Broadband Linux Bicycle
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I've finally got my linux machine working with BTOpenwoe
broadband. Now I've got to swap all my bikes' components to
Campag ;-)
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"Richard Bates" <usenet01@artybee.net> wrote in message
news:9qose0tejhkppi4do29p7r0jbk5konple4@4ax.com...
> I've finally got my linux machine working with BTOpenwoe
> broadband. Now I've got to swap all my bikes' components
> to Campag ;-)
Probably a smidge easier than working with Linux
bob watkinson wrote:
> "Richard Bates" <usenet01@artybee.net> wrote in message
> news:9qose0tejhkppi4do29p7r0jbk5konple4@4ax.com...
>
>>I've finally got my linux machine working with BTOpenwoe
>>broadband. Now I've got to swap all my bikes' components
>>to Campag ;-)
>
>
>
> Probably a smidge easier than working with Linux
>
>
Yeah, but that's how the world works isn't it...
Windows - Easy but crap. Linux - Difficult but good.
--
Chris
bob watkinson wrote:
> "Richard Bates" <usenet01@artybee.net> wrote in message
> news:9qose0tejhkppi4do29p7r0jbk5konple4@4ax.com...
>
>>I've finally got my linux machine working with BTOpenwoe
>>broadband. Now I've got to swap all my bikes' components
>>to Campag ;-)
>
>
>
> Probably a smidge easier than working with Linux
>
>
Nonsense... it just takes a bit of practice! I'm just
about getting the hang of it now, after 20 years using
similar things (:
Steve
Richard Bates wrote:
> I've finally got my linux machine working with BTOpenwoe
> broadband. Now I've got to swap all my bikes' components
> to Campag ;-)
>
SRAM, surely? Campag are just Apple.
Succorso wrote:
> Yeah, but that's how the world works isn't it...
>
> Windows - Easy but crap.
Windows - Crap - but we've learned all its little
inconsistancies and how to work with it, and don't mind too
much when Microsoft keep changing them. It took so much
investment of time learning how to deal with Windows, most
would be afraid of trying anything different.
I started on BBC Basic, then RISCOS, then tried Windows
3.11, hated it, and moved to HPUX then Linux. Switching to
Windows NT when work required it was as much a paradigm
shift for me as a Windows person switching to Linux. Its not
about user friendlyness - its about what you're used to -
and Windows NT was very inconsistant and not intuitive at
all. Fortunately I was brought up on IBM's Common User
Interface Guidelines, so had a good idea how things worked
in principle, so it wasn't too hard to learn.
> Linux - Difficult but good.
Linux - I'd learned all its little niggles and how to work
with it and how the model works. The underlying UNIX model
is different to Windows, but internally consistant, and in
some ways works very well. Everything is a file, and there's
no such thing as a sharing violation.
Then some people came along and said "Linux should be made
like Windows", and things got a little mixed up - but
fortunately differences are being resolved, and middle
button paste is working again in most apps (even though
Eclipse needs CTRL-V still, at least it pastes the primary
selection, so it half fits in), and I've not seen a file
dialog try to represent the filesystem as Windows like drive
letters for some time (Word Perfect), or a program try to
save user data into its read only install directory
(Eclipse, many others).
The funny thing is that Microsoft keep "innovating" ideas
from Linux, like auto completing file dialogs and the "Show
Desktop" button, home directories, primary selection in
terminals, and Longhorn screenshots remind me of FVWM2 in
many ways. Meanwhile some factions in Linux are chasing
people brought up on Windows 9 series and it looks like both
camps will go whizzing past eachother in opposite
directions.
- Richard
On Fri, 09 Jul 2004 11:20:54 +0100, Succorso <chris@ivy-house.net> wrote:
>
> Yeah, but that's how the world works isn't it...
>
> Windows - Easy but crap. Linux - Difficult but good.
Well, easy but crap and completely impossible when it either
doesn't do what it's supposed to, or doesn't do what you
want it to.
cf non-trivial but possible to do whatever.
Linux is not more difficult than windows if you had 6 years
unix experience before you ever laid hands on a MS machine -
at least as far as quite a lot of administration tasks are
concerned.
regards, Ian Smith
--
|\ /| no .sig
|o o|
|/ \|
In article <slrncetnvp.11k.ian@phlegethon.smithnet>,
Ian Smith <ian@astounding.org.uk> writes:
> Linux is not more difficult than windows if you had 6
> years unix experience before you ever laid hands on a MS
> machine - at least as
Nor even if you have exactly the same length of experience
on both. I came to both DOS and Unix in 1987 (having
previously been primarily a VMS man) and encountered windows
several years before I first used Linux in '95. From that
starting point, it's abundantly clear that Linux is superior
in every way, *including* ease of use.
It's like comparing a Galaxy to something from ToysRus (on
the premise, probably unfounded, that the latter might sell
toy bikes of the kind that make ten miles seem a b*****
long way).
--
Nick Kew
in message <2l84j1Fa0692U1@uni-berlin.de>, Richard Corfield
('rcnews2@littondale.dyndns.org') wrote:
> Then some people came along and said "Linux should be made
> like Windows", and things got a little mixed up - but
> fortunately differences are being resolved, and middle
> button paste is working again in most apps (even though
> Eclipse needs CTRL-V still
Isn't that *fscking* annoying? The other thing that really
winds me up with Eclipse is its habit of deciding a file is
read-only when you want to edit it. Not only have I not
discovered its rationale for deciding that files should be
read-only, the only way I've discovered of telling it that
they're not is by finding the file in the package explorer
pane (not easy when you've browsed deep into a Java bug),
right clicking on it, opening the properties dialogue, and
clearing the read-only property there.
I'm sort of in the process of changing over from XEmacs/JDE
to Eclipse having been an [X|Gnu]Emacs user for seventeen
years. Eclipse really does have a lot of useful, worth
having features, but the above little niggles really wind me
up. That, and, of course, the fact that I keep typing ^Y
when I'm in Eclipse and ^V when I'm in XEmacs - or better
still, ^Z, which in Eclipse is 'undo' and in XEmacs is
'close window'.
--
simon@jasmine.org.uk (Simon Brooke)
http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/
;; Women are from Venus. Men are from Mars. Lusers
are from Uranus.
Simon Brooke wrote:
>
> I'm sort of in the process of changing over from
> XEmacs/JDE to Eclipse having been an [X|Gnu]Emacs user for
> seventeen years. Eclipse really does have a lot of useful,
> worth having features, but the above little niggles really
> wind me up. That, and, of course, the fact that I keep
> typing ^Y when I'm in Eclipse and ^V when I'm in XEmacs -
> or better still, ^Z, which in Eclipse is 'undo' and in
> XEmacs is 'close window'.
>
It took a while in Windows to get used to the idea that I
could press ^C in a running program without killing it, and
backspace in the file dialog! Having got so used to that
button deleting things, I used to press it with trepidation.
- Richard
--
_/_/_/ _/_/_/ _/_/_/ Richard dot Corfield at ntlworld dot
com _/ _/ _/ _/ _/_/ _/ _/ Time is a one way street, _/
_/ _/_/ _/_/_/ Except in the Twilight Zone.
On Sat, 10 Jul 2004 17:03:54 +0100, in <2laibaFaoeesU1@uni-berlin.de>,
Richard Corfield <rcnews2@littondale.dyndns.org> wrote:
>It took a while in Windows to get used to the idea that I
>could press [...] backspace in the file dialog!
Well I never knew you could do that!
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DISCLAIMER: My email box is private property.Email which
appears in my inbox is mine to do what I like with. Anything
which is sent to me (whether intended or not) may, if I so
desire, form a legal and binding contract.
Richard Bates wrote:
>
> Well I never knew you could do that!
>
On older Windows, it was the only way of going up a
directory, as there was no up or back button. Before
someone told me that, I had to start navigating from the
top level again.
- Richard
--
_/_/_/ _/_/_/ _/_/_/ Richard dot Corfield at ntlworld dot
com _/ _/ _/ _/ _/_/ _/ _/ Time is a one way street, _/
_/ _/_/ _/_/_/ Except in the Twilight Zone.
On Fri, 9 Jul 2004, Succorso wrote:
> Windows - Easy but crap. Linux - Difficult but good.
FreeBSD - Harder but better OS X - Easy and Good
:-)
--
Jose Marques
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