On Wed, Sep 12, 2007, Jim Perrin wrote: >I suppose it would help if I finished the reply before sending..... > >On 9/12/07, Bill Campbell <centos@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> I have been installing Linux systems for well over a decade, starting with >> Caldera Network Desktop 1.0, all versions of Caldera through 2001, and SuSE >> from 8.1 through SLES10, and never have I seen an installation procedure >> that would write to anything on the hard drive without asking first. > >The whole idea behind kickstart is that it does not ask questions. >It's for automated installs. Think pxe setup, or a computer lab, or >hundreds of identical workstations. Why answer questions on all of >them, when you can automate the process and go get a coffee? I understand what kickstart is for. I've been doing autoyast installs on SuSE for quite a while to build identical systems. IHMO, If you're going to have an interactive option, then it should be interactive, gathering information to do the install, and not start scribbling on the hard drive until all that information is complete. >> This certainly violates the Principle of Least Surprise. >Not really. The tool works as expected. You're just unfamiliar with it. >Not trying to sound snippy with this, so please don't take it this way. I guess my expectations are a bit different than yours. Yes, I'm unfamiliar with Anaconda and kickstart (and I'm trying very hard to be polite and not be viewed as a troll). I'm new to CentOS, and have had little experience with Red Hat systems. I've been designing computer systems now for over 40 years, Unix systems since 1982, and Linux since 1995. I've always tried to design software as bullet-proof (idiot proof :-) as possible, and not to do irreversible things accidentally (measure twice, cut once). It just happens that I'm reading a very interesting book somewhat related to this, Alan Cooper's ``The Inmates are Running the Asylum: Why High-Tech Products Drive Us Crazy and How to Restore the Sanity''. My primary purpose in the original message was to provide feedback from somebody who's pretty technical, but not steeped in Red Hat/CentOS. Bill -- INTERNET: bill@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Bill Campbell; Celestial Software LLC URL: http://www.celestial.com/ PO Box 820; 6641 E. Mercer Way FAX: (206) 232-9186 Mercer Island, WA 98040-0820; (206) 236-1676 Everybody is ignorant, only on different subjects. Will Rogers _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos