Re: ideas....
On Fri, Apr 06, 2007 at 08:43:09PM +0100, John Watson wrote:
> Some fantastic ideas
>
>
> First of all I would like to say how great Debian is as a operating system
> and a linux distro. I have tried many distribution but always come back to
> Debian. What I find wrong with these so called distros is that they always
> artificially alter components, components deleted/missing and loads of
> useless bells and whistles that never work..... I have some ideas which may
> or may not improve the project or least something to discuss about......
>
>
> 1) I just find that releases are being delayed due to the obsession with
> security.
First, that's not actually true. While security surely is one concern,
it certainly isn't the only one under consideration when releasing.
Second, I don't think security is something we should be compromising
on.
> If Microsoft was Debian then Microsoft would only be releasing
> Windows XP now,
Well, they aren't. And just in case you didn't notice, it took Debian
less time to release etch than it took Microsoft to release Vista; and
on top of that, they had to throw out a bunch of planned features in
order to make that happen, which was not the case for us.
I really don't see where your statement is coming from.
[...]
> I would suggest having two releases of Debian, one "really stable" which
> could be released every 2 years, another one "stable" released every 6
> months by taking a freeze of the current "testing" distro and spending a
> month (no more) fixing any major bugs. I personally believe the "testing"
> version is as stable as many of the other distros in the market. I normally
> use the testing version however when it comes to a release of the stable
> version, updates on testing are few with a increase temptation to switch to
> a different distro.
Is there a problem with starting to use testing, say, six months to a
year after the release? If so, what?
> 2)One real issue with Debian is a lack of admin tools, (such as yast is for
> SuSE). Considering starting a project to develop a range of gui based admin
> tools for Debian.
>
> What are folks view on this and is there any other similar projects?
I don't think there is anyone working on that currently, but there's
nothing wrong with it. Creating an interface that would give one a
"control panel" type of view, allowing to configure packages using
debconf, could surely be a good idea.
[... strange unintelligible question about money snipped ...]
--
<Lo-lan-do> Home is where you have to wash the dishes.
-- #debian-devel, Freenode, 2004-09-22
Reply to:
- References:
- ideas....
- From: "John Watson" <jgw2001uk@googlemail.com>