Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 22nd Nov 2006 22:33 UTC, submitted by Rich Morgan
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Member since:
2006-10-08
"Whats this bullshit lately about making each and _every_ distro "newbie friendly"? "
I have to admit that Slackware was my very first Linux distribution in use, long long time ago (SlW 3.4, K 2.0.32 / 2.1.57, X 3.1.1) because i needed someting to typeset a scientific paper (I decided to use LaTeX).
Slackware still achieves the goals of being able to be configured easily. And that's what I think is important to a newbie. It has KDE ("newbie friendly"), so that should be enough. (But I'd like to remember you Slackware comes with XFCE as well, which is much faster and is "newbie friendly" as well.)
"Whats the point of judging a distro on its "newbie friendliness" even though the distro is explicitely _not_ aimed at unwilling to learn newbies? "
Let me try a definition of "newbie friendly":
1. The software installes itself without needing to be removed out of the box it came in.
2. The software is fully configured to what the newbie wants it for.
3. The software tells the newbie what he has to do in every matter.
4. The software silently corrects every newbie user error.
5. The software makes the correct output out of wrong or incomplete input.
But if it's not from MICROS~1, it's not newbie friendly. :-)
People who don't want to learn anything should not be allowed to own a computer. Because people like car analogies: If you don't want to learn to drive a car and what the rules of public traffic are about, you're not permitted to drive a car. Simple solution.
And for installing Slackware, you don't need to be a "computer person". Even my neighbor got it running, and he hasn't seen any Linux in his life.