Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 5th Oct 2006 20:49 UTC, submitted by Eugenia
Thread beginning with comment 168847
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RE[2]: Not well informed
by sbergman27 on Thu 5th Oct 2006 22:09
in reply to "RE: Not well informed"
"""You know what, you're a jerk. Until you post a picture of your perfect body..."""
Well, that was not to be taken too seriously.
But, to quote Katherine Hepburn as Eleanor of Aquitaine in "The Lion In Winter":
"You must remember to squint as you aproach or you may be blinded by my beauty!" ;-)
-Steve (Who is 43 years old and walks 3+ miles a day to compensate.)
Edited 2006-10-05 22:20




Member since:
2005-07-24
Ye Gods! Where to begin?
The software in Ubuntu, a single CD distro, is just a starting point. There are two obvious ways for an inexperienced user to install the software of their choice from the Ubuntu and Debian repositories which, last I checked, contained about 19,000 packages. They can use the drop dead simple "Add or Remove Software" application that appears at the bottom of the "Applications" menu on the panel. Or they can use the more powerful, and still easy to use, Synaptic, in the System->Administration menu.
Beyond that, gdebi is enabled by default. It allows 3rd party vendors to provide debs which the user can download to the desktop and then doubleclick to install in a nice friendly graphical fashion.
I would also recommend Jenny Craig to the author of the article, but that might be considered a personal attack. ;-)
Edited 2006-10-05 21:11