Why Fedora ?

Vikram Goyal vikigoyal at gmail.com
Wed Nov 2 05:21:27 UTC 2005


-----Original Message-----
From: Benjamin Franz <snowhare at nihongo.org>
Sent: Tue, Nov 01, 2005 at 02:23:28PM -0800
To For users of Fedora Core releases
Subject: Re: Why Fedora ?


> On Tue, 1 Nov 2005, Timothy Murphy wrote:
> 
> >Mike McCarty wrote:
> >
> >>I disagree with this statement entirely. Fedora Core is not a
> >>stable release.
> >
> >What exactly does that mean?
> >
<snip>
> You want stable, either buy RHEL or migrate to a different distribution 
> like CentOS, SUSE or Ubuntu.  I *am* a reasonable expert in administering 
> Linux boxes (I've been running Linux systems since the kernels had 0.9x 
> versions), and Fedora still bites me hard from time to time.
> 

I second that. I have been using redhat linux since maybe ver 4 or
something. At ver 8 redhat distribution had matured to the point that I
had thought, Ok, now it'll take off in a grand manner. Most of the
general and mundane creases had been removed, the applications'
integration was at its best and the whole system had become smooth and a
good experience.

Then came fedora with its bag of problems. Most of the users like me
thought , ok, maybe in one or two release it will also reach the same
level of comfort as redhat 8, 9. But that never happened. Rather the
most inoovative applications integrations were done away with odd
desktop user interface.

One good example is file browser. In 8,9 ver one could do almost all
acts in the same browser window. There was preferences tab with all the
nitty-gritty settings which a user might want to tweak. The comfort
level was great. Then came nautilus. File browser was put in the
system-tools. Its preferences tab removed. Now for each setting one has
to click Desktop -> Preferences -> the particular preference, which in
my opinion sucks. This is only one example, and there are numerous. Old
users know and can pin point such things. But I think they just took the
whole thing in their stride and since were more proficient in using
linux, ithey just side stepped these problems with changes in their
usage habits.

The point I want to make is that we have gone into a cycle of some level
of applications integration, then some quirk destroys that integration
and a new interface is introduces, some new policies render quite few
applications unfit for the next release and we are back to some earlier
point of integration where apps don't interact well with each other or
new quirks render them almost useless
The users unlearn and then try to relearn the system usage which sucks
the interest and resources of people.

-- 
vikram...
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-- 
Always leave room to add an explanation if it doesn't work out.
-- 
 o
~|~
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Registered Linux User #285795
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