On Sat, 2008-04-05 at 20:02 +0100, Alan Bartlett wrote:
On 05/04/2008, Les Mikesell lesmikesell@gmail.com wrote: On the command line, if you saved the commands - or got them from an instructional listing in the first place, you just paste the same set of commands into a terminal window.
Three comments from me:
(1) Regarding what Les wrote (above), I can say that the three Wiki "Kernel" HowTos have been written in such a way that the command lines shown in those articles *can* be copied (from a GUI) and pasted (into a CLI/TUI). I'm sure that same is true for many other WIki articles.
(2) We must not loose sight of what CentOS basically is. CentOS == RHEL less RH. A stable, server orientated OS. On the fora, we often see evidence that CentOS is believed to be similar to *other* distros (that are more suitable for laptops & "home" use) and that it, CentOS, can be loaded onto typical laptops or home PCs. Then the grumbling starts about the non-operation of a bottom-of-the-range NIC or video controller or how multi-media doesn't work straight out of the box. The complaints that really irritate me are those that end with ". . . . whilst 'foo' (or 'bar' or 'xyzzy' or 'y2') runs o.k. on my hardware. So why doesn't CentOS?"
"So why doesn't CentOS?" CentOS is for High End Server Hardware. The most attracted feature it has to a new user is "my computer has been running for a whole week. "Stability" Windows begs for that.
The most disliked option for CentOS that I see was the option to not do a spin of the Client, Workstation and Server versions. Ohh, how it was so easy for me to tell a client get the Workstation version and Select install everything. I guess the reason for doing so was not enough resources.
Similar to other Distros: CentOS Does not even begin to compare to the usability of Ubuntu. But what can you say? Ubuntu is backed by a Multi Million Dollar Company.
Multimedia: I'll save that one for later. :-) I have an idea for that...
(3) The CentOS-docs list. Anne, the last item I received was dated April 3rd.
Alan.
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