On Mon, May 20, 2013 at 12:52 PM, Arun Khan knura9@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, May 20, 2013 at 11:18 PM, Ashwin Dixit ganeshacomputes@gmail.com wrote:
Yet, the Linux community seem to have two conflicting agendas:
Choose your poison. The FOSS eco system allows you both.
Arun, I am acutely aware that the FOSS eco system offers a wide variety of choices. The problem is not that there are too many Linux distros. The problem is that there are too many Linux application package formats.
When a Windows or BSD ( *BSD | OS X ) user locates a desired application on the Internet, they pretty much know it will run for them. On Linux, you have to use the right package manager to install a desired application based on its package format, and your architecture. Choice is great for the brilliant Linux hacker, but terrible for the average Linux user.
For an OS to be intelligent and user-friendly, it has to hide its complexity from the common user. The OS should just DWIM ( Do What I Mean ).
The average human user, is statistically more error-prone than a modern machine. The user should be removed from the loops of most decisions.
The OS should shield the common user from decisions such as: "Software updates available. Install now?" "Do you want to trust this site?"
Who wants to babysit a Personal Assistant who asks you every single time before using the bathroom? "There is some gas in my tummy. Fart now? [nY]"
Dear Linux, for starters, please don't tell me the package format. Just make decisions for me, using real-time, context-sensitive heuristics, and my custom settings.
Just my 0.02 BTC
Cheers,
- Ashwin.
================================================= Subvert the dominant paradigm. Repeat as desired. http://ownlifeful.com/