joysick...
stephan schutter
rhl at farorbit.com
Mon Sep 22 15:11:05 UTC 2003
I was not thinking of the enterprize... Besides, Microsoft's Enterprize
solutions do have this and many other nice-to-have features. I agree
that an organization may not make their OS choice based on the presence
of a tool to configure joysticks -- but the presence of such a tool does
add to the overall impression of the product; how complete it is.
Mike A. Harris wrote:
> On Wed, 17 Sep 2003, stephan schutter wrote:
>
>
>>Date: Wed, 17 Sep 2003 21:14:26 -0500
>>From: stephan schutter <rhl at farorbit.com>
>>To: rhl-beta-list at redhat.com
>>Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
>>List-Id: For testers of Red Hat Linux beta releases
>> <rhl-beta-list.redhat.com>
>>Subject: Re: joysick...
>>
>>Well... I just thought that one might want to cover all bases... Geeks
>>play games right? Anyway, S.u.S.E has included such a tool in Yast...
>>Why not copy them? Or mandrake... Desktop OSes ought to have tools to
>>configur all common harware; i thing anyway...
>
>
> For starters, SuSE's YAST tool, isn't open source to my
> knowledge. Red Hat isn't likely to devote engineering resources
> to something useful only for playing video games. Someone
> theoretically could do it in their spare time, but having it
> designated as a must-have solution for the enterprise is
> unlikely.
>
> It's just not something I can see us spending money developing
> internally. It does however make perfect sense being developed
> by someone sufficiently motivated to volunteer and write such a
> tool cleanly, or suggest an existing one. (Or convince someone
> else to write one.)
>
> Perfectly fits into the community nature of the project for such
> a motivated individual.
>
>
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