Debian Unstable vs. Ubuntu

squareyes squareyes at optusnet.com.au
Wed Feb 9 01:26:40 UTC 2005


Hi all,
I live in a small country town, and seem to be spending a lot of time
helping the silent majority to use Windows98/XP etc. As far as I know am
the only Linux user in town (620 people), but am trying to correct this,
would be nice to have some local help for myself :-)
It seems to me that the majority of computer users are only really
interested in ; The Internet, playing games, a little word processing,
and some graphics/digital camera. How the system works is of no interest
to  most. The basics even for "Windows" for a new user is minimal.What
is considered "simple", for some, is far from it for many. How to access
the CDrom drive, finding where to save etc., but books are
available(windows) for those who are interested, but from my experience
not many are.

Of the Linux distributions I have tried, Ubuntu seems to me the easiest
to install. and use. It has the advantages of the Debian
system,(apt-get/security and power) and so far none of the
disadvantages(difficult to install/setup). Horses for courses, power
users-- Debian/Ubuntu, the average home user, Ubuntu. I have tried both,
couldn't get Debian to work, as a newbie. If Linux is ever going to make
inroads into the home computer scene it needs to follow the kiss
formula, with an understandable, simple help system, while keeping the
power and security of Linux, and this seems to be the way Ubuntu is
going.
I have tried various Linux distro's, and for the new computer user, most
have help that is not at all user friendly. Man pages are only usable by
those educated enough to understand what they are about. The average
user has no idea of "command line" and isn't interested in getting to
know it.

Consider a total novice who goes to the computer store, who buys a
machine with windows/linux installed, goes home, plugs everything in,
and switches it on. Now what do they do? Big panic. (been there)
The opening screen with Knoppix is a great idea, most want to turn on
their machine and connect to "The Internet" How? A little onscreen help
would be great for a new user.
I am currently working on a html document I would like to submit to
Ubuntu that could be included to show at start up, with instructions on
setting up dialup etc (no dialup, no help) , what is/how to use
Synaptic/apt-get, where to find help after this etc.

My thanks to Ubuntu, its great, the choices that are "forced" on
install, are pretty much those that the average home user needs, a power
user can always remove anything not wanted.
 
> > documentation? All Ubuntu has right now is a bunch of HOWTOs, some
> > "unofficial" Ubuntu guide, and fairly small-to-medium user forums. I know
> > it's great to have a question answered immedietly, but I'd still love to
> > find it myself in a manual or a book, you know, just in case :)

 Any Ubuntu user is quite free to write a manual, could be a very
rewarding experience. Would certainly get a warm reception :-)
Am think about it, still have approx. 25 years(and a lot of learning)
left :-)
Take Care
Winton 


On Tue, 2005-02-08 at 13:11 -0800, Matt Zimmerman wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 08, 2005 at 10:04:36PM +0200, Rami Kayyali wrote:
> 
> > On Tue, 8 Feb 2005 10:56:32 -0800, Matt Zimmerman <mdz at ubuntu.com> wrote:
> > > On Tue, Feb 08, 2005 at 12:14:12PM +0200, Rami Kayyali wrote:
> > > > My gripes with Ubuntu:
> > > > - To some degree, there's certain incompatibility with Debian
> > > > packages, I can't use Debian's repositories in Ubuntu and sleep sound.
> > > 
> > > Our intention is that it should be unnecessary, as we provide all of the
> > > software from Debian directly.
> > 
> > Then why the double work? Why not be very compatible with Debian, but
> > still provide cutting-edge packages?
> 
> The realities of packaging such a large volume of software are unfortunately
> more complex than this; Ubuntu _is_ very compatible with Debian (by nature),
> but neither Debian nor Ubuntu can make guarantees about this, because the
> two projects make independent decisions.
> 
> Regardless of compatibility, it is problematic to mix packages from
> different distributions on the same system, because neither distribution
> will want to accept bug reports from a mixed system: they are unlikely to be
> able to reproduce them, and their burden is already great enough to support
> one distribution.  There are also technical obstacles with the way that apt
> handles these situations.
> 
> However, the amount of duplicate work is actually fairly minimal (Debian and
> Ubuntu share a great majority of their code); what gave you the impression
> that it was otherwise?
> 
> > Well, I don't think you could discuss merging Debian and Fedora, since
> > both are of very different natures. However, you could discuss merging
> > Fedora with Mandrake for instance. If Ubuntu could be somehow merged with
> > Debian, I think we wouldn't have the need to do the work others have done
> > before. It's a combination of efforts.
> 
> In the open source world, different people want different things, and that
> is why there are a huge number of distributions to choose from.  The way
> forward is not to try to merge distributions, but rather to allow for
> efficient collaboration between distributions, which is one of the primary
> goals we are pursuing with Ubuntu and Launchpad.
> 
> Again, your sentiment seems to indicate that you believe there to be a great
> duplication of effort between Ubuntu and Debian, but there is quite a bit
> less than one might expect.  Patches from Ubuntu are regularly sent to
> Debian maintainers for merging, and Debian work is regularly merged into
> Ubuntu.  Our goal is to minimize the differences between Ubuntu and Debian,
> to the point where they closely approximate the different goals of the two
> projects.
> 
> Ubuntu and Debian are already operating cooperatively, and we hope to
> streamline that collaboration as we evolve.
> 
> > Keep in my mind, that I haven't heard any reasoning on why Ubuntu
> > shouldn't be merged with Debian, or why not just track Debian and
> > provide extra packages from a certain repository that would generate a
> > Debian => Ubuntu desktop while still maintaining close ties to
> > Debian's own repositories.
> 
> Ubuntu and Debian cannot merge, because Debian and Ubuntu want different
> (and very often incompatible) things.
> 
> There are solid technical reasons why a shared repository model wouldn't
> work.  Ubuntu does much more than just add new packages to Debian; our real
> focus is on integrating existing packages in very specific ways, by making
> modifications to them.  This is fundamentally incompatible with mixing
> Debian ond Ubuntu repositories, because the packages from each distribution
> would supersede each other unpredictably.  Our current approach is carefully
> considered and has performed well so far.
> 
> > Many say that Ubuntu "forces" its own choices. If you ask me, by all means
> > do that. The desktop doesn't need tons of questions, and nitty-gritty
> > details about every other little aspect of the system.  Users need
> > simplicity, they just want a system that works (trust me, this is the only
> > thing that got me to try Ubuntu and ditch Gentoo for a while, the fact
> > that I got the system up and running in less than 10 mins).
> 
> That's the idea exactly.  In fact, I don't see the Ubuntu approach as
> "forcing" at all; given a simple, working system, the user is free to make
> new choices and depart from the standard configuration as far as they like.
> 
> If we did not make these default choices, that would be "forcing" users to
> make a choice before they can have a usable system.
> 
> > > We have an excellent documentation team who discuss and prioritize these
> > > issues.  They can be found on the ubuntu-doc mailing list.
> > 

> 
> My comment was a thinly veiled invitation for you to correspond with the
> documentation team about your ideas for new documentation. ;-)
> 
> > To be fair though, I'm quite astonished with how this thread is going.  I
> > love the intelligent remarks, the non-flamable replies, and that everyone
> > knows that if we're discussing this, then it's only for the better of
> > Ubuntu; it's called constructive criticism. You guys just don't know how
> > rare this is. I can't stop liking Ubuntu. Like many people said, it's not
> > just the quality, it's the whole end-to-end experience (downloading =>
> > installing => finding help => getting things to work => etc....)
> 
> I am extremely pleased with the way that the community has grown, while
> maintaining the spirit of cooperation and mutual respect on which it was
> based.
> 
> -- 
>  - mdz
> 





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