One problem with Gparted, is the representation. Do you read the graph from right to left, or left to right.
If we want fast access, we should move all /bin files to a partition at the very front of a physical disk. It can remain where it is on a SSD drive.
Leslie
Mr. Leslie Satenstein 50 years in Information Technology and going strong. Yesterday was a good day, today is a better day, and tomorrow will be even better. SENT FROM MY OPEN SOURCE
FEDORA LINUX SYSTEM.
mailto:lsatenstein@xxxxxxxxx alternative: leslie.satenstein@xxxxxxxxx www.itbms.biz www.eclipseguard.com
--- On Mon, 1/21/13, Luya Tshimbalanga <luya@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
From: Luya Tshimbalanga <luya@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: Re: "'Wow' for anaconda" ! To: "Discussion of Development and Customization of the Red Hat Linux Installer" <anaconda-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx> Date: Monday, January 21, 2013, 2:22 PM
This quote:
"I'm accustomed to the gparted presentation, which is
nothing more than a graphical depiction of the physical layout of
the drive, and that in itself assumes that you know enough to
understand what each partition is and how they fit together. That
isn't a very good assumption for the average user, is it? Showing
partitions in logical installation groups may well be a better idea,
and I just need to adjust to it."
is crucial because it shows the author understood the concept about
making the partition setting easier to read for ordinary users.
Hopefully the side effect will be to educate them.
Luya
-----Inline Attachment Follows-----
|
_______________________________________________
Anaconda-devel-list mailing list
Anaconda-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/anaconda-devel-list