Linked by Eugenia Loli on Sat 30th Jul 2005 02:17 UTC, submitted by Swank1
Linspire If you are looking for a desktop Linux with all the ease and user-friendliness of OS X, Linspire Five-O is a great option. It may not be the best for advanced users, but home and SOHO users will be happy with its performance, support, and great looks, the review says.
Thread beginning with comment 11781
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
RE[2]: rant
by on Sun 31st Jul 2005 20:17 UTC in reply to "RE: rant"

Member since:

dude where did you find the time....
:)
thats ABOUT all CNR is, a nice frontend for apt... the exact same problems occur and happen which are usually dependency issues.....
dependency issues rarely happen in debian if you stick to the released distro and dont go off trying to mix stuff. That is the reason they call it a stable release after all. So problems never happen in CNR? What do you do to fix thosee? Does Kevin Carmony come to your house and fix it for you? CNR is nothing but a installer and a expensive one at that!!!

"Even for me, with thousands of hours of experience, problems never seen before do arise. But I can figure it out. So I hope I have made it clear once and for all that CNR is a huge boon for any new(ish) user, be it Aunt Tillie, Carl jr or Jo User. "
Can you give me a example of these problems? What have you made clear? I dont see that you have offered anything that clearly shows how CNR offers a huge boon as you put it! If anything you have proven my point that linspired people love to harp on a couple things in linspire while ignoring everything else!

Reply Parent Score: 0

RE[3]: rant
by Anonymous Penguin on Sun 31st Jul 2005 23:09 in reply to "RE[2]: rant"
Anonymous Penguin Member since:
2005-07-06

"thats ABOUT all CNR is, a nice frontend for apt... the exact same problems occur and happen which are usually dependency issues....."

No they don't, because they make sure that the CNR is like Debian Stable, almost bug-free.

"dependency issues rarely happen in debian if you stick to the released distro and dont go off trying to mix stuff. That is the reason they call it a stable release after all"

I have said that already: if you use Debian Sarge you should have very few problems. But what did you do before the release of Sarge? Use Woody, as old as dirt?
Moreover, the majority of distros are NOT based on Stable. And what do you do when Sarge become old (it is already beginning to feel outdated)

"Can you give me a example of these problems?"

That proves me once again that you have never worked with Debian.

Examples? Thousands. Just a couple for you: install apt-listbugs and try:

# apt-get -t testing dist-upgrade

or even worse:

# apt-get -t unstable dist-upgrade

and have a look at the list of bugs: I bet you'll be scared.
(of course you can ignore the bugs: do it and see what happens-fam is a very interesting example)

Else try:

# apt-get -t unstable install gnome

Another one? Try to install KDE 3.4.1

And I hope you'll finally begin to understand.

"CNR is nothing but a installer and a expensive one at that!!!"

$49 a year, including every new release of the OS.
Libranet, as an example, is $90 and in one year time it will be totally outdated.

Reply Parent Score: 1