On Fri, 2005-09-09 at 11:31 +0800, Marc Wiriadisastra wrote: > So we need to specify who are we > targeting. If we are targeting new users to linux then we need to make > sure that every amount of information that they would need they have > access to. If we are targeting more experienced users they would need > the information in a different way. Developers well they need > development information. > > I suppose it boils down to who is our target market in specifics. > Demographics, pschographics, locations and purely from a marketing point > of view we have to answer those questions first then we can create the > information to help those users. This is a two-way street. We honestly have never 'targeted' new-to- Linux and the Linux-curious, but they found us. In the absence of support, they formed their own support. Now we come along and consider if we are going to support those areas. Is this a community distro or not? Are end-users of any flavor part of the community? We now have the job of marketing to all of these levels: * Newbies * Power newbies * Linux experienced * Developers That's just the way it is. Look what happened to us in the FDP when we mandated soup-to-nuts toolchains? People who didn't want to use those tools started using other tools. It's our job to embrace that direction and help make it part of the overall experience. So, the same things come to the developers. Some developers, somewhere, have to be interested in a smoother end-user experience and need to solve these problems. Perhaps the make-your-own-Fedora-based-distro (MYOFBD?) tools are a good way to go. Then, for example, LTSP can design their own Fedora distro that they are willing to define updates for so their end-users are not overwhelmed. Better example -- grow an Ubunto-like project from *within* Fedora. Let those who think they know what such a distro would look like, build and support it. They can base it on Core and filter the updates to some sane subset that Mom, Pop, and Johnny can all love. - Karsten -- Karsten Wade, RHCE * Sr. Tech Writer * http://people.redhat.com/kwade/ gpg fingerprint: 2680 DBFD D968 3141 0115 5F1B D992 0E06 AD0E 0C41 Red Hat SELinux Guide http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-4-Manual/selinux-guide/
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