You are not logged in. Login Now
 0-24   25-49   50-74   75-99   100-124   106-130   131-155   156-180   181-203 
 
Author Message
25 new of 203 responses total.
keesan
response 131 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 17:28 UTC 2007

Cross, please stop picking on me.  If what I write annoys you, put me in your
twit filter instead.
nharmon
response 132 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 17:37 UTC 2007

Some of us wouldn't get anything done if we had to put as much time into
it as Sindi does.
cross
response 133 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 19:58 UTC 2007

Regarding #131; I'm not picking on you. I'm just saying that what you do is
pathologically different from what the vast majority of Ubuntu users do.  I
don't understand why you'd pitch in about what business users do anyway, since
you're so far removed from that case that it's silly.  Btw- in Computer
Science, the word `pathological' does not have the same meaning it has in
criminal justice.

You should also learn to use paragraphs.
keesan
response 134 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 23:34 UTC 2007

So what does pathological mean in computer science?
cross
response 135 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 23:50 UTC 2007

Essentially, pushed to an extreme.  So, for instance, some times we say that
algorithms exhibit `pathological behavior' if we hit some sort of edge case
that greatly increases the algorithm's running time or something of that
nature.
easlern
response 136 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 17 00:04 UTC 2007

Counter to understanding maybe? Patho = abnormal and logos = knowledge I
think.
mcnally
response 137 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 17 00:54 UTC 2007

 It's a good thing cross didn't use another, related term to describe
 Sindi's behavior.  But the insult potential of describing someone
 else as "the degenerate case" would be pretty unmistakable, even if
 it wasn't meant in a critical sense.
cross
response 138 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 17 04:18 UTC 2007

Hmm, I tend not to think of it like that.  For instance, when someone says,
``the pathological case of quicksort'' one is typically referring to an input
that gives an O(n^2) running time (ie, one that is quadratic in the size of
the input).  Rather, that's the worst case running time for a pathological
input.
maus
response 139 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 17 06:32 UTC 2007

I will say that it seems to me that keesan exerts more effort than it
would be worth to the majority of Linux/BSD users to get a working
system, and that the hardware on which keesan does this costs
significantly more in having to fiddle with it than it would to replace
with something more recent and more supportable (one for which
replacement parts can be obtained easily and which the OEM has not
disavowed). 

This is not to say that everyone should dump their older machines, but
there is a threshold age beyond which a machine demands more effort than
it is worth. I lump 32bit Sparcstations, pre-pentium 2 PCs and System7
and earlier Macs into this category. 
keesan
response 140 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 17 13:13 UTC 2007

keesan spends almost no money on entertainment.  And provides or sets up 10-20
free computer systems a year to friends, neighbors, etc., who otherwise would
not have any computers, and learns a lot, and gets a system that is much more
pleasant to work with than anything that could be purchased.
cyklone
response 141 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 17 14:03 UTC 2007

"More pleasant" being a subjective term that, as you define it, would not
apply to the vast majority of computer users.
johnnie
response 142 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 17 15:16 UTC 2007

Well, the setting-it-up part is no doubt a big PITA, but the end result
is likely pleasing, particularly if the ultimate user is concerned about
the simple things (such as email and word-processing).
keesan
response 143 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 17 15:42 UTC 2007

I enjoy learning to set it up and I hate GUIS.  I just figured out how to set
up 38MB of linux with three browsers, and kermit and a few other useful things
which includes X and a window manager and email and text editor.....
for someone who only wants to use it for browsing and email.  Her ex husband
liked what I set up for him.  She also wants Office Suite which is no fun at
all to set up and wants 121MB typical (Office 97) plus the 150MB of minimal
Win98.
cross
response 144 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 18 00:58 UTC 2007

You're free to hate whatever you want.  My concern is that, when you set
someone up with some recycled computer, that you inject your own biases and
potentially prevent them from doing useful stuff in a way that's compatible
with the mainstream.  Certainly, installing Windows 98 on someone's computer
isn't a good idea; it's ridiuled with security problems.  You'd be better off
figuring out how to install Ubuntu or something lik ethat.
keesan
response 145 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 18 01:20 UTC 2007

Why is Ubuntu better than Slackware?  Win98 is only to run WORD on (not all
of Office Suite, I was told.  She just can't tell them apart).  Linux for
internet.  With Opera.  No Shockwave Flash or noises.  Good for email.
I am setting it up to go into X directly, with a menu.

Ubuntu does not work well on old hardware.  It could not even find our modem
or sound card, and it wastes most of the memory on unneeded daemons and boots
slowly and runs slowly.  
cross
response 146 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 18 01:35 UTC 2007

Ubuntu is easy for non-experts to use, in addition to experts.
keesan
response 147 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 18 03:04 UTC 2007

What I set up is extremely easy to use.  Ctrl-ESC or mouse for a menu, or type
m for a menu, then type the first letter of the program or use a mouse if you
prefer or type the whole program out.  Looks something like Windows but much
faster and does not crash.  Customized.
maus
response 148 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 18 05:53 UTC 2007

Let me rephrase what Cross was saying: Ubuntu is easy for non-experts
*OUT OF THE BOX*. It does not require expertise to set up, it does not
require expertise to maintain, it provides a clear upgrade path and a
straightforward source of application software. I would say that all of
the above is doubly true for SLED/OpenSuse (though Ubuntu seems to be a
little bit faster). Ditto RHEL/CentOS. Even bog-standard Slackware is
appropriate, as it is a common, well-known and supported environment.
The skills learned on these mainstream systems are more portable and
more useful outside the network of you and your friends. People learn to
use tools that implement and expose standard interfaces, and learn to do
things in ways that are valuable elsewhere. Yes there is value in
learning how to do things with minimal tools, but it puts into place a
barrier to use that reinforces the notion that Linux/UNIX is
unnecessarily hard. 
twenex
response 149 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 18 13:21 UTC 2007

Jeff was just about to ask Sindi why she favours referring to herself in the
third person when you switched to using first.

Why does Sindi hate GUIs?

Jeff agrees with Cross; for the kinds of things one can do with Win98 these
days, a GUI linux distro would be better for most people than Win98. There
are several distros Jeff or Sindi could use which are low-powered and have
GUIs.

Jeff agrees that Sindi has a right not to use GUI's if she chooses not to,
but surely Sindi realises that she is not at all in the majority in this?
Cross was right to use the word "pathological" in the sense he used it, but
Jeff agrees with whomever pointed out that Cross should have explained his
use of the word.
cross
response 150 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 18 15:11 UTC 2007

Dan wonders why people insist on calling him Cross and not just, you know,
Dan.  Or even dan.
twenex
response 151 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 18 15:29 UTC 2007

Jeff calls Dan {C,c}ross because that's his login name.
twenex
response 152 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 18 15:29 UTC 2007

And surname.
cross
response 153 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 18 15:33 UTC 2007

Dan understands that.  But Dan would sort of prefer Dan.
keesan
response 154 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 18 16:04 UTC 2007

keesan to cross and twenex:
Someone specifically wanted Win98 to play Win9X educational games on with her
daycare kids.  Someone else specifically wants to learn MS WORD so she can
get a job in an MS OFFICE.  Other people (who I have never met) wanted
something their friends in Ypsi could help them with.  
Linux is going onto computers for friends, and they seem able to manage
without help once I set it up with Opera and give them a quick lesson.  No
Windows worms or viruses, and it runs much much faster.  It also takes only
a few minutes to copy over from a USB memory stick and uncompress (once I
partition and format the drive), and put on their phone number, login and
password.  I don't need to download 8MB of video driver because I have some
older video cards that work with a standard driver and configuration.

Since ALL they want to do is browse the internet, and don't need anything
fancy such as Shockwave Flash or even sound, this is a small tool that does
the job much faster than a big one.  

keesan does not like GUIs because:  they take longer to set up and load
(though linux X and icewm are only a couple of seconds), they waste memory,
they are designed around a mouse and it is quicker for me to use the keyboard,
they waste hard drive space (a bigger hard drive boots slower because linux
checks it out first).  But sets them up for friends so they can use Opera.

Opera is now usable as 'user' - su user first.  I dial as root so that user
won't have access to the file containing login and password.  

Three of our friends for whom I set up both Win98 and linux with opera have
not used the Win98 version, they prefer linux.  Faster, more stable.

I had it booting into X (vt1 - the other vts were still console) until I added
the password package and now I lost that.  SOmeone suggested putting startx
in profile but then I would not have three consoles in addition to X.  Any
other ideas?  I had edited inittab to only make vt1 go to X.

memory leak, forcing core dump, segmentation fault (I exited lynx on vt3)....
cross
response 155 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 18 16:41 UTC 2007

The problem with Windows 98 and web browsing is that Windows 98 is horribly
insecure.  A Windows 98 machine dialing into the net is likely to get
compromised almost immediately, even one coming over a slow dialup line! 
Hence the danger.

I would check and see if Windows programs run under WINE or something similar
before going with Windows 98.

It's not just about simplicity and space, it's also about security.
 0-24   25-49   50-74   75-99   100-124   106-130   131-155   156-180   181-203 
Response Not Possible: You are Not Logged In
 

- Backtalk version 1.3.30 - Copyright 1996-2006, Jan Wolter and Steve Weiss