Il giorno 18/ago/06, alle ore 16:34, Rahul ha scritto:
Does the interview actually ends up with Max saying "Which is why I think a lot of the OSS "religious wars" don't make a lot of sense." ?? If so i am a bit disappointed :-) That's because on the last question "Have you tried Ubuntu yourself? Is there, in your opinion, something Ubuntu does better than Fedora?" Max didn't actually answered. He cites the main site/wiki efficency and the fist second impression of a missing NetworkManager but then he omits to talk about the obvious better "dektop experience" for Ubuntu users (fade effects, fast user switching, general graphical consinstency [1]). Ubuntu was born to be, and it's still developed to be, "Linux for Human Beings". Like my mom, or my friend which has studied literature, or anyone. Fedora is a 360° open pourpouse distribution. With time and skill you can turn it into anything you like or want it to be. If that's our goal fine, go ahead. If we want to appeal more and more people, and to get them come to use we should think new strategies, the couple that comes to my mind are (i think) near the actual Board goals (as stated in the interview): - the Core + Extras + Community package separation should be clearly resolved. The Ubuntu or Mandriva approach is (to me) the winner: core (as universe or main) + extras (multiverse or contrib) + jpackage (java related) + PLF/non-free and STOP. No more livna/rpmforge dualism, nor a dozen self referring repo for a specific task (each one on his server) - some enhancements in the graphical behaviour of our window managers (but i'd like to talk about them in the desktop list). Hope that my english was not too rusty to be understood. -- Nicola .:kOoLiNuS:. Losito |
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