On Mon, Mar 24, 2008 at 11:25 AM, Dan Kegel <dank@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Mon, Mar 24, 2008 at 11:20 AM, Alexander Nicolaysen Sørnes > <alex@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > but would it also be worth adding a section on the AppDB page that listed > > > some native alternatives that did the same job, I mean for most word > > > processing do people really need to use Word or do they just need an > > > application that can read/write Word files if necessary? > > > > That's an interesting idea. It certainly wouldn't be too hard to add such > > functionality, and quite a few entries list such alternatives already. > > What is the general mood for something like this? > > It doesn't seem like a priority to me; e.g. a better way to search/browse > apps by various criteria is much higher on my list. > I agree. If someone needs or just wants to run a Windows app then the last thing I personally want to get in the middle of is some political conversation about Open Source vs everything else. I have nothing against those conversation but this isn't the place for them IMO. I agree also about better searching although if a user has a specific app she's paid for then it's that app she's probably most concerned about. Specifically for newbies, and maybe as part of regression testing overall, I think it would be VERY useful to have a list of links to demo downloads for apps we, as a group, agree work well. Newbies could quickly look at that list, download a few, and figure out how to do an install of those without the problems they are likely to see with the random app they want to run. After they go to 'Wine Install School' if they then try installing their specific app. I suspect they'll make fewer newbie mistakes and ask fewer questions of the list. So RFC: Let consider creating a Wine Install School with some known apps and simple instructions for newbies to build their understanding. - Mark