I feel the system boot up time is longer than FC1.
7. This is a minor problem - I only installed kernel+gnome, no KDE. Yet it takes up more than 2gb space. What the hell? A normal Windows 2000 installation usually takes only 1.5gb even with all components selected. I forgot how much was FC1, but FC3 apparently is not doing better or even worse.
8. I may think of others that attribute to this 'FC3 sucks' topic.
Final words - I am not negating Linux. Actually I think Linux and Open Source has a very good future. That's why I am catching the new waves here.
Thanks.
Edward Yang wrote:
After getting so many reply from my last post, I finally understand why the post aroused so much agitation.
- It seems for some people, 'FC3 sucks' is the same as '*Linux*
sucks'. But I am very sorry, I did not mean that. I just meant FC3 sucks or FC3 sucks because it is worse than FC1 based on my personal experience.
- Some young guys (mostly students) or even not-so-young guys (what
the hell who are they?) like the feel of calling somebody *troll*, and so they seize every possible chance to show off their *skills* at name calling. That's a dark side I already know about Linux communitiy. But, please note I am not saying the *whole* Linux community is bad, I mean a small part of it.
Okay, let me elaborate why I think FC3 sucks or FC3 is worse than FC1. Note that I did not have experience with FC2.
- Installation. Well, what can I say? It is not worse, but it not any
bettern than FC1. Components selection is still very difficult.
This is a matter of personal preference. For me, FC installation looks pretty easy - much easier than any version of Windows i tried.
- FC3 could not start into X in Virtual PC. It spews out tons of
error messages complaining something that actually should not have caused its failure. So I have to download a temporary patch from http://vpc.visualwin.com/. See page http://vpc.visualwin.com/Notes/FedoraCore.3.Final.html.
Sorry, but this is a problem in virrtual PC and has nothing to do with Fedora, no matter the reason. There are a lot of windows apps that don't run in wine of Crossover Office. Is it right to say that these apps suck?
- After several times of kernel updating (at least 3), I finally can
boot into X from the so called official kernel provided by FC3.
- It is hopelessly slower than FC1! I could run FC1 with only 128mb
memory and don't feel much sluggishness. I now run FC3 with 164mb memory, but it is visibly slower than FC1! Application startup time is almost unbearable.
I didn't try FC1, but on my machine, both FC2 and FC3 run significantly faster than RH9. When I installed FC2, it really made me feel that somehow it upgraded my CPU. Your problem may be eithere poorly supported hardware or, most probably, bad emulation in virtual pc
- I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For example,
in gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
Never had such problem with any version of linux i tried. Either stop tweaking options you don't understand or (again) it is an emulator that needs tweaking. BTW, in my terminal, backspace is configured to generate ASCII DEL, and del to escape sequence and I never changed this. So, you probably just configured del to be a backspace.
- I have not acurate data to prove this, but I feel the system boot
up time is longer than FC1.
Look in release notes how to disable graphical boot.
- This is a minor problem - I only installed kernel+gnome, no KDE.
Yet it takes up more than 2gb space. What the hell? A normal Windows 2000 installation usually takes only 1.5gb even with all components selected. I forgot how much was FC1, but FC3 apparently is not doing better or even worse.
It depends on what else you chose to install. Win2k is 1.5gb and all it provides is notepad. If you learn linux programming, you probably installed development tools, and some other tools - depending on what you are trying to do - databases, kernel sources, etc. Also, did you install stuff like OpenOffice etc.?
- I may think of others that attribute to this 'FC3 sucks' topic.
Final words - I am not negating Linux. Actually I think Linux and Open Source has a very good future. That's why I am catching the new waves here.
Thanks.
Edward Yang escreveu:
After getting so many reply from my last post, I finally understand why the post aroused so much agitation.
- It seems for some people, 'FC3 sucks' is the same as '*Linux* sucks'.
But I am very sorry, I did not mean that. I just meant FC3 sucks or FC3 sucks because it is worse than FC1 based on my personal experience.
- Some young guys (mostly students) or even not-so-young guys (what the
hell who are they?) like the feel of calling somebody *troll*, and so they seize every possible chance to show off their *skills* at name calling. That's a dark side I already know about Linux communitiy. But, please note I am not saying the *whole* Linux community is bad, I mean a small part of it.
Okay, let me elaborate why I think FC3 sucks or FC3 is worse than FC1. Note that I did not have experience with FC2.
- Installation. Well, what can I say? It is not worse, but it not any
bettern than FC1. Components selection is still very difficult.
- FC3 could not start into X in Virtual PC. It spews out tons of error
messages complaining something that actually should not have caused its failure. So I have to download a temporary patch from http://vpc.visualwin.com/. See page http://vpc.visualwin.com/Notes/FedoraCore.3.Final.html.
"Product Specifications
The Virtual PC application requires a 400 MHz Pentium-compatible processor (1 GHz is recommended), and requires approximately 20 MB of disk space. It runs on Windows XP Professional and Windows 2000 Professional. ". These are the hosts.
And these are the guests: "MS-DOS 6.22; Windows 95; Windows 98; Windows Me; Windows 2000; Windows NT 4.0; Windows XP; and OS/2**"
See http://www.microsoft.com/windows/virtualpc/evaluation/overview2004.mspx
I suppose GNU\Linux is not supported by Virtual PC, but VMWare does supports GNU\Linux.
- After several times of kernel updating (at least 3), I finally can
boot into X from the so called official kernel provided by FC3.
- It is hopelessly slower than FC1! I could run FC1 with only 128mb
memory and don't feel much sluggishness. I now run FC3 with 164mb memory, but it is visibly slower than FC1! Application startup time is almost unbearable.
- I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For example,
in gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
- I have not acurate data to prove this, but I feel the system boot up
time is longer than FC1.
- This is a minor problem - I only installed kernel+gnome, no KDE. Yet
it takes up more than 2gb space. What the hell? A normal Windows 2000 installation usually takes only 1.5gb even with all components selected. I forgot how much was FC1, but FC3 apparently is not doing better or even worse.
- I may think of others that attribute to this 'FC3 sucks' topic.
Final words - I am not negating Linux. Actually I think Linux and Open Source has a very good future. That's why I am catching the new waves here.
Thanks.
Vinicius escreveu:
Edward Yang escreveu:
After getting so many reply from my last post, I finally understand why the post aroused so much agitation.
- It seems for some people, 'FC3 sucks' is the same as '*Linux*
sucks'. But I am very sorry, I did not mean that. I just meant FC3 sucks or FC3 sucks because it is worse than FC1 based on my personal experience.
- Some young guys (mostly students) or even not-so-young guys (what
the hell who are they?) like the feel of calling somebody *troll*, and so they seize every possible chance to show off their *skills* at name calling. That's a dark side I already know about Linux communitiy. But, please note I am not saying the *whole* Linux community is bad, I mean a small part of it.
Okay, let me elaborate why I think FC3 sucks or FC3 is worse than FC1. Note that I did not have experience with FC2.
- Installation. Well, what can I say? It is not worse, but it not any
bettern than FC1. Components selection is still very difficult.
- FC3 could not start into X in Virtual PC. It spews out tons of
error messages complaining something that actually should not have caused its failure. So I have to download a temporary patch from http://vpc.visualwin.com/. See page http://vpc.visualwin.com/Notes/FedoraCore.3.Final.html.
"Product Specifications
The Virtual PC application requires a 400 MHz Pentium-compatible processor (1 GHz is recommended), and requires approximately 20 MB of disk space. It runs on Windows XP Professional and Windows 2000 Professional. ". These are the hosts.
And these are the guests: "MS-DOS 6.22; Windows 95; Windows 98; Windows Me; Windows 2000; Windows NT 4.0; Windows XP; and OS/2**"
See http://www.microsoft.com/windows/virtualpc/evaluation/overview2004.mspx
I suppose GNU\Linux is not supported by Virtual PC, but VMWare does supports GNU\Linux.
But the KB has another things to say: Cannot Install a Red Hat Linux 6.2 Guest PC in Virtual PC: http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;824668 How to Install a Linux Virtual PC: http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;824513 X-Windows Display Is Corrupted or Does Not Appear When You Install Linux as a Guest Operating System: http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;825379
- After several times of kernel updating (at least 3), I finally can
boot into X from the so called official kernel provided by FC3.
- It is hopelessly slower than FC1! I could run FC1 with only 128mb
memory and don't feel much sluggishness. I now run FC3 with 164mb memory, but it is visibly slower than FC1! Application startup time is almost unbearable.
- I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For example,
in gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
- I have not acurate data to prove this, but I feel the system boot
up time is longer than FC1.
- This is a minor problem - I only installed kernel+gnome, no KDE.
Yet it takes up more than 2gb space. What the hell? A normal Windows 2000 installation usually takes only 1.5gb even with all components selected. I forgot how much was FC1, but FC3 apparently is not doing better or even worse.
- I may think of others that attribute to this 'FC3 sucks' topic.
Final words - I am not negating Linux. Actually I think Linux and Open Source has a very good future. That's why I am catching the new waves here.
Thanks.
Vinicius wrote:
Edward Yang escreveu:
After getting so many reply from my last post, I finally understand why the post aroused so much agitation.
- It seems for some people, 'FC3 sucks' is the same as '*Linux*
sucks'. But I am very sorry, I did not mean that. I just meant FC3 sucks or FC3 sucks because it is worse than FC1 based on my personal experience.
- Some young guys (mostly students) or even not-so-young guys (what
the hell who are they?) like the feel of calling somebody *troll*, and so they seize every possible chance to show off their *skills* at name calling. That's a dark side I already know about Linux communitiy. But, please note I am not saying the *whole* Linux community is bad, I mean a small part of it.
Okay, let me elaborate why I think FC3 sucks or FC3 is worse than FC1. Note that I did not have experience with FC2.
- Installation. Well, what can I say? It is not worse, but it not
any bettern than FC1. Components selection is still very difficult.
- FC3 could not start into X in Virtual PC. It spews out tons of
error messages complaining something that actually should not have caused its failure. So I have to download a temporary patch from http://vpc.visualwin.com/. See page http://vpc.visualwin.com/Notes/FedoraCore.3.Final.html.
"Product Specifications
The Virtual PC application requires a 400 MHz Pentium-compatible processor (1 GHz is recommended), and requires approximately 20 MB of disk space. It runs on Windows XP Professional and Windows 2000 Professional. ". These are the hosts.
And these are the guests: "MS-DOS 6.22; Windows 95; Windows 98; Windows Me; Windows 2000; Windows NT 4.0; Windows XP; and OS/2**"
See http://www.microsoft.com/windows/virtualpc/evaluation/overview2004.mspx
I suppose GNU\Linux is not supported by Virtual PC, but VMWare does supports GNU\Linux.
Haha, you believe what Microsoft says?
Microsoft or m$ bought Virtual PC from Connectix, which had very good support for Linux. What m$ di is remove Linux or even Unix from the supported list and added a few buggy features and pack it and sell it as Microsofot Virtual PC 2004! If you use Virtual PC you can find an 'Other...' option when you create a VM. That 'Other...' is for Linux! I don't think m$ took time to remove the already working code for supporting Linux.
- After several times of kernel updating (at least 3), I finally can
boot into X from the so called official kernel provided by FC3.
- It is hopelessly slower than FC1! I could run FC1 with only 128mb
memory and don't feel much sluggishness. I now run FC3 with 164mb memory, but it is visibly slower than FC1! Application startup time is almost unbearable.
- I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For
example, in gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
- I have not acurate data to prove this, but I feel the system boot
up time is longer than FC1.
- This is a minor problem - I only installed kernel+gnome, no KDE.
Yet it takes up more than 2gb space. What the hell? A normal Windows 2000 installation usually takes only 1.5gb even with all components selected. I forgot how much was FC1, but FC3 apparently is not doing better or even worse.
- I may think of others that attribute to this 'FC3 sucks' topic.
Final words - I am not negating Linux. Actually I think Linux and Open Source has a very good future. That's why I am catching the new waves here.
Thanks.
Pasha wrote:
Edward Yang wrote:
After getting so many reply from my last post, I finally understand why the post aroused so much agitation.
- It seems for some people, 'FC3 sucks' is the same as '*Linux*
sucks'. But I am very sorry, I did not mean that. I just meant FC3 sucks or FC3 sucks because it is worse than FC1 based on my personal experience.
- Some young guys (mostly students) or even not-so-young guys (what
the hell who are they?) like the feel of calling somebody *troll*, and so they seize every possible chance to show off their *skills* at name calling. That's a dark side I already know about Linux communitiy. But, please note I am not saying the *whole* Linux community is bad, I mean a small part of it.
Okay, let me elaborate why I think FC3 sucks or FC3 is worse than FC1. Note that I did not have experience with FC2.
- Installation. Well, what can I say? It is not worse, but it not
any bettern than FC1. Components selection is still very difficult.
This is a matter of personal preference. For me, FC installation looks pretty easy - much easier than any version of Windows i tried.
- FC3 could not start into X in Virtual PC. It spews out tons of
error messages complaining something that actually should not have caused its failure. So I have to download a temporary patch from http://vpc.visualwin.com/. See page http://vpc.visualwin.com/Notes/FedoraCore.3.Final.html.
Sorry, but this is a problem in virrtual PC and has nothing to do with Fedora, no matter the reason. There are a lot of windows apps that don't run in wine of Crossover Office. Is it right to say that these apps suck?
- After several times of kernel updating (at least 3), I finally can
boot into X from the so called official kernel provided by FC3.
- It is hopelessly slower than FC1! I could run FC1 with only 128mb
memory and don't feel much sluggishness. I now run FC3 with 164mb memory, but it is visibly slower than FC1! Application startup time is almost unbearable.
I didn't try FC1, but on my machine, both FC2 and FC3 run significantly faster than RH9. When I installed FC2, it really made me feel that somehow it upgraded my CPU. Your problem may be eithere poorly supported hardware or, most probably, bad emulation in virtual pc
- I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For
example, in gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
Never had such problem with any version of linux i tried. Either stop tweaking options you don't understand or (again) it is an emulator that needs tweaking. BTW, in my terminal, backspace is configured to generate ASCII DEL, and del to escape sequence and I never changed this. So, you probably just configured del to be a backspace.
What do you define the word 'bug' in software world? In my dictionary, bug at least means one thing - it does not work as it should to work. Your above comment is like saying - that DEL option is the ears of a deaf, don't use it!
- I have not acurate data to prove this, but I feel the system boot
up time is longer than FC1.
Look in release notes how to disable graphical boot.
- This is a minor problem - I only installed kernel+gnome, no KDE.
Yet it takes up more than 2gb space. What the hell? A normal Windows 2000 installation usually takes only 1.5gb even with all components selected. I forgot how much was FC1, but FC3 apparently is not doing better or even worse.
It depends on what else you chose to install. Win2k is 1.5gb and all it provides is notepad. If you learn linux programming, you probably installed development tools, and some other tools - depending on what you are trying to do - databases, kernel sources, etc. Also, did you install stuff like OpenOffice etc.?
- I may think of others that attribute to this 'FC3 sucks' topic.
Final words - I am not negating Linux. Actually I think Linux and Open Source has a very good future. That's why I am catching the new waves here.
Thanks.
Vinicius wrote:
Vinicius escreveu:
Edward Yang escreveu:
After getting so many reply from my last post, I finally understand why the post aroused so much agitation.
- It seems for some people, 'FC3 sucks' is the same as '*Linux*
sucks'. But I am very sorry, I did not mean that. I just meant FC3 sucks or FC3 sucks because it is worse than FC1 based on my personal experience.
- Some young guys (mostly students) or even not-so-young guys (what
the hell who are they?) like the feel of calling somebody *troll*, and so they seize every possible chance to show off their *skills* at name calling. That's a dark side I already know about Linux communitiy. But, please note I am not saying the *whole* Linux community is bad, I mean a small part of it.
Okay, let me elaborate why I think FC3 sucks or FC3 is worse than FC1. Note that I did not have experience with FC2.
- Installation. Well, what can I say? It is not worse, but it not
any bettern than FC1. Components selection is still very difficult.
- FC3 could not start into X in Virtual PC. It spews out tons of
error messages complaining something that actually should not have caused its failure. So I have to download a temporary patch from http://vpc.visualwin.com/. See page http://vpc.visualwin.com/Notes/FedoraCore.3.Final.html.
"Product Specifications
The Virtual PC application requires a 400 MHz Pentium-compatible processor (1 GHz is recommended), and requires approximately 20 MB of disk space. It runs on Windows XP Professional and Windows 2000 Professional. ". These are the hosts.
And these are the guests: "MS-DOS 6.22; Windows 95; Windows 98; Windows Me; Windows 2000; Windows NT 4.0; Windows XP; and OS/2**"
See http://www.microsoft.com/windows/virtualpc/evaluation/overview2004.mspx
I suppose GNU\Linux is not supported by Virtual PC, but VMWare does supports GNU\Linux.
But the KB has another things to say: Cannot Install a Red Hat Linux 6.2 Guest PC in Virtual PC: http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;824668 How to Install a Linux Virtual PC: http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;824513 X-Windows Display Is Corrupted or Does Not Appear When You Install Linux as a Guest Operating System: http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;825379
I did not install RH 6.2. I installed FC1/FC3.
- After several times of kernel updating (at least 3), I finally
can boot into X from the so called official kernel provided by FC3.
- It is hopelessly slower than FC1! I could run FC1 with only 128mb
memory and don't feel much sluggishness. I now run FC3 with 164mb memory, but it is visibly slower than FC1! Application startup time is almost unbearable.
- I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For
example, in gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
- I have not acurate data to prove this, but I feel the system boot
up time is longer than FC1.
- This is a minor problem - I only installed kernel+gnome, no KDE.
Yet it takes up more than 2gb space. What the hell? A normal Windows 2000 installation usually takes only 1.5gb even with all components selected. I forgot how much was FC1, but FC3 apparently is not doing better or even worse.
- I may think of others that attribute to this 'FC3 sucks' topic.
Final words - I am not negating Linux. Actually I think Linux and Open Source has a very good future. That's why I am catching the new waves here.
Thanks.
I've found out many times that if you try to install/upgrade/run systems in a non standard manner, you can often come up against problems, while I have spent many an evening banging my head against a wall, I still have to think at the end of the day, the coders made it work a cetain way, I've tried to change it, so the blame falls on me ;p Sorry just my 2 cents, I love fedora, and I have tried most distros, fedora is my personal favorite, runs fast, smoothly and has all the functions I need. Pete
From: Edward Yang neo_in_matrix@fastmail.fm Reply-To: For users of Fedora Core releases fedora-list@redhat.com To: For users of Fedora Core releases fedora-list@redhat.com Subject: Why I think FC3 sucks! Date: Thu, 27 Jan 2005 17:59:25 +0800 MIME-Version: 1.0 Received: from hormel.redhat.com ([209.132.177.30]) by mc4-f2.hotmail.com with Microsoft SMTPSVC(6.0.3790.211); Thu, 27 Jan 2005 01:59:43 -0800 Received: from listman.util.phx.redhat.com (listman.util.phx.redhat.com [10.8.4.110])by hormel.redhat.com (Postfix) with ESMTPid 5AE8973778; Thu, 27 Jan 2005 04:59:35 -0500 (EST) Received: from int-mx1.corp.redhat.com (int-mx1.corp.redhat.com[172.16.52.254])by listman.util.phx.redhat.com (8.12.11/8.12.10) with ESMTP idj0R9xPSH030084 for fedora-list@listman.util.phx.redhat.com;Thu, 27 Jan 2005 04:59:26 -0500 Received: from mx3.redhat.com (mx3.redhat.com [172.16.48.32])by int-mx1.corp.redhat.com (8.11.6/8.11.6) with ESMTP id j0R9xPO32625for fedora-list@redhat.com; Thu, 27 Jan 2005 04:59:25 -0500 Received: from sina.com (sina187-156.sina.com.cn [202.106.187.156] (may beforged))by mx3.redhat.com (8.12.11/8.12.11) with SMTP id j0R9xH9g020576for fedora-list@redhat.com; Thu, 27 Jan 2005 04:59:18 -0500 Received: (qmail 99021 invoked from network); 27 Jan 2005 09:59:13 -0000 Received: from unknown (HELO ?192.168.0.122?) (210.22.170.62)by 202.106.187.156 with SMTP; 27 Jan 2005 09:59:13 -0000 Received: from(edyang75@sina.com) to(fedora-list@redhat.com) X-Message-Info: vAu4ZEtdRihCsBxqqlr4Srn+xXHGKEJUoMp6f5srIZ8= User-Agent: Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0 (Windows/20050126) X-Accept-Language: en-us, en X-RedHat-Spam-Score: 0.001 X-loop: fedora-list@redhat.com X-BeenThere: fedora-list@redhat.com X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.5 Precedence: junk List-Id: For users of Fedora Core releases <fedora-list.redhat.com> List-Unsubscribe: http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list,mailto:fedora-list-request@redhat.com?subject=unsubscribe List-Archive: https://www.redhat.com/archives/fedora-list List-Post: mailto:fedora-list@redhat.com List-Help: mailto:fedora-list-request@redhat.com?subject=help List-Subscribe: http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list,mailto:fedora-list-request@redhat.com?subject=subscribe Errors-To: fedora-list-bounces@redhat.com Return-Path: fedora-list-bounces@redhat.com X-OriginalArrivalTime: 27 Jan 2005 09:59:45.0192 (UTC) FILETIME=[EDB88A80:01C50456]
After getting so many reply from my last post, I finally understand why the post aroused so much agitation.
- It seems for some people, 'FC3 sucks' is the same as '*Linux* sucks'.
But I am very sorry, I did not mean that. I just meant FC3 sucks or FC3 sucks because it is worse than FC1 based on my personal experience.
- Some young guys (mostly students) or even not-so-young guys (what the
hell who are they?) like the feel of calling somebody *troll*, and so they seize every possible chance to show off their *skills* at name calling. That's a dark side I already know about Linux communitiy. But, please note I am not saying the *whole* Linux community is bad, I mean a small part of it.
Okay, let me elaborate why I think FC3 sucks or FC3 is worse than FC1. Note that I did not have experience with FC2.
- Installation. Well, what can I say? It is not worse, but it not any
bettern than FC1. Components selection is still very difficult.
- FC3 could not start into X in Virtual PC. It spews out tons of error
messages complaining something that actually should not have caused its failure. So I have to download a temporary patch from http://vpc.visualwin.com/. See page http://vpc.visualwin.com/Notes/FedoraCore.3.Final.html.
- After several times of kernel updating (at least 3), I finally can boot
into X from the so called official kernel provided by FC3.
- It is hopelessly slower than FC1! I could run FC1 with only 128mb memory
and don't feel much sluggishness. I now run FC3 with 164mb memory, but it is visibly slower than FC1! Application startup time is almost unbearable.
- I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For example, in
gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
- I have not acurate data to prove this, but I feel the system boot up
time is longer than FC1.
- This is a minor problem - I only installed kernel+gnome, no KDE. Yet it
takes up more than 2gb space. What the hell? A normal Windows 2000 installation usually takes only 1.5gb even with all components selected. I forgot how much was FC1, but FC3 apparently is not doing better or even worse.
- I may think of others that attribute to this 'FC3 sucks' topic.
Final words - I am not negating Linux. Actually I think Linux and Open Source has a very good future. That's why I am catching the new waves here.
Thanks.
-- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@redhat.com To unsubscribe: http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list
- I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For
example, in gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
Never had such problem with any version of linux i tried. Either stop tweaking options you don't understand or (again) it is an emulator that needs tweaking. BTW, in my terminal, backspace is configured to generate ASCII DEL, and del to escape sequence and I never changed this. So, you probably just configured del to be a backspace.
What do you define the word 'bug' in software world? In my dictionary, bug at least means one thing - it does not work as it should to work. Your above comment is like saying - that DEL option is the ears of a deaf, don't use it!
Where is the bug here? You configure DEL to be BACKSPACE and complain that it generates BACKSPACE. Change your setting to default and it will work as you expect it to work. This option is probably for compatibility with some terminals, where DEL works as backspace. If you don't want it to act that way, don't configure it so.
Pasha wrote:
- I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For
example, in gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
Never had such problem with any version of linux i tried. Either stop tweaking options you don't understand or (again) it is an emulator that needs tweaking. BTW, in my terminal, backspace is configured to generate ASCII DEL, and del to escape sequence and I never changed this. So, you probably just configured del to be a backspace.
What do you define the word 'bug' in software world? In my dictionary, bug at least means one thing - it does not work as it should to work. Your above comment is like saying - that DEL option is the ears of a deaf, don't use it!
Where is the bug here? You configure DEL to be BACKSPACE and complain that it generates BACKSPACE. Change your setting to default and it will work as you expect it to work. This option is probably for compatibility with some terminals, where DEL works as backspace. If you don't want it to act that way, don't configure it so.
Can you read???????????????? I said:
if I set DEL to ASCII DEL
Edward Yang wrote:
Pasha wrote:
- I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For
example, in gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
Never had such problem with any version of linux i tried. Either stop tweaking options you don't understand or (again) it is an emulator that needs tweaking. BTW, in my terminal, backspace is configured to generate ASCII DEL, and del to escape sequence and I never changed this. So, you probably just configured del to be a backspace.
What do you define the word 'bug' in software world? In my dictionary, bug at least means one thing - it does not work as it should to work. Your above comment is like saying - that DEL option is the ears of a deaf, don't use it!
Where is the bug here? You configure DEL to be BACKSPACE and complain that it generates BACKSPACE. Change your setting to default and it will work as you expect it to work. This option is probably for compatibility with some terminals, where DEL works as backspace. If you don't want it to act that way, don't configure it so.
Can you read???????????????? I said:
if I set DEL to ASCII DEL
First, there is no need to shout. Second, please turn off HTML when you post to this list. In Thunderbird composition window, select Options/Format/Plain Text.
If you look more closely, you can see that ASCII DEL is also generated by backspace. For me this means, that if I set Del to the same setting as backspace, it will act the same way as backspace. Also, you may be surprised, but originally ASCII DEL (and delete key) acted as backspace. I don't remember where it was changed, probably in MS-DOS. Anyway, there are a lot of hints telling that you should not touch that setting at all. In any case this is not a bug.
Edward Yang wrote:
After getting so many reply from my last post, I finally understand why the post aroused so much agitation.
- It seems for some people, 'FC3 sucks' is the same as '*Linux*
sucks'. But I am very sorry, I did not mean that. I just meant FC3 sucks or FC3 sucks because it is worse than FC1 based on my personal experience.
- Some young guys (mostly students) or even not-so-young guys (what
the hell who are they?) like the feel of calling somebody *troll*, and so they seize every possible chance to show off their *skills* at name calling. That's a dark side I already know about Linux communitiy. But, please note I am not saying the *whole* Linux community is bad, I mean a small part of it.
Okay, let me elaborate why I think FC3 sucks or FC3 is worse than FC1. Note that I did not have experience with FC2.
- Installation. Well, what can I say? It is not worse, but it not any
bettern than FC1. Components selection is still very difficult.
- FC3 could not start into X in Virtual PC. It spews out tons of
error messages complaining something that actually should not have caused its failure. So I have to download a temporary patch from http://vpc.visualwin.com/. See page http://vpc.visualwin.com/Notes/FedoraCore.3.Final.html.
- After several times of kernel updating (at least 3), I finally can
boot into X from the so called official kernel provided by FC3.
- It is hopelessly slower than FC1! I could run FC1 with only 128mb
memory and don't feel much sluggishness. I now run FC3 with 164mb memory, but it is visibly slower than FC1! Application startup time is almost unbearable.
- I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For example,
in gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
- I have not acurate data to prove this, but I feel the system boot
up time is longer than FC1.
- This is a minor problem - I only installed kernel+gnome, no KDE.
Yet it takes up more than 2gb space. What the hell? A normal Windows 2000 installation usually takes only 1.5gb even with all components selected. I forgot how much was FC1, but FC3 apparently is not doing better or even worse.
- I may think of others that attribute to this 'FC3 sucks' topic.
Final words - I am not negating Linux. Actually I think Linux and Open Source has a very good future. That's why I am catching the new waves here.
Thanks.
Here is number 8!
I just found out that on FC3 Borland C++Builder takes more than 400mb memory! While on Windows, it only takes a little more than 60mb.This is making me believe that System Monitor is having a bug about calculating memory size...
And number 9: Though I have screen saver disabled, but I still get xscreensaver in my session. :-(
Pasha wrote:
Edward Yang wrote:
Pasha wrote:
- I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For
example, in gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
Never had such problem with any version of linux i tried. Either stop tweaking options you don't understand or (again) it is an emulator that needs tweaking. BTW, in my terminal, backspace is configured to generate ASCII DEL, and del to escape sequence and I never changed this. So, you probably just configured del to be a backspace.
What do you define the word 'bug' in software world? In my dictionary, bug at least means one thing - it does not work as it should to work. Your above comment is like saying - that DEL option is the ears of a deaf, don't use it!
Where is the bug here? You configure DEL to be BACKSPACE and complain that it generates BACKSPACE. Change your setting to default and it will work as you expect it to work. This option is probably for compatibility with some terminals, where DEL works as backspace. If you don't want it to act that way, don't configure it so.
Can you read???????????????? I said:
if I set DEL to ASCII DEL
First, there is no need to shout. Second, please turn off HTML when you post to this list. In Thunderbird composition window, select Options/Format/Plain Text.
If you look more closely, you can see that ASCII DEL is also generated by backspace. For me this means, that if I set Del to the same setting as backspace, it will act the same way as backspace. Also, you may be surprised, but originally ASCII DEL (and delete key) acted as backspace. I don't remember where it was changed, probably in MS-DOS. Anyway, there are a lot of hints telling that you should not touch that setting at all. In any case this is not a bug.
Okay, I like posting in HTML, which is not forbid by law; it's only the usual custom to post in plain text, I choose not to follow it. If you can't read it, please ignore me.
ASCII DEL = ASCII 7 and ASCII BS = 8.
Do you mean 7 == 8?
Hi
I just found out that on FC3 Borland C++Builder takes more than 400mb memory! While on Windows, it only takes a little more than 60mb.This is making me believe that System Monitor is having a bug about calculating memory size...
fedora does not ship borland c++. if borland generated bloated code on fedora, how is that a fedora problem?
And number 9: Though I have screen saver disabled, but I still get xscreensaver in my session. :-(
not here
Edward Yang wrote:
Can you read???????????????? I said:
if I set DEL to ASCII DEL
ASCII dates back to the sixties. The current keyboard layout dates back to the eighties.
The convention these days is that "delete" deletes the character to the right of the cursor (or under the cursor, if you have a block cursor). This took a *long* time to sort out: on many older terminals, "delete" did the same thing as modern "backspace". There were also "erase" and "rubout" keys to deal with, as terminal manufacturers attempted to explain what on earth this key does to users with no experience of computers.
And the ASCII code name has not been updated.
Gnome terminal is correctly set up out-of-the-box for Fedora. The switch is there for people who use the program with other, older pieces of kit. There is still a *lot* of that around.
The terminology is confusing. But it is the standard terminology. The phrase "don't do that then" comes to mind.
James.
Rahul Sundaram wrote:
Hi
I just found out that on FC3 Borland C++Builder takes more than 400mb memory! While on Windows, it only takes a little more than 60mb.This is making me believe that System Monitor is having a bug about calculating memory size...
fedora does not ship borland c++. if borland generated bloated code on fedora, how is that a fedora problem?
It's C++BuilderX, which uses Java to drive its graphical IDE. It's the Java thing that takes up more than 400mb memory.
Can anyone have C++BuilderX installed on FC3 confirm that they also have the same result?
And number 9: Though I have screen saver disabled, but I still get xscreensaver in my session. :-(
not here
Rahul Sundaram wrote:
Hi
I just found out that on FC3 Borland C++Builder takes more than 400mb memory! While on Windows, it only takes a little more than 60mb.This is making me believe that System Monitor is having a bug about calculating memory size...
fedora does not ship borland c++. if borland generated bloated code on fedora, how is that a fedora problem?
Agreed. Fedora ships with the Gnu C/C++ compiler and as complete a linker as you'd want--and if you want an IDE, check out "anjuta."
That's my general approach to finding application support: looking for equivalent Linux applications and acquiring a package that does everything my old Windows apps used to do.
Temlakos
On Thu, 27 Jan 2005 20:48:44 +0800, Edward Yang neo_in_matrix@fastmail.fm wrote:
Pasha wrote:
Second, please turn off HTML when you post to this list. In Thunderbird composition window, select Options/Format/Plain Text.
Okay, I like posting in HTML, which is not forbid by law; it's only the usual custom to post in plain text, I choose not to follow it. If you can't read it, please ignore me.
No. You're quite right. It isn't forbidden by law. However, on technical mailing lists like this you'll often find that many of the most knowledgable members of the list will ignore mail that is sent in HTML. If you want to take the risk that the people most likely to help you will just ignore your message then just carry on posting in HTML. Sounds a bit of a silly idea to me tho'.
Dave...
Edward Yang wrote:
Pasha wrote:
Edward Yang wrote:
Pasha wrote:
> > 5. I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For > example, in gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the > profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may > be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I > attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
Never had such problem with any version of linux i tried. Either stop tweaking options you don't understand or (again) it is an emulator that needs tweaking. BTW, in my terminal, backspace is configured to generate ASCII DEL, and del to escape sequence and I never changed this. So, you probably just configured del to be a backspace.
What do you define the word 'bug' in software world? In my dictionary, bug at least means one thing - it does not work as it should to work. Your above comment is like saying - that DEL option is the ears of a deaf, don't use it!
Where is the bug here? You configure DEL to be BACKSPACE and complain that it generates BACKSPACE. Change your setting to default and it will work as you expect it to work. This option is probably for compatibility with some terminals, where DEL works as backspace. If you don't want it to act that way, don't configure it so.
Can you read???????????????? I said:
if I set DEL to ASCII DEL
First, there is no need to shout. Second, please turn off HTML when you post to this list. In Thunderbird composition window, select Options/Format/Plain Text.
If you look more closely, you can see that ASCII DEL is also generated by backspace. For me this means, that if I set Del to the same setting as backspace, it will act the same way as backspace. Also, you may be surprised, but originally ASCII DEL (and delete key) acted as backspace. I don't remember where it was changed, probably in MS-DOS. Anyway, there are a lot of hints telling that you should not touch that setting at all. In any case this is not a bug.
Okay, I like posting in HTML, which is not forbid by law; it's only the usual custom to post in plain text, I choose not to follow it. If you can't read it, please ignore me.
ASCII DEL = ASCII 7 and ASCII BS = 8.
Do you mean 7 == 8?
7 is ASCII BEL not DEL. This character produces a bell sound when printed. ASCII DEL is 8 and is synonim of ASCII BS.
Concerning HTML: If you search this list you'll find plenty of explanations on why HTML is bad for posting on mailing lists. You will also find some other rules. The most important, however is a practical one: HTML postings are ignored (and in some cases automatically deleted) by many members of the list, especially by those who can actually help you. So, your chance to receive help in this (and most others) mailing list is significantly reduced.
Edward Yang wrote:
I just found out that on FC3 Borland C++Builder takes more than 400mb memory! While on Windows, it only takes a little more than 60mb.This is making me believe that System Monitor is having a bug about calculating memory size...
Please note that on modern operating systems with shared objects and virtual memory (this includes Windows), the concept of "memory used" is not easy to define.
It sounds as though you're getting a "total virtual memory used" figure. This includes physical memory, anything in the swap file, program code, shared memories, anything memory mapped from disk (e.g. a lot of program data), and pages that have yet to be used, may never be used, and don't actually take up any memory anywhere. Windows does not necessarily include all of this (I don't believe it includes memory mapped files, for example. This may or may not be the Right Thing To Do).
James.
Pasha wrote:
Edward Yang wrote:
Pasha wrote:
Edward Yang wrote:
Pasha wrote:
>> >> 5. I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For >> example, in gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the >> profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may >> be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so >> I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable. > > > > > > > Never had such problem with any version of linux i tried. Either > stop tweaking options you don't understand or (again) it is an > emulator that needs tweaking. BTW, in my terminal, backspace is > configured to generate ASCII DEL, and del to escape sequence and > I never changed this. So, you probably just configured del to be > a backspace. >
What do you define the word 'bug' in software world? In my dictionary, bug at least means one thing - it does not work as it should to work. Your above comment is like saying - that DEL option is the ears of a deaf, don't use it!
Where is the bug here? You configure DEL to be BACKSPACE and complain that it generates BACKSPACE. Change your setting to default and it will work as you expect it to work. This option is probably for compatibility with some terminals, where DEL works as backspace. If you don't want it to act that way, don't configure it so.
Can you read???????????????? I said:
if I set DEL to ASCII DEL
First, there is no need to shout. Second, please turn off HTML when you post to this list. In Thunderbird composition window, select Options/Format/Plain Text.
If you look more closely, you can see that ASCII DEL is also generated by backspace. For me this means, that if I set Del to the same setting as backspace, it will act the same way as backspace. Also, you may be surprised, but originally ASCII DEL (and delete key) acted as backspace. I don't remember where it was changed, probably in MS-DOS. Anyway, there are a lot of hints telling that you should not touch that setting at all. In any case this is not a bug.
Okay, I like posting in HTML, which is not forbid by law; it's only the usual custom to post in plain text, I choose not to follow it. If you can't read it, please ignore me.
ASCII DEL = ASCII 7 and ASCII BS = 8.
Do you mean 7 == 8?
7 is ASCII BEL not DEL. This character produces a bell sound when printed. ASCII DEL is 8 and is synonim of ASCII BS.
Concerning HTML: If you search this list you'll find plenty of explanations on why HTML is bad for posting on mailing lists. You will also find some other rules. The most important, however is a practical one: HTML postings are ignored (and in some cases automatically deleted) by many members of the list, especially by those who can actually help you. So, your chance to receive help in this (and most others) mailing list is significantly reduced.
I was wrong when I said ASCII DEL = 7. It's actually 0x7f (127). May be you are right in that historcially DEL is same as BS in *nix world. I don't know that. But thanks for replying.
Sorry, I am a stubborn person. I still want to use HTML. If you can show me that this list REQUIRES its list members use plain text, I will follow the rule.
On Thu, 2005-01-27 at 14:14, Edward Yang wrote:
Rahul Sundaram wrote:
Hi
I just found out that on FC3 Borland C++Builder takes more than 400mb memory! While on Windows, it only takes a little more than 60mb.This is making me believe that System Monitor is having a bug about calculating memory size...
fedora does not ship borland c++. if borland generated bloated code on fedora, how is that a fedora problem?
It's C++BuilderX, which uses Java to drive its graphical IDE. It's the Java thing that takes up more than 400mb memory.
OK, go whine to the people at Sun then. The Java RE is not part of FC3 either.
- "Does not work under Virtual PC" - no one said it will, and if it doesn't it's the Virtual PC guys fault.
- "Borland Builder/Java is a resource hog" - complain to Borland and or Sun.
- "Unbearably slow on my old 128MB box" - sorry, software upgrades and hardware upgrades go hand in hand. If you feel that's bad, complain upstream to the developers working on KDE/Gnome/Other components for all the new functionality they added since the last release.
Summary: you're barking up the wrong tree.
-- Tarjei
Dave Cross wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jan 2005 20:48:44 +0800, Edward Yang neo_in_matrix@fastmail.fm wrote:
Pasha wrote:
Second, please turn off HTML when you post to this list. In Thunderbird composition window, select Options/Format/Plain Text.
Okay, I like posting in HTML, which is not forbid by law; it's only the usual custom to post in plain text, I choose not to follow it. If you can't read it, please ignore me.
No. You're quite right. It isn't forbidden by law. However, on technical mailing lists like this you'll often find that many of the most knowledgable members of the list will ignore mail that is sent in HTML. If you want to take the risk that the people most likely to help you will just ignore your message then just carry on posting in HTML. Sounds a bit of a silly idea to me tho'.
Dave...
Thanks for advice. I still choose to post in HTML.
Edward Yang wrote:
- After several times of kernel updating (at least 3), I finally can
boot into X from the so called official kernel provided by FC3.
- It is hopelessly slower than FC1! I could run FC1 with only 128mb
memory and don't feel much sluggishness. I now run FC3 with 164mb memory, but it is visibly slower than FC1! Application startup time is almost unbearable.
Do a test.. Get the source from kernel.org and recompile it , using the same config file used by redhat... You'll notice that it is just slow as the default kernel... This is related to some kernel changes made in the kernel that , in tools like virtual pc and vmware , result in running slower... In normal hardware , it works at least as fast as (but usually faster than) kernel 2.4....
- I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For example,
in gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
It's not reasonable. If the bug is in Gnome , it's a gnome bug , not a FC3 bug. Unless you find a item in the Changelog or a patch in the src.rpm added by redhat that caused the problem , it's an upstream bug that should be reported to Gnome.. Btw , did you made a bug report about it ???
- I have not acurate data to prove this, but I feel the system boot
up time is longer than FC1.
Maybe.. FC1 didnt have selinux , didnt have NFS4 and a few other things.... You know that you can (and should) disable unnecessary services ? This have two effects: improved security and a little improvement in boot time.
- This is a minor problem - I only installed kernel+gnome, no KDE.
Yet it takes up more than 2gb space. What the hell? A normal Windows 2000 installation usually takes only 1.5gb even with all components selected. I forgot how much was FC1, but FC3 apparently is not doing better or even worse.
Let's not compare windows and linux , ok? Do a rpm -qa and you'll see that you get a lot of other stuff... If you installed a single KDE app , you end up having to install several libs from KDE... Also , if you have openoffice , you'll notice that the i18n package is a little too big (it's meant to be split up for FC4)... (btw, if you dont remmember how much space FC1 used , how can you compare it?)
-- Pedro Macedo
On Thu, 27 Jan 2005, Edward Yang wrote:
... snip ...
Thanks for advice. I still choose to post in HTML.
that's it, i've had all of this i can take. i've CCed this note to the fedora-list-admin account at red hat, with the request that this dickhead be banned from this (and all other, if that's possible) red hat lists.
life is just way too short to have to put up with inconsiderate morons who have no respect for mailing list etiquette.
rday
Hi '. Dave... Thanks for advice. I still choose to post in HTML.
and you are looking for help here?.
Robert P. J. Day wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jan 2005, Edward Yang wrote:
... snip ...
Thanks for advice. I still choose to post in HTML.
that's it, i've had all of this i can take. i've CCed this note to the fedora-list-admin account at red hat, with the request that this dickhead be banned from this (and all other, if that's possible) red hat lists.
life is just way too short to have to put up with inconsiderate morons who have no respect for mailing list etiquette.
rday
Thanks. This is the first time that I have ever heard the words *troll* and *moron* in just one day.
Hi
that's it, i've had all of this i can take. i've CCed this note to the fedora-list-admin account at red hat, with the request that this dickhead be banned from this (and all other, if that's possible) red hat lists.
life is just way too short to have to put up with inconsiderate morons who have no respect for mailing list etiquette.
mailing list etiquette also includes avoiding name calling people. posting in html was a bad thing to do. name calling is even worse
Rahul Sundaram wrote:
Hi
that's it, i've had all of this i can take. i've CCed this note to the fedora-list-admin account at red hat, with the request that this dickhead be banned from this (and all other, if that's possible) red hat lists.
life is just way too short to have to put up with inconsiderate morons who have no respect for mailing list etiquette.
mailing list etiquette also includes avoiding name calling people. posting in html was a bad thing to do. name calling is even worse
THIS IS LINUX COMMUNITY!!! What the hell...
On Thu, 2005-01-27 at 17:59 +0800, Edward Yang wrote:
After getting so many reply from my last post, I finally understand why the post aroused so much agitation.
1. Request a refund. 2. Remove it from your system. 3. Don't post in HTML 4. Legitimate problems should result in bugzilla entries. 5. Differentiate between a distribution and packages.
________________________________________________________________________ Total Quality Management - A Commitment to Excellence http://www.TQMcube.com
On Thu, 27 Jan 2005, Edward Yang wrote:
Rahul Sundaram wrote:
mailing list etiquette also includes avoiding name calling people. posting in html was a bad thing to do. name calling is even worse
normally, i'd agree, but there's just *so* *many* *times* that one can go through this "please don't post in HTML" nonsense.
it is *way* past time for red hat to put some simple etiquette rules at http://fedora.redhat.com/participate/communicate, under the "Mailing Lists" section. apparently, until it's an *official* edict from red hat and on one of their own pages, this is going to continue.
dear red hat: please deal with this. i'm begging you.
rday
Edward Yang wrote:
Rahul Sundaram wrote:
Hi
that's it, i've had all of this i can take. i've CCed this note to the fedora-list-admin account at red hat, with the request that this dickhead be banned from this (and all other, if that's possible) red hat lists.
life is just way too short to have to put up with inconsiderate morons who have no respect for mailing list etiquette.
mailing list etiquette also includes avoiding name calling people. posting in html was a bad thing to do. name calling is even worse
THIS IS LINUX COMMUNITY!!! What the hell...
Wrong. This is Fedora Core community.
On Thu, 27 Jan 2005 09:01:41 -0500 (EST) "Robert P. J. Day" rpjday@mindspring.com wrote:
normally, i'd agree, but there's just *so* *many* *times* that one can go through this "please don't post in HTML" nonsense.
I think it's time for you to set up a mail filter. You can set this up with a specialized program (there is an excellent one called "Mailfilter" which I use - http://mailfilter.sourceforge.net) or just use the filtering on your email client (I use Sylpheed).
To send all html mail to trash, filter the heading:
Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
Or if you only want to send html mail on the Fedora list to trash, use a logical AND:
To: For users of Fedora Core releases fedora-list@redhat.com
AND
Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
That should take care of it. For good.
cheers, Robert
Dave Cross wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jan 2005 20:48:44 +0800, Edward Yang neo_in_matrix@fastmail.fm wrote:
Pasha wrote:
Second, please turn off HTML when you post to this list. In Thunderbird composition window, select Options/Format/Plain Text.
Okay, I like posting in HTML, which is not forbid by law; it's only the usual custom to post in plain text, I choose not to follow it. If you can't read it, please ignore me.
No. You're quite right. It isn't forbidden by law. However, on technical mailing lists like this you'll often find that many of the most knowledgable members of the list will ignore mail that is sent in HTML. If you want to take the risk that the people most likely to help you will just ignore your message then just carry on posting in HTML. Sounds a bit of a silly idea to me tho'.
Dave...
Why can't he just configure T-Bird, or even Evo, to recognize fedora-list@redhat.com as a user who doesn't want to receive HTML mail, and convert all mail to plain text? Such a simple thing!
Temlakos
On Thu, 27 Jan 2005 17:59:25 +0800, Edward Yang neo_in_matrix@fastmail.fm wrote:
After getting so many reply from my last post, I finally understand why the post aroused so much agitation.
Um, because you're being an asshole, maybe?
- It seems for some people, 'FC3 sucks' is the same as '*Linux* sucks'.
But I am very sorry, I did not mean that. I just meant FC3 sucks or FC3 sucks because it is worse than FC1 based on my personal experience.
No, you ignoramus - if I showed up in your neighborhood and started yelling publicly that you and your neighbors and all the work they do sucks, would you react kindly? I thknk not.
- Some young guys (mostly students) or even not-so-young guys (what the
hell who are they?) like the feel of calling somebody *troll*, and so they seize every possible chance to show off their *skills* at name calling. That's a dark side I already know about Linux communitiy. But, please note I am not saying the *whole* Linux community is bad, I mean a small part of it.
You are such an idiot. A quick Google search finds just as many instances of the word "troll" in Windows newsgroups as Linux ones.
Okay, let me elaborate why I think FC3 sucks or FC3 is worse than FC1. Note that I did not have experience with FC2.
Seriously, just stop. No one on the list is taking you seriously. You're an idiot, and an asshole. Go away.
- Installation. Well, what can I say? It is not worse, but it not any
bettern than FC1. Components selection is still very difficult.
Yeah, I guess it is if you are ignorant of the way the OS works and too lazy to learn. If I didn't take the time to learn about how Windows worked, I would expect it to be counterintuitive, too.
- FC3 could not start into X in Virtual PC. It spews out tons of error
messages complaining something that actually should not have caused its failure. So I have to download a temporary patch from http://vpc.visualwin.com/. See page http://vpc.visualwin.com/Notes/FedoraCore.3.Final.html.
So what you are saying is that you didn't investigate how to run FC3 in VirtualPC. How is that the fault of the distribution? Sounds like a failure on your part to perform due dilligence.
- After several times of kernel updating (at least 3), I finally can boot
into X from the so called official kernel provided by FC3.
So you have a weird environment and you didn't research it. Your stupidity, not the distribution's.
- It is hopelessly slower than FC1! I could run FC1 with only 128mb memory
and don't feel much sluggishness. I now run FC3 with 164mb memory, but it is visibly slower than FC1! Application startup time is almost unbearable.
Hey, dumbass, the 90's called, they want their computers back. As we can afford more powerful computers for less money, code will gain more features and therefore require more resources. That's not a bad thing, you moron. It's up to YOU to decide what features you want and remove or deactivate the rest.
- I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For example, in
gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
No, it's quite stupid. That bug has been documented and discussed ad nauseum. Your being too stupid or lazy to find out about it doesn't mean that the distro is bad. And if you don't understand that FC is a bleeding edge distro and is EXPECTED to uncover bugs and problems, then you need to go read the very first paragraph at http://fedora.redhat.com. YOU need to do some work instead of coming in here and blaming your ignorance and stupidity on the distro.
- I have not acurate data to prove this, but I feel the system boot up
time is longer than FC1.
If you don't have accurate data, then you're talking out of your ass. Shut up. Oh, and see my response to #4 again.
- This is a minor problem - I only installed kernel+gnome, no KDE. Yet it
takes up more than 2gb space. What the hell? A normal Windows 2000 installation usually takes only 1.5gb even with all components selected. I forgot how much was FC1, but FC3 apparently is not doing better or even worse.
You stupid, stupid shit. You're comparing apples to oranges. If Windows 2000 is so much better, hey, don't let the door hit you in the ass on the way out, OK?
- I may think of others that attribute to this 'FC3 sucks' topic.
I can think of pages and pages of stuff to add to an "Edward Yang Sucks" thread.
Final words - I am not negating Linux.
Yes, you are. You're spewing half-truths and statements of ignorance intended to be insulting and derogatory.
Actually I think Linux and Open Source has a very good future. That's why I am catching the new waves here.
You wanna play in this arena, then learn how to play nice.
Thanks.
Any time.
LW
On Thu, 27 Jan 2005, Thomas Cameron wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jan 2005 17:59:25 +0800, Edward Yang neo_in_matrix@fastmail.fm wrote:
After getting so many reply from my last post, I finally understand why the post aroused so much agitation.
Um, because you're being an asshole, maybe?
hey! no name calling! that's *my* job. :-P
rday
On Thu, Jan 27, 2005 at 05:59:25PM +0800, Edward Yang wrote:
- It is hopelessly slower than FC1! I could run FC1 with only 128mb
memory and don't feel much sluggishness. I now run FC3 with 164mb memory, but it is visibly slower than FC1! Application startup time is almost unbearable.
On *real* hardware, some things are slower, especially in RAM constrained situations; but many things are faster. Several changes could contribute to markedly slower performance in an emulator. You must understand that in an emulator, the guest scheduler and virtual memory system can have a complex interaction with the host scheduler and virtual memory system.
The HZ setting in 2.6 defaults to 1000; it was 100 in 2.4. This can cause the host scheduler to see the guest as a CPU hog, resulting in longer latencies when you use it interactively -- it feels slower. There are patches working their way towards usability that would essentially eliminate unnecessary ticks of periodic clock, as this is desirable in virtual environment. But for starters, you might try setting HZ to 100, or tweaking some feature of VirtualPC.
Another thing is that the kernel expects fast, uniform access to memory, unless it is using NUMA. The kernel has a tendency to touch memory pages all over the place, so if the entire emulation is not resident in memory on the host system, things slow down considerably; this effect is frequently seen in User-Mode Linux. Remember, access to your swap file is thousands of times slower than access to RAM!
Until there is infrastructure in place for the guest OS to determine whether a page is in memory, and the guest OS uses it, this will continue to be a problem on memory-constrained systems. The "workaround" on Linux is for environments like User-Mode Linux to put their temporary files in ramfs or tmpfs. I don't know what, if any, tuning is possible with VirtualPC.
As for your complaints of bloat and bugs, FC3 has its share of both, but in this community you report them and try to help fix them, rather than whining about it. You are empowered to do this -- that's the whole point, really! The upside for your investigative efforts is that, with the help of others, you can usually have a bug fix in days or weeks, and no proprietary OS, with at best quarterly releases, comes close to that, if they even bother to fix your bug at all.
And if you prefer to be spoon fed, stick with a system other than Linux.
Regards,
Bill Rugolsky
Funny as hell. Someone that is trying to emulate something inside of Winders, and has a problem. Whoa! Red Alert!!!
linux.whiz@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jan 2005 17:59:25 +0800, Edward Yang neo_in_matrix@fastmail.fm wrote:
After getting so many reply from my last post, I finally understand why the post aroused so much agitation.
Um, because you're being an asshole, maybe?
- It seems for some people, 'FC3 sucks' is the same as '*Linux* sucks'.
But I am very sorry, I did not mean that. I just meant FC3 sucks or FC3 sucks because it is worse than FC1 based on my personal experience.
No, you ignoramus - if I showed up in your neighborhood and started yelling publicly that you and your neighbors and all the work they do sucks, would you react kindly? I thknk not.
- Some young guys (mostly students) or even not-so-young guys (what the
hell who are they?) like the feel of calling somebody *troll*, and so they seize every possible chance to show off their *skills* at name calling. That's a dark side I already know about Linux communitiy. But, please note I am not saying the *whole* Linux community is bad, I mean a small part of it.
You are such an idiot. A quick Google search finds just as many instances of the word "troll" in Windows newsgroups as Linux ones.
Okay, let me elaborate why I think FC3 sucks or FC3 is worse than FC1. Note that I did not have experience with FC2.
Seriously, just stop. No one on the list is taking you seriously. You're an idiot, and an asshole. Go away.
- Installation. Well, what can I say? It is not worse, but it not any
bettern than FC1. Components selection is still very difficult.
Yeah, I guess it is if you are ignorant of the way the OS works and too lazy to learn. If I didn't take the time to learn about how Windows worked, I would expect it to be counterintuitive, too.
- FC3 could not start into X in Virtual PC. It spews out tons of error
messages complaining something that actually should not have caused its failure. So I have to download a temporary patch from http://vpc.visualwin.com/. See page http://vpc.visualwin.com/Notes/FedoraCore.3.Final.html.
So what you are saying is that you didn't investigate how to run FC3 in VirtualPC. How is that the fault of the distribution? Sounds like a failure on your part to perform due dilligence.
- After several times of kernel updating (at least 3), I finally can boot
into X from the so called official kernel provided by FC3.
So you have a weird environment and you didn't research it. Your stupidity, not the distribution's.
- It is hopelessly slower than FC1! I could run FC1 with only 128mb memory
and don't feel much sluggishness. I now run FC3 with 164mb memory, but it is visibly slower than FC1! Application startup time is almost unbearable.
Hey, dumbass, the 90's called, they want their computers back. As we can afford more powerful computers for less money, code will gain more features and therefore require more resources. That's not a bad thing, you moron. It's up to YOU to decide what features you want and remove or deactivate the rest.
- I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For example, in
gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
No, it's quite stupid. That bug has been documented and discussed ad nauseum. Your being too stupid or lazy to find out about it doesn't mean that the distro is bad. And if you don't understand that FC is a bleeding edge distro and is EXPECTED to uncover bugs and problems, then you need to go read the very first paragraph at http://fedora.redhat.com. YOU need to do some work instead of coming in here and blaming your ignorance and stupidity on the distro.
- I have not acurate data to prove this, but I feel the system boot up
time is longer than FC1.
If you don't have accurate data, then you're talking out of your ass. Shut up. Oh, and see my response to #4 again.
- This is a minor problem - I only installed kernel+gnome, no KDE. Yet it
takes up more than 2gb space. What the hell? A normal Windows 2000 installation usually takes only 1.5gb even with all components selected. I forgot how much was FC1, but FC3 apparently is not doing better or even worse.
You stupid, stupid shit. You're comparing apples to oranges. If Windows 2000 is so much better, hey, don't let the door hit you in the ass on the way out, OK?
- I may think of others that attribute to this 'FC3 sucks' topic.
I can think of pages and pages of stuff to add to an "Edward Yang Sucks" thread.
Final words - I am not negating Linux.
Yes, you are. You're spewing half-truths and statements of ignorance intended to be insulting and derogatory.
Actually I think Linux and Open Source has a very good future. That's why I am catching the new waves here.
You wanna play in this arena, then learn how to play nice.
Thanks.
Any time.
LW
Edward Yang wrote:
Rahul Sundaram wrote:
Hi
I just found out that on FC3 Borland C++Builder takes more than 400mb memory! While on Windows, it only takes a little more than 60mb.This is making me believe that System Monitor is having a bug about calculating memory size...
fedora does not ship borland c++. if borland generated bloated code on fedora, how is that a fedora problem?
It's C++BuilderX, which uses Java to drive its graphical IDE. It's the Java thing that takes up more than 400mb memory.
Can anyone have C++BuilderX installed on FC3 confirm that they also have the same result?
The JavaVM for Linux is less than perfect and in fact pretty much (in your terms) suck when compared to the Windows counterpart... Using Java programs in Linux is too expensive (in my experience) in terms of memory and CPU resources... My suggestion... Don't use them. Or if you must, you know what are the trade offs of using them.
May I make a suggestion? if you're using Thunderbird as your mail application, you can send both HTML and plain text messages, that way you most likely reach both groups of users... I personally like HTML mail too, but for many people this is not the case, since they may use plain text console mail readers. Just a suggestion, though (I know this may have some overhead on the list server... If that's the case, I'm sorry I suggested this).
Sorry, I am a stubborn person. I still want to use HTML. If you can show me that this list REQUIRES its list members use plain text, I will follow the rule.
Hmm... There may yet still be a reason why you notice such a slowdown with FC3 when compared to FC1&2: SELinux... Yes, it increases system's security, but on some cases it may be too much an overhead to the system and indeed a system hog. In my case since I use custom built kernels (due some odd hardware that I would not be able to use otherwise) I have to shut down SELinux to successfully boot the kernel (other wise the audit will fail and boot will stop). Try that and see if your performance increases... I'm sure many on the list think otherwise regards this, but in my experience it has worked.... I went from 106 processes (fresh boot into my session) to 83 when disabled this.
Gain Paolo Mureddu wrote:
May I make a suggestion? if you're using Thunderbird as your mail application, you can send both HTML and plain text messages, that way you most likely reach both groups of users... I personally like HTML mail too, but for many people this is not the case, since they may use plain text console mail readers. Just a suggestion, though (I know this may have some overhead on the list server... If that's the case, I'm sorry I suggested this).
Actually, he is sending both versions.
I'm reading this in mutt: every one of his messages has been readable.
(I will leave the Gentle Reader to make up his or her own mind about the desirability of this!)
James.
On Thu, 27 Jan 2005, Vinicius wrote:
Edward Yang escreveu:
After getting so many reply from my last post, I finally understand why the post aroused so much agitation.
- It seems for some people, 'FC3 sucks' is the same as '*Linux* sucks'.
But I am very sorry, I did not mean that. I just meant FC3 sucks or FC3 sucks because it is worse than FC1 based on my personal experience.
- Some young guys (mostly students) or even not-so-young guys (what the
hell who are they?) like the feel of calling somebody *troll*, and so they seize every possible chance to show off their *skills* at name calling. That's a dark side I already know about Linux communitiy. But, please note I am not saying the *whole* Linux community is bad, I mean a small part of it.
Okay, let me elaborate why I think FC3 sucks or FC3 is worse than FC1. Note that I did not have experience with FC2.
- Installation. Well, what can I say? It is not worse, but it not any
bettern than FC1. Components selection is still very difficult.
- FC3 could not start into X in Virtual PC. It spews out tons of error
messages complaining something that actually should not have caused its failure. So I have to download a temporary patch from http://vpc.visualwin.com/. See page http://vpc.visualwin.com/Notes/FedoraCore.3.Final.html.
"Product Specifications
The Virtual PC application requires a 400 MHz Pentium-compatible processor (1 GHz is recommended), and requires approximately 20 MB of disk space. It runs on Windows XP Professional and Windows 2000 Professional. ". These are the hosts.
And these are the guests: "MS-DOS 6.22; Windows 95; Windows 98; Windows Me; Windows 2000; Windows NT 4.0; Windows XP; and OS/2**"
See http://www.microsoft.com/windows/virtualpc/evaluation/overview2004.mspx
I suppose GNU\Linux is not supported by Virtual PC, but VMWare does supports GNU\Linux.
- After several times of kernel updating (at least 3), I finally can boot
into X from the so called official kernel provided by FC3.
- It is hopelessly slower than FC1! I could run FC1 with only 128mb memory
and don't feel much sluggishness. I now run FC3 with 164mb memory, but it is visibly slower than FC1! Application startup time is almost unbearable.
- I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For example, in
gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
- I have not acurate data to prove this, but I feel the system boot up
time is longer than FC1.
- This is a minor problem - I only installed kernel+gnome, no KDE. Yet it
takes up more than 2gb space. What the hell? A normal Windows 2000 installation usually takes only 1.5gb even with all components selected. I forgot how much was FC1, but FC3 apparently is not doing better or even worse.
- I may think of others that attribute to this 'FC3 sucks' topic.
Final words - I am not negating Linux. Actually I think Linux and Open Source has a very good future. That's why I am catching the new waves here.
Thanks.
I must be an oddball.......... I think the first thing a person needs is decent hardware to run this stuff like it was intended.
My laptop is a Sony Vaio PCG-V505BL with a 2.4GHZ P4M, and 1GIG of ram. Fedora Core 3 installed easily and painlessly. I am also running VMWare with an install of Win2K. again, working perfectly. I have never seen a Linux distro so easy to get up and running. I run everything I want to run on it, with little or no problems installing or configuring. I am maybe just a little better than a beginner at this. I don't really consider myself a novice.
I am running Fedora Core 1 on a Dell Poweredge 600SC. No problems. NONE It is a 1.8 Celeron with 256MB RAM. FC1 installed quickly and painlessly here as well. It is my server. Does mail, DNS, apache, DHCP, MRTG, Big Brother, blah blah blah....... all with little or no trouble installing or configuring.
FC3 is the bomb. I love it, and will not use anything else. What problems I have had, I either did my homework or asked a ? here. I always have gotten an answer to my problems here. This is better that M$ could ever offer.
There's my .02 take it or leave it........... -- Don Dupy
FC1 - Kernel 2.4.22 - Dell Poweredge 600SC http://www.maxxrad.net email: fedora@maxxrad.net
- It is less capable than even late 1990's M$ when you are trying to setup dual-displays. - Some drivers are intentionally deleted because "nobody has this hardware any longer". - Some programs have lower functionality than they had when they were first created. - Disabling ICONs in the menus (mozilla) and not using the default icons that were provided from the projects. (confusing and too blue)
................
Now, why I like Fedora FC3:
- Most of my hardware is recognized and is reliable and functional.
- New ways to approach computing and keeping security a primary concern.
- and of course, because it is downloadable for free and not encumbered with proprietary software.
On Thu, Jan 27, 2005 at 06:31:04PM -0500, Jim Cornette wrote:
- Some drivers are intentionally deleted because "nobody has this
hardware any longer".
Examples please ? We support some pretty arcane stuff, so if the driver still builds fine, isn't a potential security disaster waiting to happen, and doesn't impact overall maintainence of the kernel package, I'm happy to reconsider any drivers if theres sufficient demand. (And in some cases, I've enabled stuff on request from a single user as the driver made sense to enable).
Dave
James Wilkinson wrote:
Actually, he is sending both versions.
I'm reading this in mutt: every one of his messages has been readable.
(I will leave the Gentle Reader to make up his or her own mind about the desirability of this!)
James.
I actually like (very much) the advance formatting you can do with HTML e-mail messages, so I tend to use it a lot, but I'm also aware that there's people that simply don't like it and are more than happy to use their good ol'e-mail reader in a VC simply because they still can do it... thus I send my messages as both: plain text and HTML.
On Thursday 27 January 2005 3:31 pm, Jim Cornette flailed at a keyboard and produced this:
- It is less capable than even late 1990's M$ when you are trying to
setup dual-displays.
- Some drivers are intentionally deleted because "nobody has this
hardware any longer".
- Some programs have lower functionality than they had when they were
first created.
- Disabling ICONs in the menus (mozilla) and not using the default icons
that were provided from the projects. (confusing and too blue)
I, personally, can't think of any reason why Fedora would suck for me. It does all that I need it to do: web browsing, e-mail, writing (very important for me), programming (mostly web development), music and DVD's. I'm not much of a gamer, so that isn't important to me.
Every now and then, FC3 does something unusual and unexpected; this morning, for example, it stopped listening to my USB devices for no good reason that I could see, and wouldn't start listening again until I rebooted. When these things happen, I repeat the mantra: "Fedora Core 3 is bleeding edge, Fedora Core 3 is bleeding edge". Even so, I still have fewer problems with FC3 than I do with my WinXP laptop.
One thing that does suck is that I can't make the SMP version of the 2.6 kernel play with my dual-processor motherboard; I think, though, that this is a problem with the 2.6 kernel and my motherboard, not with FC3, since I had the same problem with SuSE.
Now, why I like Fedora FC3:
Most of my hardware is recognized and is reliable and functional.
New ways to approach computing and keeping security a primary concern.
and of course, because it is downloadable for free and not encumbered
with proprietary software.
I love FC3 because of the strong user community surrounding it. Whenever I have a question I can post it here or to one of the other lists I belong to, and it will be answered. Sometimes sarcastically, but always answered. ;-) Plus, I can customize it any way I like; I didn't like FC's implementation of KDE, so I grabbed KDE from the KDE-Redhat project, and I haven't looked back. Installing my DVD drive was a piece of cake. Running FC3, my old dual-pro 866 MHz PIII works slicker and smoother and more reliably than my 1.2GHz PIV laptop running WinXP. There's almost nothing I can do in WinXP that I can't do in FC3. The only reason I keep Windows around at this point is so I can install audio books from audible.com onto my Creative Zen Nomad+ MP3 player (yes, I do have GNomad installed on my FC3 box, but the Audible.com manager desktop application does not exist for Linux... yet).
I'm not a maniac about FC3; at home I also run an RH8 box and a Debian Woody laptop. At work, I maintain a server running FC2, a couple of Solaris boxes, and an old SunBlade 100 running Gentoo. My world is not all that narrow, though after only three years of playing with this stuff, I'm still a relative *nix newbie.
On Thu, Jan 27, 2005 at 06:31:04PM -0500, Jim Cornette wrote:
- It is less capable than even late 1990's M$ when you are trying to
setup dual-displays.
HAHAHAHAHA!
Oh, you mean like having dialog boxes straddle the two monitors on Windows? We've got Windows software released this millenium that still gets this wrong. [Yeah, I know that the same problem existed with Xinerama and many -- but not all -- X window managers until recently.] But I've been running with two *independent* (non-Xinerama) screens for a decade. Each screen has numerous virtual pages that are independently switchable. We are able to see M*N combinations of virtual pages side-by-side, where M and N around here are anywhere from 4-32. This is invaluable to someone who has to run multiple trading systems, program, read mail, browse the web, etc. Tell me again how that works on Windows? ;-p
Bill Rugolsky
On Thu, 2005-01-27 at 21:28 +0800, Edward Yang wrote:
Pasha wrote:
Edward Yang wrote:
Pasha wrote:
Edward Yang wrote:
Pasha wrote:
> > > > > > > > 5. I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few > > > bugs. For example, in gnome-termial, if I set DEL to > > > ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts > > > like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to > > > gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute > > > the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable. > > > > > > > > > > > > Never had such problem with any version of linux i > > tried. Either stop tweaking options you don't understand > > or (again) it is an emulator that needs tweaking. BTW, > > in my terminal, backspace is configured to generate > > ASCII DEL, and del to escape sequence and I never > > changed this. So, you probably just configured del to be > > a backspace. > > > > What do you define the word 'bug' in software world? In my > dictionary, bug at least means one thing - it does not > work as it should to work. Your above comment is like > saying - that DEL option is the ears of a deaf, don't use > it!
Where is the bug here? You configure DEL to be BACKSPACE and complain that it generates BACKSPACE. Change your setting to default and it will work as you expect it to work. This option is probably for compatibility with some terminals, where DEL works as backspace. If you don't want it to act that way, don't configure it so.
Can you read???????????????? I said:
if I set DEL to ASCII DEL
First, there is no need to shout. Second, please turn off HTML when you post to this list. In Thunderbird composition window, select Options/Format/Plain Text.
If you look more closely, you can see that ASCII DEL is also generated by backspace. For me this means, that if I set Del to the same setting as backspace, it will act the same way as backspace. Also, you may be surprised, but originally ASCII DEL (and delete key) acted as backspace. I don't remember where it was changed, probably in MS-DOS. Anyway, there are a lot of hints telling that you should not touch that setting at all. In any case this is not a bug.
Okay, I like posting in HTML, which is not forbid by law; it's only the usual custom to post in plain text, I choose not to follow it. If you can't read it, please ignore me.
ASCII DEL = ASCII 7 and ASCII BS = 8.
Do you mean 7 == 8?
7 is ASCII BEL not DEL. This character produces a bell sound when printed. ASCII DEL is 8 and is synonim of ASCII BS.
Concerning HTML: If you search this list you'll find plenty of explanations on why HTML is bad for posting on mailing lists. You will also find some other rules. The most important, however is a practical one: HTML postings are ignored (and in some cases automatically deleted) by many members of the list, especially by those who can actually help you. So, your chance to receive help in this (and most others) mailing list is significantly reduced.
I was wrong when I said ASCII DEL = 7. It's actually 0x7f (127). May be you are right in that historcially DEL is same as BS in *nix world. I don't know that. But thanks for replying.
Sorry, I am a stubborn person. I still want to use HTML. If you can show me that this list REQUIRES its list members use plain text, I will follow the rule.
You can be stubborn if you wish. I have no desire to look at ugly html tags in my text mail reader that I prefer.
You will NEVER get help from me if you continue to post bloated and ugly html to a list that by concensus prefers text.
Kill filters work wonders for those annoyances.
-- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@redhat.com To unsubscribe: http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list
On Thu, 2005-01-27 at 21:51 +0800, Edward Yang wrote:
Rahul Sundaram wrote:
Hi
that's it, i've had all of this i can take. i've CCed this note to the fedora-list-admin account at red hat, with the request that this dickhead be banned from this (and all other, if that's possible) red hat lists.
life is just way too short to have to put up with inconsiderate morons who have no respect for mailing list etiquette.
mailing list etiquette also includes avoiding name calling people. posting in html was a bad thing to do. name calling is even worse
THIS IS LINUX COMMUNITY!!! What the hell...
community implies just that. Members of a community work together and try to get along.
Those who refuse to comply with the community standards get ostracized.
On Thu, 2005-01-27 at 21:51 +0800, Edward Yang wrote:
Rahul Sundaram wrote:
Hi
that's it, i've had all of this i can take. i've CCed this note to the fedora-list-admin account at red hat, with the request that this dickhead be banned from this (and all other, if that's possible) red hat lists.
life is just way too short to have to put up with inconsiderate morons who have no respect for mailing list etiquette.
mailing list etiquette also includes avoiding name calling people. posting in html was a bad thing to do. name calling is even worse
THIS IS LINUX COMMUNITY!!! What the hell...
Your short email above is actually this
This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --===============1536995009== Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="------------050105060905050005060901"
This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --------------050105060905050005060901 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Rahul Sundaram wrote:
Hi
that's it, i've had all of this i can take. i've CCed this note to the fedora-list-admin account at red hat, with the request that this dickhead be banned from this (and all other, if that's possible) red hat lists.
life is just way too short to have to put up with inconsiderate morons who have no respect for mailing list etiquette.
mailing list etiquette also includes avoiding name calling people. posting in html was a bad thing to do. name calling is even worse
THIS IS LINUX COMMUNITY!!! What the hell...
--------------050105060905050005060901 Content-Type: text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"> <html> <head> <meta content="text/html;charset=ISO-8859-1" http-equiv="Content- Type"> </head> <body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#000000"> Rahul Sundaram wrote: <blockquote cite="midc79487d605012705459f594a4@mail.gmail.com" type="cite"> <pre wrap="">Hi
</pre> <blockquote type="cite"> <pre wrap="">that's it, i've had all of this i can take. i've CCed this note to the fedora-list-admin account at red hat, with the request that this dickhead be banned from this (and all other, if that's possible) red hat lists.
life is just way too short to have to put up with inconsiderate morons who have no respect for mailing list etiquette.
</pre> </blockquote> <pre wrap=""><!----> mailing list etiquette also includes avoiding name calling people. posting in html was a bad thing to do. name calling is even worse
</pre> </blockquote> <font face="Georgia">THIS IS LINUX COMMUNITY!!! What the hell...</font><br> </body> </html>
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I wouldn't stick my hands into fire for this, but it could be the BIOS of the MoBo that's faulty, and maybe a flash is required. Other than that, I find it very strange that the kernel won't pick up the other processor.
One thing that does suck is that I can't make the SMP version of the 2.6 kernel play with my dual-processor motherboard; I think, though, that this is a problem with the 2.6 kernel and my motherboard, not with FC3, since I had the same problem with SuSE.
The post by the WORST PERSON is a very excellent example to proove what I say - "Linux community has a dark side".
Thomas Cameron wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jan 2005 17:59:25 +0800, Edward Yang neo_in_matrix@fastmail.fm wrote:
After getting so many reply from my last post, I finally understand why the post aroused so much agitation.
Um, because you're being an asshole, maybe?
- It seems for some people, 'FC3 sucks' is the same as '*Linux* sucks'.
But I am very sorry, I did not mean that. I just meant FC3 sucks or FC3 sucks because it is worse than FC1 based on my personal experience.
No, you ignoramus - if I showed up in your neighborhood and started yelling publicly that you and your neighbors and all the work they do sucks, would you react kindly? I thknk not.
- Some young guys (mostly students) or even not-so-young guys (what the
hell who are they?) like the feel of calling somebody *troll*, and so they seize every possible chance to show off their *skills* at name calling. That's a dark side I already know about Linux communitiy. But, please note I am not saying the *whole* Linux community is bad, I mean a small part of it.
You are such an idiot. A quick Google search finds just as many instances of the word "troll" in Windows newsgroups as Linux ones.
Okay, let me elaborate why I think FC3 sucks or FC3 is worse than FC1. Note that I did not have experience with FC2.
Seriously, just stop. No one on the list is taking you seriously. You're an idiot, and an asshole. Go away.
- Installation. Well, what can I say? It is not worse, but it not any
bettern than FC1. Components selection is still very difficult.
Yeah, I guess it is if you are ignorant of the way the OS works and too lazy to learn. If I didn't take the time to learn about how Windows worked, I would expect it to be counterintuitive, too.
- FC3 could not start into X in Virtual PC. It spews out tons of error
messages complaining something that actually should not have caused its failure. So I have to download a temporary patch from http://vpc.visualwin.com/. See page http://vpc.visualwin.com/Notes/FedoraCore.3.Final.html.
So what you are saying is that you didn't investigate how to run FC3 in VirtualPC. How is that the fault of the distribution? Sounds like a failure on your part to perform due dilligence.
- After several times of kernel updating (at least 3), I finally can boot
into X from the so called official kernel provided by FC3.
So you have a weird environment and you didn't research it. Your stupidity, not the distribution's.
- It is hopelessly slower than FC1! I could run FC1 with only 128mb memory
and don't feel much sluggishness. I now run FC3 with 164mb memory, but it is visibly slower than FC1! Application startup time is almost unbearable.
Hey, dumbass, the 90's called, they want their computers back. As we can afford more powerful computers for less money, code will gain more features and therefore require more resources. That's not a bad thing, you moron. It's up to YOU to decide what features you want and remove or deactivate the rest.
- I am a newbie on Linux, but I already find a few bugs. For example, in
gnome-termial, if I set DEL to ASCII DEL in the profile settings, it actualy acts like BACKSPACE. This bug may be specific only to gnome, but since it's bundled with FC3, so I attribute the problem to FC3. It's quite reasonable.
No, it's quite stupid. That bug has been documented and discussed ad nauseum. Your being too stupid or lazy to find out about it doesn't mean that the distro is bad. And if you don't understand that FC is a bleeding edge distro and is EXPECTED to uncover bugs and problems, then you need to go read the very first paragraph at http://fedora.redhat.com. YOU need to do some work instead of coming in here and blaming your ignorance and stupidity on the distro.
- I have not acurate data to prove this, but I feel the system boot up
time is longer than FC1.
If you don't have accurate data, then you're talking out of your ass. Shut up. Oh, and see my response to #4 again.
- This is a minor problem - I only installed kernel+gnome, no KDE. Yet it
takes up more than 2gb space. What the hell? A normal Windows 2000 installation usually takes only 1.5gb even with all components selected. I forgot how much was FC1, but FC3 apparently is not doing better or even worse.
You stupid, stupid shit. You're comparing apples to oranges. If Windows 2000 is so much better, hey, don't let the door hit you in the ass on the way out, OK?
- I may think of others that attribute to this 'FC3 sucks' topic.
I can think of pages and pages of stuff to add to an "Edward Yang Sucks" thread.
Final words - I am not negating Linux.
Yes, you are. You're spewing half-truths and statements of ignorance intended to be insulting and derogatory.
Actually I think Linux and Open Source has a very good future. That's why I am catching the new waves here.
You wanna play in this arena, then learn how to play nice.
Thanks.
Any time.
LW
On Thu, Jan 27, 2005 at 10:43:40PM +0800, Robert Storey wrote:
I think it's time for you to set up a mail filter. You can set this up with a specialized program (there is an excellent one called "Mailfilter" which I use - http://mailfilter.sourceforge.net) or just use the filtering on your email client (I use Sylpheed).
To send all html mail to trash, filter the heading:
Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
Or if you only want to send html mail on the Fedora list to trash, use a logical AND:
To: For users of Fedora Core releases fedora-list@redhat.com
AND
Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
That should take care of it. For good.
Say, Robert - I think this filter is too loose. This method will also trash text based email which are PGP signed. Thats not what you want.
But you are on the right track.
Perhaps something that tracks more closely on html, like this line from my procmailrc file (this line is in a recipe which looks only at email headers and it is case insensitive):
* ^content-type:.*html
Edward Yang wrote:
The post by the WORST PERSON is a very excellent example to proove what I say - "Linux community has a dark side".
Please come here for help -- that's what this list is for -- but can we please cut this out?
Every community has people that fit into every personality type. Some people are friendly, and some are downright rude. Making that sort of judgment can be done outside of this list. Our common thread here is that we all use Fedora Core Linux.
Just as shouting "Apple sucks!" on an Apple list will make people angry, saying that "FC3 sucks" on this list will do the same. Please stop making broad negative statements about this community -- there are many of us here who would just as soon give you the shirts off our backs if you so needed it.
Chris Stark wrote:
Edward Yang wrote:
The post by the WORST PERSON is a very excellent example to proove what I say - "Linux community has a dark side".
Please come here for help -- that's what this list is for -- but can we please cut this out?
Every community has people that fit into every personality type. Some people are friendly, and some are downright rude. Making that sort of judgment can be done outside of this list. Our common thread here is that we all use Fedora Core Linux.
Just as shouting "Apple sucks!" on an Apple list will make people angry, saying that "FC3 sucks" on this list will do the same. Please stop making broad negative statements about this community -- there are many of us here who would just as soon give you the shirts off our backs if you so needed it.
So, I wonder if you support name calling (as Mr. WORST calling me **** in every post and every paragraph)?
Fedora is not the best to some, adequate to others, and the best to others as well. I like Fedora because I'm familiar with RH Linux. I'm comfortable in it. Some like Gentoo for its ability to build for their specific hardward, while others prefer Debian.
None are perfect. If you're interested in Linux, try out several distributions, ask for help on the appropriate list, and stay with a distro you like. If none suit your needs, then try Mac OS X, FreeBSD, or Windows.
Saying something sucks is nothing more than one persons way of getting attention on a mailing list and a sure fire way to get others riled up.
Personally, it's best to simply ignore folks that come out and say something sucks without asking for help to solve their problems.
I hope Edward can find a solution to his problems, but he must be willing to work at them.
Later Jesus Rodriguez
In the words of one of my colleagues... "Let the biscuit go"
Best wishes to all, Jeramy
On Fri, 28 Jan 2005 09:40:15 +0800, Edward Yang neo_in_matrix@fastmail.fm wrote:
So, I wonder if you support name calling (as Mr. WORST calling me **** in every post and every paragraph)?
Edward Yang wrote:
So, I wonder if you support name calling (as Mr. WORST calling me **** in every post and every paragraph)?
While I don't support name calling, I do support getting over it.
Whether or not you feel you have done anything wrong, readers of this list have the PERCEPTION that you started this thread in an aggressive and hostile manner by attacking the very thing that we work with and devote much time and energy toward.
Whether this was your intention is only something you can know. If you think that the name calling was undeserved, please understand that our perceptions of your behavior are that of hostility, stubbornness, and narrow-mindedness. If you want those perceptions to change, you need to start LISTENING to the advice that has been given.
Again, no I don't think that name calling is acceptable, but neither is your behavior. Grow up and get over it.
Its called ignoring that sort of verbage. I don't support name calling and I usually find those sort of posters have very little to offer in helping me get ahead with my problem.
So if you ignore that sort of fluff and posters then you are set.
Cheers,
Aly.
So, I wonder if you support name calling (as Mr. WORST calling me **** in every post and every paragraph)?
On Fri, 28 Jan 2005 09:40:15 +0800 Edward Yang neo_in_matrix@fastmail.fm insightfully noted:
EY>Chris Stark wrote: EY> EY>> Edward Yang wrote: EY>> EY>>> The post by the WORST PERSON is a very excellent example to proove EY>>> what I say - "Linux community has a dark side". EY>> EY>> EY>> Please come here for help -- that's what this list is for -- but can EY>> we please cut this out? EY>> EY>> Every community has people that fit into every personality type. Some EY> EY>> people are friendly, and some are downright rude. Making that sort of EY> EY>> judgment can be done outside of this list. Our common thread here is EY>> that we all use Fedora Core Linux. EY>> EY>> Just as shouting "Apple sucks!" on an Apple list will make people EY>> angry, saying that "FC3 sucks" on this list will do the same. Please EY>> stop making broad negative statements about this community -- there EY>> are many of us here who would just as soon give you the shirts off EY>our > backs if you so needed it. EY>> EY>So, I wonder if you support name calling (as Mr. WORST calling me **** EY>in every post and every paragraph)? <PLONK>
Dave Jones wrote:
On Thu, Jan 27, 2005 at 06:31:04PM -0500, Jim Cornette wrote:
- Some drivers are intentionally deleted because "nobody has this
hardware any longer".
Examples please ? We support some pretty arcane stuff, so if the driver still builds fine, isn't a potential security disaster waiting to happen, and doesn't impact overall maintainence of the kernel package, I'm happy to reconsider any drivers if theres sufficient demand. (And in some cases, I've enabled stuff on request from a single user as the driver made sense to enable).
Dave
ISA ethernet versions and I did have a problem with pcnet_cs (I believe) not being configurable with the tools to setup networks.
I sold the laptop that needed the pcnet_cs PCMCIA card, so "I don't have the computer any longer." I do still have two different PCMCIA NICs that I believe would no be easily configurable. The cards just stay in storage. The new computer had a built in NIC. It would be decent to be able to resurrect these cards.
I agree with the view that you expressed above.
Jim
On Thu, Jan 27, 2005 at 09:15:50PM -0500, Jim Cornette wrote:
- Some drivers are intentionally deleted because "nobody has this
hardware any longer".
Examples please ?
ISA ethernet versions
Ah yes, that got fixed a few updates back.
and I did have a problem with pcnet_cs (I believe) not being configurable with the tools to setup networks.
the driver should have been there since.. well, almost forever. I don't have access to CVS prior to 09-Sep-04 handy right now, but it's definitly been in FC3 since then.
I'd love for ISA crap to just go away forever, but every time we make noises even suggesting it, we get comments from lots of people about how useful it is for them to have them present in the Fedora kernels. Maybe one day we can farm out all the ancient junk to a kernel-oldjunk rpm in fedora-extras 8-)
Dave
Jesus M. Rodriguez wrote:
Fedora is not the best to some, adequate to others, and the best to others as well. I like Fedora because I'm familiar with RH Linux. I'm comfortable in it. Some like Gentoo for its ability to build for their specific hardward, while others prefer Debian.
None are perfect. If you're interested in Linux, try out several distributions, ask for help on the appropriate list, and stay with a distro you like. If none suit your needs, then try Mac OS X, FreeBSD, or Windows.
Saying something sucks is nothing more than one persons way of getting attention on a mailing list and a sure fire way to get others riled up.
Personally, it's best to simply ignore folks that come out and say something sucks without asking for help to solve their problems.
I hope Edward can find a solution to his problems, but he must be willing to work at them.
Later Jesus Rodriguez
Hmm~ I like your style.
Chris Stark wrote:
Edward Yang wrote:
So, I wonder if you support name calling (as Mr. WORST calling me **** in every post and every paragraph)?
While I don't support name calling, I do support getting over it.
Whether or not you feel you have done anything wrong, readers of this list have the PERCEPTION that you started this thread in an aggressive and hostile manner by attacking the very thing that we work with and devote much time and energy toward.
Whether this was your intention is only something you can know. If you think that the name calling was undeserved, please understand that our perceptions of your behavior are that of hostility, stubbornness, and narrow-mindedness. If you want those perceptions to change, you need to start LISTENING to the advice that has been given.
Again, no I don't think that name calling is acceptable, but neither is your behavior. Grow up and get over it.
Hmm~~ I am not perfect person. But I like your style.
Chris Stark wrote:
Edward Yang wrote:
So, I wonder if you support name calling (as Mr. WORST calling me **** in every post and every paragraph)?
While I don't support name calling, I do support getting over it.
Whether or not you feel you have done anything wrong, readers of this list have the PERCEPTION that you started this thread in an aggressive and hostile manner by attacking the very thing that we work with and devote much time and energy toward.
Whether this was your intention is only something you can know. If you think that the name calling was undeserved, please understand that our perceptions of your behavior are that of hostility, stubbornness, and narrow-mindedness. If you want those perceptions to change, you need to start LISTENING to the advice that has been given.
Again, no I don't think that name calling is acceptable, but neither is your behavior. Grow up and get over it.
What I want to add is - Try to post something like 'Windows sucks!!' to a Windows newsgroup and wait for rsponse.
I bet you won't get any words such as *troll* or *idiot* or *moron* or even more.
Richard S. Crawford wrote:
On Thursday 27 January 2005 3:31 pm, Jim Cornette flailed at a keyboard and produced this:
- It is less capable than even late 1990's M$ when you are trying to
setup dual-displays.
- Some drivers are intentionally deleted because "nobody has this
hardware any longer".
- Some programs have lower functionality than they had when they were
first created.
- Disabling ICONs in the menus (mozilla) and not using the default icons
that were provided from the projects. (confusing and too blue)
I, personally, can't think of any reason why Fedora would suck for me. It does all that I need it to do: web browsing, e-mail, writing (very important for me), programming (mostly web development), music and DVD's. I'm not much of a gamer, so that isn't important to me.
Following the development of RHL 10 (Switched to FC1 in process) and using RHL since version 4.2 (5.2 and beyond on a regular basis). I am impressed overall with Fedora and the RHL versions that it transitioned from. I have become more impressed with Fedora and Linux in general. But looking back at other OSes and the problems and features that were available in earlier days and what is not yet reliable in Linux does give you some reason to wonder if Linux will ever catch up, since they are so far back on getting out of the gate. Dual-display is one of the areas where I see a 6 yr gap in Linux. (xorg-x11, maybe xfree86 also) getting at a stage where it should be today. I would expect one video driver and another video driver to be able to correctly allocate memory regions for each card, without overlapping the other video cards space. I'm not sure if picking memory regions for the limited video drivers supplied with xorg-x11 that work, but do not overlap with each other would be good practice. Or to have the server dynamically figure out what memory regions to assign the cards through the internal modules within xorg-x11 would be a better way to approach the problem. My thnking is that the drivers ought to be made to not overlap the same memory regions as much as possible, then get feedback from any overlapping memory allocations that are stated in Xorg.0.log and adjusting xorg.conf to allocate the correct regions for each card for the next time that the X server is started. My main concern is that my Intel 815 card is limited in resolution when an ati or radeon PCI card is added to the mix. With no card present, I can get the desired resolution. With both cards present, I cannot get full resolution and the memory allocation of the cards is overlapping. I refer to gdm starting from videocard1 and then the first active display is videocard0. Then moving the mouse around eventually leads to an X server lockup and most probably the whole computer locks up. I was surprised that someone running three video cards also sees a similar problem, but was able to get the proper results with FC1 w/ xfree86. Dual-display seems seriously broken now. I'm not sure if it was breakage or there were always problems with this feature.
Every now and then, FC3 does something unusual and unexpected; this morning, for example, it stopped listening to my USB devices for no good reason that I could see, and wouldn't start listening again until I rebooted. When these things happen, I repeat the mantra: "Fedora Core 3 is bleeding edge, Fedora Core 3 is bleeding edge". Even so, I still have fewer problems with FC3 than I do with my WinXP laptop.
I avoid XP as much as possible. I am not much for having to always be on gaurd for spyware, virus and intrusion detection software. These protections should be part of the OS and are enough of a distraction to keeps away from using it if not needed for some special purpose that is not yet possible while using a Linux distribution.
One thing that does suck is that I can't make the SMP version of the 2.6 kernel play with my dual-processor motherboard; I think, though, that this is a problem with the 2.6 kernel and my motherboard, not with FC3, since I had the same problem with SuSE.
I have not experienced dual-processors, but the smp kernel works fine on a multithreaded Processor that I use. In fact, this model desktop works great and has no hardware problems that I have noticed lately. It did have an X problem that was triggered by certain screensavers and caused X to completely crash, but leave residual infomation in the cards allocated memory (stuff on display before X crashed were present until the computer was rebooted). The problem was resolved mysterously with improvements in xorg-x11. These same improvements seemed to negatively effect another desktop that used earlier versions of similar video cards. Both the older and newer video cards seem to be unbroken now.
Now, why I like Fedora FC3:
Most of my hardware is recognized and is reliable and functional.
New ways to approach computing and keeping security a primary concern.
and of course, because it is downloadable for free and not encumbered
with proprietary software.
I love FC3 because of the strong user community surrounding it. Whenever I have a question I can post it here or to one of the other lists I belong to, and it will be answered. Sometimes sarcastically, but always answered. ;-) Plus, I can customize it any way I like; I didn't like FC's implementation of KDE, so I grabbed KDE from the KDE-Redhat project, and I haven't looked back. Installing my DVD drive was a piece of cake. Running FC3, my old dual-pro 866 MHz PIII works slicker and smoother and more reliably than my 1.2GHz PIV laptop running WinXP. There's almost nothing I can do in WinXP that I can't do in FC3. The only reason I keep Windows around at this point is so I can install audio books from audible.com onto my Creative Zen Nomad+ MP3 player (yes, I do have GNomad installed on my FC3 box, but the Audible.com manager desktop application does not exist for Linux... yet).
The Nomad player that I also own one is my only reason to use windows. It would be great if there was a linux OS that you could load on it and do away with the need for windows entirely. (was 20 gig, but is now 40 gig, changed disk and reloaded os)
I'm not a maniac about FC3; at home I also run an RH8 box and a Debian Woody laptop. At work, I maintain a server running FC2, a couple of Solaris boxes, and an old SunBlade 100 running Gentoo. My world is not all that narrow, though after only three years of playing with this stuff, I'm still a relative *nix newbie.
A good mixture of distros and hardware to become familiar with. I started playing with Minux, then later Linux (Slackware, then RHL 4.2) to become familiar with the Unix (Sun) operating system. I never touched a sun computer yet though.
Jim
Bill Rugolsky Jr. wrote:
On Thu, Jan 27, 2005 at 06:31:04PM -0500, Jim Cornette wrote:
- It is less capable than even late 1990's M$ when you are trying to
setup dual-displays.
HAHAHAHAHA!
Oh, you mean like having dialog boxes straddle the two monitors on Windows? We've got Windows software released this millenium that still gets this wrong.
I can set display 1 at one resolution and display to another resolution and they both work. Now for the problem with programs slopping the wrong information on each screen is different. Most windows programs that I have seen were not impressive to me, dual-display or single-display.
[Yeah, I know that the same problem existed
with Xinerama and many -- but not all -- X window managers until recently.] But I've been running with two *independent* (non-Xinerama) screens for a decade. Each screen has numerous virtual pages that are independently switchable. We are able to see M*N combinations of virtual pages side-by-side, where M and N around here are anywhere from 4-32. This is invaluable to someone who has to run multiple trading systems, program, read mail, browse the web, etc. Tell me again how that works on Windows? ;-p
The programs suck. Configuring the displays to work was pretty easy though. Did you have to manually edit your configuration files to get things setup or were you able to use some easy to run tool?
In windows, the second display presents a text message on screen that tells you where to go to configure the second monitor. You follow the text directions on the second display and you are all set to go.
I'm impressed that you can use dual-displays for a decade now. It would be better for this feature to be easier to configure and work for more cases than only for special configuration of the files or customized programs.
It doesn't work for me today on Fedora, but it does on ME. Why there is a difference is just a curiousity and a disappointment to me.
Jim
Bill Rugolsky
On Fri, 2005-01-28 at 09:40 +0800, Edward Yang wrote:
Chris Stark wrote:
Edward Yang wrote:
The post by the WORST PERSON is a very excellent example to proove what I say - "Linux community has a dark side".
Please come here for help -- that's what this list is for -- but can we please cut this out?
Every community has people that fit into every personality type. Some people are friendly, and some are downright rude. Making that sort of judgment can be done outside of this list. Our common thread here is that we all use Fedora Core Linux.
Just as shouting "Apple sucks!" on an Apple list will make people angry, saying that "FC3 sucks" on this list will do the same. Please stop making broad negative statements about this community -- there are many of us here who would just as soon give you the shirts off our backs if you so needed it.
So, I wonder if you support name calling (as Mr. WORST calling me **** in every post and every paragraph)?
Please, everybody grow up a bit and let this drop?
This thread is not the least bit constructive and should just die.
Paul
Dave Jones wrote:
On Thu, Jan 27, 2005 at 09:15:50PM -0500, Jim Cornette wrote:
- Some drivers are intentionally deleted because "nobody has this
hardware any longer".
Examples please ?
ISA ethernet versions
Ah yes, that got fixed a few updates back.
and I did have a problem with pcnet_cs (I believe) not being configurable with the tools to setup networks.
the driver should have been there since.. well, almost forever. I don't have access to CVS prior to 09-Sep-04 handy right now, but it's definitly been in FC3 since then.
I'd love for ISA crap to just go away forever, but every time we make noises even suggesting it, we get comments from lots of people about how useful it is for them to have them present in the Fedora kernels. Maybe one day we can farm out all the ancient junk to a kernel-oldjunk rpm in fedora-extras 8-)
Dave
The configuration of the cards that used pcnet_cs was the toughest part. I believe I had to load the module in /etc/rc.d/rc.local and was dependent on the pcmcia file that was before the permissions of the file were set from 755 to 644. I had to carry the file from release to release. The GUI tools were pretty useless to get the NICs configured. I might pull out the cards from storage and attempt to put them back in service again.
I like the proposed title for the rpm. Would this include ntfs support? I'm sure that some features needed for extreme legacy hardware would have to be put aside in such a scheme of a legacy kernel rpm. The kernel already outgrew the 1.44 floppy, we don't need it to be the size of a normal CD.
Jim
A good mixture of distros and hardware to become familiar with. I started playing with Minux, then later Linux (Slackware, then RHL 4.2) to become familiar with the Unix (Sun) operating system. I never touched a sun computer yet though.
See http://www.opensolaris.org, you don't really need a sun box to run Solaris any more.
Edward Yang wrote:
What I want to add is - Try to post something like 'Windows sucks!!' to a Windows newsgroup and wait for rsponse.
I bet you won't get any words such as *troll* or *idiot* or *moron* or even more.
Well, basically (and I was included in the group for many, many years), Windows users have a self esteem lowered... You can see for yourself, people may use it, but at least *nobody* I know *loves* it... Where as Apple, BSD, Linux and BeOS are a *completely* different story. That's the way I see it, anyway... and that't virutally the *only* explanation I can give why Windows users in Windows lists may not take seriuos a "Windows sucks" comment... <joke>They already know that</joke>
Temlakos wrote:
Why can't he just configure T-Bird, or even Evo, to recognize fedora-list@redhat.com as a user who doesn't want to receive HTML mail, and convert all mail to plain text? Such a simple thing!
Temlakos
Temlakos makes a good point, its really easy to set domains that don't want to receive html mail. I still use html mail for certain people who want a little bit of color in a message, like my 8 year old niece. But for all the technical lists I subscribe to I just add the domain to the plain text only domains section in Thunderbird options. This way I never accidentally send an html message to the list either.
Sincerely, Gerald
Jim Cornette wrote:
Dave Jones wrote:
I'd love for ISA crap to just go away forever, but every time we make noises even suggesting it, we get comments from lots of people about how useful it is for them to have them present in the Fedora kernels. Maybe one day we can farm out all the ancient junk to a kernel-oldjunk rpm in fedora-extras 8-)
I like the proposed title for the rpm. Would this include ntfs support? I'm sure that some features needed for extreme legacy hardware would have to be put aside in such a scheme of a legacy kernel rpm. The kernel already outgrew the 1.44 floppy, we don't need it to be the size of a normal CD.
Jim
I agree with Jim and Dave, I like the proposed title for the extras kernel for older hardware kernel-oldjunk kernel-oldjunk-ntfs
Gerald
Gain Paolo Mureddu wrote:
Edward Yang wrote:
What I want to add is - Try to post something like 'Windows sucks!!' to a Windows newsgroup and wait for rsponse.
I bet you won't get any words such as *troll* or *idiot* or *moron* or even more.
Well, basically (and I was included in the group for many, many years), Windows users have a self esteem lowered... You can see for yourself, people may use it, but at least *nobody* I know *loves* it... Where as Apple, BSD, Linux and BeOS are a *completely* different story. That's the way I see it, anyway... and that't virutally the *only* explanation I can give why Windows users in Windows lists may not take seriuos a "Windows sucks" comment... <joke>They already know that</joke>
You missed a very important and greatly misunderstood OS: IBM's OS/2. I used it from 1992 until just short of 2000, when I started to explore LINUX. BTW, think banks and nuclear power plants.
James McKenzie wrote:
You missed a very important and greatly misunderstood OS: IBM's OS/2. I used it from 1992 until just short of 2000, when I started to explore LINUX. BTW, think banks and nuclear power plants.
Yeah, I omited it by accident... the whole OS/2 -- Win95 issue make my blood boil.
On Thu, 2005-01-27 at 18:33 -0500, Dave Jones wrote:
On Thu, Jan 27, 2005 at 06:31:04PM -0500, Jim Cornette wrote:
- Some drivers are intentionally deleted because "nobody has this
hardware any longer".
Examples please ? We support some pretty arcane stuff, so if the driver still builds fine, isn't a potential security disaster waiting to happen, and doesn't impact overall maintainence of the kernel package, I'm happy to reconsider any drivers if theres sufficient demand. (And in some cases, I've enabled stuff on request from a single user as the driver made sense to enable).
---- adopt the RHEL paradigm - kernel-unsupported ;-)
oops - it's all technically unsupported in Fedora
Craig
On Thu, 2005-01-27 at 18:33 -0500, Dave Jones wrote:
On Thu, Jan 27, 2005 at 06:31:04PM -0500, Jim Cornette wrote:
- Some drivers are intentionally deleted because "nobody has this
hardware any longer".
Examples please ? We support some pretty arcane stuff, so if the driver still builds fine, isn't a potential security disaster waiting to happen, and doesn't impact overall maintainence of the kernel package, I'm happy to reconsider any drivers if theres sufficient demand. (And in some cases, I've enabled stuff on request from a single user as the driver made sense to enable).
How about the advansys driver? A number of people have asked about this at various times:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=111232 https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=112795 https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=120446 https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=124018
I still use one of these cards myself and the driver is still part of the mainline kernel, though not built by default. The driver code is at least partly maintained though, because it changes between releases. It's sufficiently important for me that I maintain a web page showing how to use an Advansys SCSI card in Fedora Core (http://www.city- fan.org/ftp/contrib/drivers/advansys/) and the feedback I get suggests that I'm far from the only one still using them.
Paul.
On Thu, Jan 27, 2005 at 10:38:34PM -0500, Jim Cornette wrote:
The programs suck. Configuring the displays to work was pretty easy though. Did you have to manually edit your configuration files to get things setup or were you able to use some easy to run tool?
In windows, the second display presents a text message on screen that tells you where to go to configure the second monitor. You follow the text directions on the second display and you are all set to go.
I agree, configuring X via a GUI to take advantage of anything more than the most vanilla configuration is a recent development. One should understand, however, that the priority over these many years has been to make X even work on hardware that is often not well documented, etc.
I'm impressed that you can use dual-displays for a decade now. It would be better for this feature to be easier to configure and work for more cases than only for special configuration of the files or customized programs.
*XFree86* hasn't supported multiple displays that long, but *some* X server has, either on Sun equipment, or the Xi Graphics product for i386 (which I used on Linux and Solaris long ago). Multiple screen support was a fundamental design element of X -- that's why your $DISPLAY variable is :<xserver>.<screen#>. On Windows, AFAIK, one still just gets a single simulated large display.
In the past, multi-head was achieved with multiple video adapters -- [and those adapters, e.g., Matrox, had to have a special feature to turn off the VGA hw registers on all but the first card]. These days, commodity cards support dual-head, though often with various limitations (like lower RAMDAC speed on the second head), special setup requirements that are not (well-)documented by the vendors, etc. One still needs special Option lines in the device config to correctly select analog, flat-panel, TV-Out, etc. on various cards.
And auto-configuration depends on auto-detection, which involves things like DDC probing, matching to a database of hardware quirks and monitor types, determining which bit-depths can be supported on each card/screen, etc.
Remember, for the most part, X drivers have been developed by third-parties, not the hardware vendors themselves, who supply the Windows drivers that take full advantage of their product.
Bill Rugolsky
On Fri, Jan 28, 2005 at 08:18:39AM +0000, Paul Howarth wrote:
How about the advansys driver? A number of people have asked about this at various times:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=111232 https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=112795 https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=120446 https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=124018
current fedora-testing has it reenabled for x86.
I still use one of these cards myself and the driver is still part of the mainline kernel, though not built by default. The driver code is at least partly maintained though, because it changes between releases.
it disappeared in Fedora because someone marked it as BROKEN upstream, so when we rebased, it disappeared silently. We've got some smarts in the build system to actually notice things like this disappearing now, so hopefully we won't see this happening again in future. (Or at least we'll have a heads-up on it in the worse case).
The BROKEN tag is only relevant on some architectures. As some have noticed, it builds, and works just fine on x86.
It's sufficiently important for me that I maintain a web page showing how to use an Advansys SCSI card in Fedora Core (http://www.city- fan.org/ftp/contrib/drivers/advansys/) and the feedback I get suggests that I'm far from the only one still using them.
Maybe everyone else jumped on the -testing kernel 8-)
Dave
Robert Storey and Jeff Kinz were discussing procmail scripts to "handle" HTML mail.
Robert wrote:
To send all html mail to trash, filter the heading:
Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
Or if you only want to send html mail on the Fedora list to trash, use a logical AND:
To: For users of Fedora Core releases fedora-list@redhat.com
AND
Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
That should take care of it. For good.
Jeff replied:
Say, Robert - I think this filter is too loose. This method will also trash text based email which are PGP signed. Thats not what you want.
Will it? PGP signed e-mail should be multipart/mixed or multipart/signed (depending on how much is signed).
On the other hand, it *won't* get simple HTML-only mail: Content-Type: text/html is perfectly valid.
But you are on the right track.
Perhaps something that tracks more closely on html, like this line from my procmailrc file (this line is in a recipe which looks only at email headers and it is case insensitive):
- ^content-type:.*html
That shouldn't get *any* Fedora List e-mail...
The mailman mailing list software that Red Hat uses, as you know, sticks a list signature at the end of every e-mail. It's trivial to do this for plain text, very difficult to do for arbitrarily complex HTML, and impossible for signed e-mail that uses MIME to store the signature.
So if you have a MIME e-mail that isn't just text/plain, mailman will stick in another MIME part with the signature in plain text, and set the content-type for the entire message to multipart/mixed. And when procmail is examining headers, it doesn't include MIME message part headers.
I have this in my .procmailrc: it is designed to catch *list* mail that has an HTML part *without* a corresponding text/plain part. So far, it hasn't been fooled:
:0 fhw * ^content-type: multipart/mixed * B ?? ^content-type: text/html * B ?? !^content-type: multipart/alternative * B ?? !^content-disposition: attachment | formail -A "X-Label: html-only" # sort out Red Hat's footers. Come to that, it should pick up on any text/html # that doesn't have an equivalent text/ something else. # Now we have to wait for something to fool the regexps... oh well.
Mutt can do scoring on the X-Label I'm putting in the header. And since I use mutt, I'm more interested in flagging e-mails without the main part of the e-mail in text.
(The "content-disposition" line will mean the mail doesn't get flagged if it includes an HTML file as an attachment: you may well want to leave that line out. It seems *very* difficult to make sure that the content-disposition relates to the HTML message part, and I'd rather be cautious).
Take out the multipart/alternative bit if you want to get *all* mail with HTML content.
James.
On Fri, Jan 28, 2005 at 10:16:16PM +0000, James Wilkinson wrote:
Robert Storey and Jeff Kinz were discussing procmail scripts to "handle" HTML mail.
Robert wrote:
Or if you only want to send html mail on the Fedora list to trash, use a logical AND: To: For users of Fedora Core releases fedora-list@redhat.com AND Content-Type: multipart/alternative; That should take care of it. For good.
Jeff replied:
Say, Robert - I think this filter is too loose. This method will also trash text based email which are PGP signed. Thats not what you want.
Will it? PGP signed e-mail should be multipart/mixed or multipart/signed (depending on how much is signed).
On the other hand, it *won't* get simple HTML-only mail: Content-Type: text/html is perfectly valid.
But you are on the right track.
Perhaps something that tracks more closely on html, like this line from my procmailrc file (this line is in a recipe which looks only at email headers and it is case insensitive):
- ^content-type:.*html
That shouldn't get *any* Fedora List e-mail...
Thats not the entire recipe. In real life testing (this list) my procmail recipe identifies and filters out all the html email, ( both text-html or just html) into trash/spam folders with 100% accuracy, since it was installed.
Now, the remainder of the exercise is to figure out what the rest of the recipe holds. Since Robert is on the right track and since he may not be working from the same set of assumptions I use in my procmail set up, I felt it best to simply hint him in a productive direction rather than simply hand him a pre-wrapped solution that only works in my environment.
On Friday 28 January 2005 03:18, Paul Howarth wrote:
On Thu, 2005-01-27 at 18:33 -0500, Dave Jones wrote:
On Thu, Jan 27, 2005 at 06:31:04PM -0500, Jim Cornette wrote:
- Some drivers are intentionally deleted because "nobody has
this hardware any longer".
Examples please ? We support some pretty arcane stuff, so if the driver still builds fine, isn't a potential security disaster waiting to happen, and doesn't impact overall maintainence of the kernel package, I'm happy to reconsider any drivers if theres sufficient demand. (And in some cases, I've enabled stuff on request from a single user as the driver made sense to enable).
How about the advansys driver? A number of people have asked about this at various times:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=111232 https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=112795 https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=120446 https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=124018
I still use one of these cards myself and the driver is still part of the mainline kernel, though not built by default. The driver code is at least partly maintained though, because it changes between releases. It's sufficiently important for me that I maintain a web page showing how to use an Advansys SCSI card in Fedora Core (http://www.city- fan.org/ftp/contrib/drivers/advansys/) and the feedback I get suggests that I'm far from the only one still using them.
Paul.
I'd probably be in at least one of those messages above. There for a while it worked right well, but when the decided to undo the request_region fixes, it either went to hell, or 3 different tape drives did.
The card itself is a very well designed and built card, with far less than the normal amount of virgin sacrificing needed to get the terminations 100% functional. For instance, a $0.75 schotkey diode is used in the hosts 5 volt isolation diode position, something all card makers should do, but don't, they use a 5 cent si type sacrificing half a volt of the precious 5 volts available for term power, so you wind up sacrificing virgins to get the terminations to work well enough to function in a lot of cases.
But, they wouldn't support it for all the fixes and so called races they claimed it needed but were never able to show me an example of even though I did ask, for the 2.6 kernels, so its out of my machine, probably forever, and I'm now using a 200GB hard drive with amanda.
Its one of the better built scsi2-fast narrow cards ever to come down the pike, and dropping support was, and still is IMO, a huge mistake. They were looking at the code, and not the hardware. The hardware is great.
-- Paul Howarth paul@city-fan.org
Edward Yang wrote:
Chris Stark wrote:
Edward Yang wrote:
The post by the WORST PERSON is a very excellent example to proove what I say - "Linux community has a dark side".
Please come here for help -- that's what this list is for -- but can we please cut this out?
Every community has people that fit into every personality type. Some people are friendly, and some are downright rude. Making that sort of judgment can be done outside of this list. Our common thread here is that we all use Fedora Core Linux.
Just as shouting "Apple sucks!" on an Apple list will make people angry, saying that "FC3 sucks" on this list will do the same. Please stop making broad negative statements about this community -- there are many of us here who would just as soon give you the shirts off our backs if you so needed it.
So, I wonder if you support name calling (as Mr. WORST calling me **** in every post and every paragraph)?
I don't support name calling, but you did do it first ("FC3 Sucks" is the equivelent of calling everyone on this list a bad name, as we're all involved in some manner with the development of FC3). That doesn't neccessarily make it okay for thomas to unleash the language like that, but you've done nothing but present problems that aren't related to Fedora CORE 3 as if they're bugs in the way FC3 is put together and functions. Gnome is NOT developed by the FC3 developers, it is an optional package that you may choose to install when you are installing FC3. VirtualPC is NOT developed by the FC3 developers. Java is NOT developed by the FC3 developers.
If you're having issues implementing certain software packages, as you have in prior posts as well as this one, then you could ask for help here. Understand though, that the FC3 developers, and FC3 as an install, are not responsible for watching everyone elses coding and making sure that ALL optional software packages run perfectly on every possible hardware configuration.
sorry for beating a dead horse guys, I just caught this thread before leaving work. I wish that other distros had a group as responsive as you guys.
-Joseph Green
<PS> thanks for the bits on procmail scripts guys, I'm a procmail/linux noob and that helped me with some filtering I've been trying to do
why i think thunderbird sucks..
i have filter set up to kill this "why i think FC3 sucks!" thread and a few others. but thunderbird only applies the filters once the emails are downloaded. So it's a nice way to put all of your emails away when you're done reading them but not for killing threads like this one.
note: the suject 'why i think thunderbird sucks' is in jest. i like the program.
mike hoy
Yea i know i shouldn't have done this but i am just so frustrated with having to sift thru this nonsense every single day!
On Wed, 2005-02-02 at 23:15 -0700, Mike Hoy wrote:
why i think thunderbird sucks..
i have filter set up to kill this "why i think FC3 sucks!" thread and a few others. but thunderbird only applies the filters once the emails are downloaded. So it's a nice way to put all of your emails away when you're done reading them but not for killing threads like this one.
note: the suject 'why i think thunderbird sucks' is in jest. i like the program.
mike hoy
Yea i know i shouldn't have done this but i am just so frustrated with having to sift thru this nonsense every single day!
---- you gots to take the good with da bad - I have nuked that thread many times - I don't read it
use a threaded view in Thunderbird, collapse the thread, delete the one remaining 'top' and they all delete with it at the same time...best you can do with filters.
Now, with procmail or sieve, you can send it to bit bucket before it ever gets to Thunderbird but I don't generally create rules for 'threads' only obnoxious people ;-)
Craig
use a threaded view in Thunderbird, collapse the thread, delete the one remaining 'top' and they all delete with it at the same time...best you can do with filters.
Now, with procmail or sieve, you can send it to bit bucket before it ever gets to Thunderbird but I don't generally create rules for 'threads' only obnoxious people ;-)
threaded view is nice. will have to look into procmail and sieve.. but for now i think threaded view is gonna work fine.
mike h
On Thursday 03 February 2005 07:56, Mike Hoy wrote:
use a threaded view in Thunderbird, collapse the thread, delete the one remaining 'top' and they all delete with it at the same time...best you can do with filters.
Now, with procmail or sieve, you can send it to bit bucket before it ever gets to Thunderbird but I don't generally create rules for 'threads' only obnoxious people ;-)
threaded view is nice. will have to look into procmail and sieve.. but for now i think threaded view is gonna work fine.
mike h
I've switched from thunderbird to KMail partly for the reasons you've mentioned about being flooded with uninteresting emails. In Lmail you can set it to ignore certain threads and alert you to new emails in other 'watched' threads. You could probably make a pop rule to avoid even downloading the threads you don't want.
I'd recommend the change, I'm much happier with Kmail now (running in Gnome by-the-way)
Duncan
Mike Hoy wrote:
why i think thunderbird sucks..
i have filter set up to kill this "why i think FC3 sucks!" thread and a few others. but thunderbird only applies the filters once the emails are downloaded. So it's a nice way to put all of your emails away when you're done reading them but not for killing threads like this one.
Unfortunately, it's logicaly impossible to kill e-mail threads by subject until the mail client has seen the subject!
In standard Internet e-mail, the subject line is part of the e-mail header.
Most ISPs use POP3 for client-bound e-mail. This is a very simple Internet protocol. Normally a client simply downloads an entire e-mail (including headers), and by the time the client has worked out that the subject isn't wanted, then it's too late: the rest of the e-mail is already coming!
It is possible to use the TOP command to merely get the message headers, but this is listed as "optional": not all servers support it. More importantly, I believe that there is no standard way to get the rest of the message *without* getting the headers as well. So you'd have to download the headers, check that you want the e-mail, then download the headers and the rest of the e-mail. On a mailing list like this, for example, unless you kill lots of threads, then you're going to be downloading the headers twice for nearly every e-mail, and you actually download more.
With SMTP, the oldest standard protocol, there is no way to interrupt an inbound message once it's started coming while still telling the sending mail server not to try again.
IMAP is a much newer and much richer protocol. It's also not much used by ISPs because it supports keeping messages on the server, and the ISPs want the e-mail off their servers as quickly as possible!
It does have support for retrieving subjects, and even for getting the server to search by subject and delete the results. I can't see any indication (quickly checking the RFC) that this is optional, but I don't know how much client software supports it: anyone?
That's rather longer than I expected. Sorry about that.
James.
I don't support name calling, but you did do it first ("FC3 Sucks" is the equivelent of calling everyone on this list a bad name, as we're all involved in some manner with the development of FC3). That doesn't neccessarily make it okay for thomas to unleash the language like that, but you've done nothing but present problems that aren't related to Fedora CORE 3 as if they're bugs in the way FC3 is put together and functions. Gnome is NOT developed by the FC3 developers, it is an optional package that you may choose to install when you are installing FC3. VirtualPC is NOT developed by the FC3 developers. Java is NOT developed by the FC3 developers.
The above statement remind me of a joke of a lost helicopter pilot who asks a person in the window of a building, "Where am I?" The answer he received was, "In a helicopter". He know knew where he was. He was outside the Microsoft building because the answer was correct but did not really speak to his real problem.
Fedora is a collection of software packaged as a unit and distributed by Fedora (who I claim is really a subgroup of RedHat). They chose what to include and what to not include. Sure someone with experience can choose which of the included software not to install so his needs are best met. But one of our goals as a Linux community is to convince people that Linux offers an viable alternative to that other choice. To posit that everything that is part of the distribution that was not actually written by the Fedora developers (which includes the kernels) can not be discussed or criticized is a slippery slope.
We may be all involved in Fedora Development in some way but not in the same way. There are some that are more equal than others. It is my position that any program that is distributed on the CD-s of a Fedora distribution is fair game to be discussed on the list both positively and negatively. ======================================================================= Serocki's Stricture: Marriage is always a bachelor's last option. ------------------------------------------- Aaron Konstam Computer Science Trinity University One Trinity Place. San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
telephone: (210)-999-7484 email:akonstam@trinity.edu