Re: The future of Debian install??
>>"Francisco" == Francisco M Marzoa Alonso <fmmarzoa@gmx.net> writes:
Francisco> An elitist... well, if you can configure X from scratch
Francisco> faster than the computer itself, then you should think
Francisco> about go to the Guinness show. Computers are done to make
Francisco> our lifes easy and to let us avoid repetitive tasks. I'm
Francisco> not psychologist, but I think making repetitive things
Francisco> faster is not a manner of evaluate inteligence (or is
Francisco> it?). A monkey can do that kind of things faster than an
Francisco> human if it is trained.
This is getting seriously off topic, but this is somewhat of a
hot button with me. You are touching on the tools vs appliance
dichotomy here.
A refrigerator is an appliance. I can walk to a refrigerator
in Hong Kong, and I know how it works: open door, put <object> in,
<object>'s temperature drops. Sure, there are minor variations (auto
defrost or not), but by and large, appliance don't require training
and manuals.
A tool is something else. Take an Axe. Please note that
complexity is not an issue: an axe is far simpler than a
refrigerator. But as anyone trying to split firewood know, using an
axe requires training. An Axe is dangerous: hit the chunk of wood
wrong, and it can rebound off and take off your foot. It is, however,
more flexible and can do more things than the appliance (toaster,
refrigerator) -- chop trees, tear through doors and walls in rescues,
chop wood to kindling, Executioners axes, war axes, throwing axes --
lots of variations for the tasks.
Microsoft has made money trying to convince people a general
purpose computer, one of the most versatile tools invented by man, is
really a mere appliance, and needs no training to use well.
I beg to differ. A computer is a marvelous, versatile,
flexible, configurable tool, and, I prefer to actually learn how
to use ones tools.
I probably shall be flamed for this.
manoj
who shudders at visions of hammering nails with a chain saw
--
A salamander scurries into flame to be destroyed. Imaginary creatures
are trapped in birth on celluloid. Genesis, "The Lamb Lies Down on
Broadway" I don't know what it's about. I'm just the drummer. Ask
Peter. Phil Collins in 1975, when asked about the message behind the
previous year's Genesis release, "The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway".
Manoj Srivastava <srivasta@debian.org> <http://www.debian.org/%7Esrivasta/>
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