Re: a more simple question?

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smiling,
I am in the dictionary under in most cases.
I detailed what happened on the install attempt. I agree fixing is not hard if one knows what one is doing...witch's been my point. As for the nicely packaged aspect of Linux, I am not sure everyone agrees on that. In fact you are expected to install from unknown sites if you are going to upgrade and the like. Do not mistake me, as I said I applaud all the versatility. What I do not get is the difficulty in reaching that versatility. I asked on the debian list for example to see a list of all the packages by category...no one Could provide this. Indeed the choice of wordpefect is a choice, you might not install every Dos program out there...but you can find understandable information and choose on your own what might be worth exploring. because a few have hand picked for you what you really need, if you are new you might never find what might be useful.
Ease in understanding is my point here.
Individual choice should be easy to engage in, no matter if others do not think they need the program.
 I mean how many people use lillypond here?  Or movgrabe for that matter?

I do not expect anyone else to have to use it just because I want to.
Karen

On Tue, 5 Mar 2013, Tony Baechler wrote:



On 3/4/2013 6:47 PM, Karen Lewellen wrote:
 That is exactly what I hope I will not need to do.
 although I feared that might be needful.
 I have 6 or more DVD images of the entire debian squeeze structure. None
 of
 which got used because someone else in America put some of debian on a
 hard
 drive and mailed it to me.

Actually, doing a new install isn't that hard. It mostly does the right thing automatically. you only need the first DVD.

 I have no idea fully what is here, and again not finding the in person
 training have no real way of discovering without risking damaging the
 install already here.

Even if you break something, fixing it isn't that hard in most cases.

 It is funny, since Paul brought up the 63 k packages in debian.
 I asked on the Debian discussion list about installing the entire thing,
 so
 I could in theory examine the say 20 media players included, or discover
 programs I might not know exist that might be useful.
 I was told that no no one really uses all of it. In fact even on the speak
 up list Samuel would say, you do not need more than the first couple of
 images.
 What I do not understand though is why?


Well, why not use Wordstar instead of WordPerfect? Why not use w3m instead of Lynx? You wouldn't install every DOS or Windows program out there. The difference is that Linux distros have everything nicely packaged for you so you don't have to install it from source and/or fetch it from some unknown site.

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