Slashdot Mirror


Ximian Desktop 2 Reviewed

Bruha writes "Lewt over at Warcry News Network has written his review for Ximian Desktop 2 targeted at the home users that are looking for a good desktop solution. He mentions this is a good product that could be bundled with Redhat or Mandrake to provide a one stop solution for the desktop user where they dont have to install any extra software to fully surf the web. Which you do with KDE/Gnome installs of most distro's."

188 comments

  1. What a horrible review. by Blymie · · Score: 5, Informative

    What a horrible review.

    This thing was all of 10 sentences, contains no detail, and just plain sucks.

    Can we have a _real_ review, by someone competent, please? Perhaps one that actually took more than 3 minutes to write, and has some detail?

    1. Re:What a horrible review. by SkArcher · · Score: 5, Informative

      You could try Here for a slightly more indepth review, or Here for a selection of screenshots.

      Or, perish the thought, you could try Here

      --

      An infinite number of monkeys will eventually come up with the complete works of /.
    2. Re:What a horrible review. by Blymie · · Score: 1

      Gee, google, no kidding?

      Heh.

      My comments were not because of my inability to find reviews if I wanted them, but that if /. is going to post a review, perhaps there should be a _real_ review posted... not this garbage we've just seen.

    3. Re:What a horrible review. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hate to be a grammar nazi, but why are you capitalizing the word here?

    4. Re:What a horrible review. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      LEWT OV3R AT WARCRY N3WS NETWORK HAS WRIT3N HIS R3VEIW FOR XIMIAN DASK2P 2 TARGETAD AT DA HOME US3RS TAHT R LOKNG FOR A GOD DESK2P SOLUTION11!111! LOL H3 MANTIONS THIS IS A GOD PRODUCT TAHT CUD B BUNDL3D WIT RADHAT OR MANDRAEK 2 PROVIED A ON3 S2P SOLUTION FOR DA DASK2P USER WH3R3 THEY DONT HAEV 2 INSTAL ANY 3XTRA R 2 FULY SURF DA W3B1!1!1! OMG LOL WHICH U DO WIT KDE/GNOM3 INSTALS OF MOST DISTROS11!1 WTF


      -- here is some text to beat the lame ass filter::Allowed HTML: Important Stuff: Please try to keep posts on topic. Try to reply to other people's comments instead of starting new threads. Read other people's messages before posting your own to avoid simply duplicating what has already been said. Use a clear subject that describes what your message is about. Offtopic, Inflammatory, Inappropriate, Illegal, or Offensive comments might be moderated. (You can read everything, even moderated posts, by adjusting your threshold on the User Preferences Page) Problems regarding accounts or comment posting should be sent to CowboyNeal.

    5. Re:What a horrible review. by scsi_pants · · Score: 3, Funny

      Yeah, I learned more from reading the fortune at the bottom of this page than I got from that "review".

    6. Re:What a horrible review. by DShard · · Score: 4, Funny

      This review was meant for those with a severe hangover. Short, no confusing screenshots and no coherent new feature list. If te-kill-ya shots were what your last night was about then you would be thankful for this review.

    7. Re:What a horrible review. by kkith · · Score: 1

      I agree, it sounds like SkArcher is trying to chastise you because you didn't use google. I think your first point was VERY valid.

      His response simply makes him look like an idiot. I guess if SkArcher worded it differenly I could accept it, but his rhetoric, sentence structure, choice of words, make him seem to be an elitist.

      It simply looks as if SkArcher just learned about HTML and wanted to post links in a message :)

      ----

    8. Re:What a horrible review. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd say it really just demonstrates the need for this Lewt guy to shut the hell up.

    9. Re:What a horrible review. by red_gnom · · Score: 1

      What a horrible review.

      You don't ged it, do you? This is THE worst and THE least informative reviews of all time people! It is THE one of a kind. It's a very good Guiness Record candidate! That's why it's worth to look at, and that's why is here on Slashdot.

    10. Re:What a horrible review. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a horrible review of the review.

      There were less than 10 sentences, no detail, just saying it "sucked".

      Can we have a REAL review of the review by someone competent? Perhaps one that took more than 3 minutes to write and with some detail?

    11. Re:What a horrible review. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because it turns him on.

    12. Re:What a horrible review. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you hated to be a grammar nazi, you wouldn't be acting like one. Asshat.

    13. Re:What a horrible review. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it wasn't meant seriously, shouldn't it have been from the "really-lame-reviews" department or the "gag-me-with-a-shovel" department?

    14. Re:What a horrible review. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wow, how did you know what I did last night?!

    15. Re:What a horrible review. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Gee, google, no kidding?

      Heh.

      Heh Indeed. In light of mr. smarty pants' comment, I propose that for ALL story submissions that ALL links be changed to http://www.google.com. That'll smarten those fuckers up real quick.

    16. Re:What a horrible review. by riko_at_anubics · · Score: 1

      Am I supposed to write that way to be cool???

      --
      I don't want to start any blasphemous rumors but I think that God's got a sick sense of humor. DM
    17. Re:What a horrible review. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes.

      Linux sucks no matter what the desktop.

      The end.

    18. Re:What a horrible review. by ecpx · · Score: 1

      funny you should mention hangovers. i actually read this review this afternoon while i was extremely hungover and i found it to be insightful and well written!

  2. Pants review by danrees · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is it just me, or does this review amount to little more than "Ximian Desktop reorganised my menus nicely for me". It seems hardly worth posting on Slashdot at any rate.

    It doesn't even have screenshots! I thought it was accepted here that reviews without screenshots are worthless?!

    1. Re:Pants review by ihummel · · Score: 1

      "It seems hardly worth posting on Slashdot at any rate."

      It's the weekend. What else are they gonna do?

    2. Re:Pants review by Mr.Ned · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I've been using XD2 since Tuesday and, to be honest, there's not much more to it over Redhat. The fonts are much better, the menus are better-organized (although picking up programs is a bit hit-and-miss as some Redhat wouldn't recognize Ximian does, and the other way around), everything just looks better, and the software is more 'up2date'.

      That's not to say I'll be switching back to plain Redhat anytime soon - I really like XD2. It's just not a huge leap. Think the difference between RH8 and RH9.

    3. Re:Pants review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't even have screenshots!
      Yeah, they didn't want the server /.ed

    4. Re:Pants review by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1
      Is it just me, or does this review amount to little more than "Ximian Desktop reorganised my menus nicely for me". It seems hardly worth posting on Slashdot at any rate.
      My cat's breath smells like cat food.
      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    5. Re:Pants review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love you.

  3. This barely qualifies as a review by Kris+Magnusson · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's more like a long blurb. Where's the beef?

    ............. kris

    --
    "I thought I could organize freedom. How Scandinavian of me."
    1. Re:This barely qualifies as a review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Where's the beef?

      In yo mama.

    2. Re:This barely qualifies as a review by crivens · · Score: 1

      Where's the beef? Not in Alberta for sure. Heck there simply was no beef in this "review". I wouldn't even call it a review.

  4. What? by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 4, Insightful
    He mentions this is a good product that could be bundled with Redhat or Mandrake to provide a one stop solution for the desktop user where they dont have to install any extra software to fully surf the web. Which you do with KDE/Gnome installs of most distro's.

    You do? I never have.... ALL distros I have ever used that set up a KDE or GNOME desktop for you, have a web browser, normally Mozilla/Konqueror.

    Personally I snarfed the Ximian artwork/theme and stuck with my RH9 desktop. It does everything I need, and is pretty well organised. Nonetheless, for business I would definately consider it, if only for the integrated OO and printing work.

    1. Re:What? by Blymie · · Score: 4, Funny



      You've already reviewed more than that blasted review did. It didn't even _mention_ integrated OO and printing.

      This is the first time I've heard of it.

    2. Re:What? by $calar · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Mandrake??? Ximian currently doesn't support Mandrake for XD2, only for Evolution 1.4.

      If anything, he should have said SuSE, who is officially supported.

      Either way, you are right that the distros do a great job already. However, I have installed Evolution 1.4 via Ximian's network software installer and found it to be an absolute dream.

      I assume XD2 is the same, but I am a Mandrake user, so I haven't tried it.

      If both systems are Linux Standard Base, then I don't see why it shouldn't work, though.

    3. Re:What? by ubernostrum · · Score: 1
      ALL distros I have ever used that set up a KDE or GNOME desktop for you, have a web browser, normally Mozilla/Konqueror.

      I may be wrong, but I don't think it's just about the browser. On lesser systems (i.e., Windows), you get a browser, but you also get RealPlayer, Acrobat, Flash, a JRE . . . all things which are, to many people, essential to "fully surfing the web," but aren't included in many Linux distros by default. Apparently if you pay for XD Pro, though, you get all that.

      Of course, the last time I actually paid for a RH release, it included a PowerTools CD with Real, Acrobat, and some other stuff; I was under the impression that paying for the boxed set of a distro usually got you some extra commercial-software goodies, but the guy who wrote this review is so brain-dead he probably didn't think to check.

  5. IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Eric+Destiny · · Score: 0, Insightful

    in soviet russia, ximian reviews you!

    --

    "The meek shall inherit the earth, the rest of us shall go to the stars." Isaac Asimov

    1. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA by silvaran · · Score: 4, Funny

      Sadly, that was more informative than the review itself.

    2. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here: *slit* I just slit your Karma's throat for you. *shakes head*

  6. Worst review ever by Sanity · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Perhaps it is just me, but this is one of the worst and least informative reviews of anything I have read in a long time. He starts out mumbling something about fonts, then goes into an unintelligable discussion of "menus". Apparently Red Carpet looks "cool" - very informative, thanks.

    I learned more about this product by spending 20 seconds on the ximian.com website than by reading this entire "review". Are the /. editors even bothering to read these stories before they post them these days?

  7. Extra Software by Bruha · · Score: 0, Redundant

    KDE/Gnome and others require you to install flash,realplayer,sometimes java just to fully surf the web..

    ximian worked out of the box.

    1. Re:Extra Software by Blymie · · Score: 5, Interesting


      Geez, something really stinks here.

      First, a really lame and pathetic review gets posted to /., while countless other, more complete and competent reviews do not.

      Then, the same guy that submitted the story makes a lame comment about the review, and gets modded up instantly.

      I'm beginning to wonder if someone at /. is all buddy buddy with the guy that runs this site, and is helping out the advertising budget this what.

      What an abuse of power.

    2. Re:Extra Software by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Y0UR ACCEPTED STORY SUCKS!!

    3. Re:Extra Software by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is not true, any debian based system would fill those dependencies automatically when installing a full desktop enviornment. And that includes setting the applications up as well. And, I imagine any redhat based distro would also do the same (along with Mandrake and SuSe). I have no idea why someone let you post your story here or mod you here for posting inconsistant and un-insightful 2 lines.

    4. Re:Extra Software by Miguel+de+Icaza · · Score: 5, Funny

      I stronly suspect Ximian marketing pay /. to post articles about XD2, mono, etc

      the /. editors searched long and hard and eventually found a positive (but unfortunately lame) review (DEF positive review: a review that doesn't say something along the lines of "gnome is just a dock, XD2 is an expensive dock with a better default theme")

      right now Ximian PR persons are composing angry emails to cmdr'taco, demanding a refund.

      DISCLAIMER: this is only a conjecture

      --
      Before adopting WHATWG, read the moonlight.NET EULA [http://www.microsoft.com/interop/msnovellcollab/moonlight.mspx]
    5. Re:Extra Software by Greyfox · · Score: 1
      Yeah, so I can get all that extra annoying animation to turn off.

      I don't even have animated GIFs or JavaScript enabled on my web browser. The web is much less annoying that way.

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    6. Re:Extra Software by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 1

      First, a really lame and pathetic review gets posted to /., while countless other, more complete and competent reviews do not.

      That's hardly new. Pathetic and lame reviews are common.

      Then, the same guy that submitted the story makes a lame comment about the review, and gets modded up instantly.

      Oh no, he posted at a 2 and got modded to a 4 right away. Again, that happens all the time. It's the "groupthink" mod feature. Don't like it? Try metamodding.

      Also, he's right. I agree with him, and and some of the mods also agree with him.

      In the past, I have made almost the exact same comments regarding Ximian's advantage over Vanilla Gnome, and got modded up quickly.

      I think this means that there are many people/mods who agree with these statements: Gnome's packaging is lacking, Ximian's packaging is better (for some people).

      There is no conspiracy here folks, move along.

      --
      "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
    7. Re:Extra Software by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 1

      And, I imagine any redhat based distro would also do the same (along with Mandrake and SuSe).

      Can't speak for Debian (but come on, apt often still leads to dependancy hell, which means that things don't get installed). I'm using RedHat 9, and I had to install Java, Flash, etc by hand in order to get them to work with the default install of Mozilla.

      My experience with Mandrake (9) and SuSE (8) has been similar.

      I don't understand it when people pretend that the dependancy problems don't exist.

      There are many levels to these dependancy issues: Your system could be customized, the people who provided the packages messed up or didn't test fully, etc.

      Right now, I can't install the updated foomatic ("Perl x.y.z is already installed") or ghostscript ("something is already installed") because of wierd dependancy problems.

      I haven't tried XD2 yet, but in the past Ximian 1.4 solved many many dependancy problems vs. vanilla Gnome. I'm assuming that XD2 does the same.

      --
      "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
    8. Re:Extra Software by BigRedFish · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Come again? I'm using KDE 3.1 and Konqueror right now as I write this; I didn't install Flash or Real or even Java at first. It ran just fine without 'em (unless I wanted to view a Flash site or run a Java applet of course - the same deal as with any other browser).

    9. Re:Extra Software by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apt does not lead to dependency hell, infact it's not apt that takes care of dependencies on a debian system, it's dpkg. Which takes care of it very well. Apt is a front end to the package management system, implementations of apt I've seen on otherssystems fail due to the non-existance of a robust dpkg like pagackage management system.

      If you don't know debian, why bother criticzing apt/dpkg?

    10. Re:Extra Software by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 1

      If you don't know debian, why bother criticzing apt/dpkg?

      Sorry if I don't know all the details. Guess I'm not an expert like you. I approach these things as a regular user would, which means I never type or see 'dpkg' anywhere.

      I've used apt/dpkg a couple of times on a Debian system. During half of these occasions, I would type 'apt-get install foopackage', and the install would fail due to wierd depandancy problems.

      To resolve it, I would need to remove files from my system, change my apt sources install new packages from a different site, change the apt sources again, and finally, download the first package.

      In my view, this isn't much better then running up2date or red-carpet on a RedHat system, or the SuSE package manager.

      From my view, all package managers run into similar dependancy problems.

      I wish more Debian users would get off their high horse and quit saying "Your package manger sucks, you should use Debian. Apt fixes all the problems for me", because it's more bull from the other side of the fence.

      --
      "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
    11. Re:Extra Software by CausticWindow · · Score: 1

      I wish more Debian users would get off their high horse and quit saying "Your package manger sucks, you should use Debian. Apt fixes all the problems for me", because it's more bull from the other side of the fence.


      Wtf are you on about? How can Debian users be on their high horses? Are you talking about Debian developers?


      Dependency problems like you describe there suggests that your sources.list or something were faulty. Debian is great, but it's not for idiots.

      --
      How small a thought it takes to fill a whole life
    12. Re:Extra Software by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wtf are you on about? How can Debian users be on their high horses? Are you talking about Debian developers?

      Sorry, that should be "some Debian users". Not all Debian users are on a high horse.

      I frequently hear things like "I just use apt-get, it does all the work for me" or "Apt just works" or "You should just use Debian" when I describe an rpm/RedHat install problem. Apt may be superior to anything on a RedHat system (And is much better then up2date), but Apt doesn't always "just work". Somtime it fails miserably, just like any solution on RedHat (I've tried up2date, apt-rpm, and RedCarpet). Debs can be mispackaged, just like rpms.

      Not too long ago, I tried to install Gnome on a Debian Woody system via these instructions. I don't remember the details, but I had to fix at least a dozen problems by hand before apt would download and install everything automatically. Most of the problems involved an old package on the sytem preventing a new package from being installed. It didn't automatically remove the old package like I expected. Sometimes, I had to fiddle with the sources list and download alternative packages.

      describe there suggests that your sources.list or something were faulty.

      So how is that different then my RedHat rpm's requiring the wrong dependancy?

      Look, Debian is a great distro. Apt/dpkg is a good packaging system. I'm going to install it on my second system here when I get the chance.

      But apt is not without it's own problems.

      --
      "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
    13. Re:Extra Software by arturogatti · · Score: 2, Informative

      Not too long ago, I tried to install Gnome on a Debian Woody system via these instructions

      The instructions you were trying to follow describe how to install an unofficial (i.e., not-supported-by-the-Debian-project) backport of Gnome 2.2 to woody and, in fact, the the page containing the instructions also contains feedback from a number of other users who attempted to follow them and ran into dependency problems.

      Your criticism of the distro and the packaging system seems a bit unfair, since (1) it was clear going in that other users had been having problems with the packages and (2) the (unofficial) packages hadn't been subjected to Debian's usual quality-control process.

    14. Re:Extra Software by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      Apt may be superior to anything on a RedHat system

      Yes, its nearest competitor on a RedHat based system is apt, which works just fine with debs and rpms (although not, I think, both on the same system).

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    15. Re:Extra Software by arkanes · · Score: 1
      For what it's worth, when I needed to install Gnome on my debian system, I just went to debian.org, found the first gnome app, and installed it. Since the app depended on gnome, and all the things gnome needed, it "just worked". Now, naturally, if you had a bad mirror or there was a bad package or something, that happens. I don't know alot about and can't speak to the technical merits of apt over RPM as far as the packages go. But auto-calculation of and then retrieval of dependencies is something that I pretty much expect. I was shocked to learn that RPM doesn't have it.

      BTW, I've never had any problems with apt not updating old packages (except in a very few cases with broken packages, and even then never from official mirrors), but I do always do a apt-get update, apt-get dist-upgrade before I install anything new.

    16. Re:Extra Software by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 1

      Yes, its nearest competitor on a RedHat based system is apt, which works just fine with debs and rpms

      It's a great attempt, but it still has problems.

      50% of the time when I try to install Gstreamer (Per their instructions at http://gstreamer.net/releases/redhat/), apt-rpm freezes (after installing the last package?) and locks the RPM database.

      Same thing happens when I download RPMs from freshrpms.net, so I assume the problem is with apt for rpm, not with some wierd package from gstreamer or freshrpms.

      Still trying to track down info to enter a bug...

      This has not happened yet with up2date or red-carpet so far.

      --
      "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
    17. Re:Extra Software by grumbel · · Score: 1

      The problem with apt or all package dependency tracking systems in general is that they only work smoothly when all packages come from a single official source, as soon as a unofficial rpm, deb or tar.gz enters the place since are starting to break on all fronts, either you can't compile stuff correctly since its picking includes from /usr/local/ and libraries from /usr/lib, package versions from different sources doesn't match leading to unresolvable dependencies, files from one package overriding another or binary incompabilities arise. Sure there are workarounds and fixes for all these problems, but they all require quite a lot of knowledge about what is going on and they all require time to apply. No matter how much knowledge you have, such stuff wastes a lot of time until you finally figured out what went wrong.

      As long as Linux Systems install all stuff into a single directory tree none of these problems is going away. Adding dependency trackers to software doesn't solve the problem, but simply works around it, the solution would be to get rid of most of the dependencies and make software independent of the underlaying system as much as possible, which wouldn't even require any bloat if done correctly.
      After all I would like to install two versions of a single package parellely one day without messing with --prefix and miles long PATH variables...

    18. Re:Extra Software by Skeezix · · Score: 1

      This guy is not the real miguel, just an imposter. this is the real miguel. Notice the uid.

  8. indeed. by labratuk · · Score: 0, Redundant

    ...where they dont have to install any extra software to fully surf the web. Which you do with KDE/Gnome installs of most distro's.

    Um. No, no you don't.

    --
    Malike Bamiyi wanted my assistance.
  9. RPM db conflict with RH9 by A5un · · Score: 5, Informative

    For Redhat 9 user, there is a serious problem with rpm db conflict. It has been reported here, so install at your own risk.

    1. Re:RPM db conflict with RH9 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OH GEEZ HE IZ SO +5 INF0RMATIVE. MOD UP

    2. Re:RPM db conflict with RH9 by forevermore · · Score: 4, Informative

      As has been suggested in that bug report, it's pretty easy to recompile the RPM without the "obseletes" clause. Well, for those of us redhat users who still remember how to compile things... Just `apt-get source db4` (or download the source your own way), do an `rpm -i` on it, which will place the spec into your redhat/SPECS directory. Then, just edit the .spec file, remove (or comment out) the "Obseletes: db1" clause and recompile with `rpmbuild -ba db4.spec`... viola! reinstall it and all of your dependency issues are fixed.. annoying to have to do this, though. that bug really needs to be resolved.

      --
      Do you really need reason for beer? Wingman Brewers
    3. Re:RPM db conflict with RH9 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't understand the bug report.

      I installed XD2 on RH9 and don't seem to have any problems.

      What exactly is wrong with the install? Are there any commands I need to type to observe the problem?

    4. Re:RPM db conflict with RH9 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ximian force installs (yuk!), and one package breaks the dependencies... so if you use a tool like apt-get for rpm, it will complain that your RPM database is broken.

    5. Re:RPM db conflict with RH9 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeeaahhhh.. and all the home users out there are going to do that 'real clickety' like.

      Yipes. This is why the desktops for OSS still aren't worth using. The average joe-schmoe user won't understand this kind of stuff whatsoever.

      Cripes, most people think that their computer has to attach to the big central router to access the 'WEB' these days. File transfers? Those came around after the web, just before email, right?

      *eesh*

      No offense intended towards you -- but this is, I agree, silly stuff.

  10. Changing default browser. by TheFlu · · Score: 4, Informative

    I searched for quite a while, trying to figure out how to change the default browser for XD2 from Galeon to Opera. I always like to write up tutorials on little things like this when I come across them, so you can find that info here.

    1. Re:Changing default browser. by xkahn · · Score: 1

      Or you could just search Ximian's support site:

      http://support.ximian.com/q?384

      --
      This .sig is left blank.
  11. The only comment that comes to mind by chabotc · · Score: 0, Redundant

    The only comment on this review that comes to mind is as substantiated, well worked out and thought thru as this review

    "Boooo, bad!!"

  12. My Review by daemonc · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's new and, uh, stuff.

    And new stuff is cool!

    Think I could make headlines on Slashdot?

    --
    All that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream.
    1. Re:My Review by discogravy · · Score: 3, Funny

      could use some editing.

  13. Time to outsource Slashdot editor jobs to India by Peter+Cooper · · Score: 5, Funny

    With the recent thread on the decline in white-collar jobs.. I'm not surprised, when they post nonsense like this to some of the world's biggest sites.

    I think it's time some of the editors were given the finger and let some nice Indian people give us quality links for $5 an hour. Slashdot would live on, have more money, be of a higher quality, and so on. (CmdrTaco could stay on as general manager though.)

    1. Re:Time to outsource Slashdot editor jobs to India by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haha! Well said :)

    2. Re:Time to outsource Slashdot editor jobs to India by ihummel · · Score: 1

      Would Taco agree to stay on for $5 an hour?

    3. Re:Time to outsource Slashdot editor jobs to India by Timesprout · · Score: 4, Funny

      Taco would confess to being Bill Gates illegitimate love child if his rate was doubled to $5 an hour

      --
      Do not try to read the dupe, thats impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth
      What truth?
      There is no dupe
    4. Re:Time to outsource Slashdot editor jobs to India by ihummel · · Score: 1

      Hmm. I wonder what he'd do for $10 an hour. On second thought, I think I'd rather not think about it.

    5. Re:Time to outsource Slashdot editor jobs to India by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Hanumana Desktop 2 Reviewed
      Posted by CmdrSamosa on Sunday June 15, @12:28PM
      from the would-you-like-a-squishy dept.
      Brahma is writing "Lakshmi over at Veda News Network has written his review for Hanumana Desktop 2 targeted at the home users that are looking for a good desktop solution. He is mentioning this is a good product that could be bundled with Rigveda or Mandukya to provide a one stop solution for the desktop user where they dont have to install any extra software to fully surf the web. Which you are doing with KDE/Gnome installs of most distro's."

  14. Operaaaaaaaa by jabbadabbadoo · · Score: 1

    XD2's good. It would be even better if they called up the Opera folks in Norway to make a nice little bundle together. Perhaps even a XD2 Special Edition Opera, with the appropriate style?

    1. Re:Operaaaaaaaa by damiam · · Score: 1

      The only problem is that Opera is written in QT, and wouldn't integrate nearly as well as Galeon.

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
  15. pet peeve #32 : 'definate' by mechaZardoz · · Score: 1

    to the author of the review, the word is spelled 'definite': does no one believe in spell checkers?

  16. For systems without wget... by FiendBeast · · Score: 1

    Does anyone know where an ISO image of this can be downloaded?

    1. Re:For systems without wget... by spydir31 · · Score: 3, Informative

      You can download the installer and packages seperatly and point the installer at the files, the installer supports it. (though I can't vouch for how well, not having tried it.)
      find the files at one of the Mirrors

    2. Re:For systems without wget... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Er... 'up2date wget'?!

    3. Re:For systems without wget... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      XD2 isnt a distro, it installs on top of other distros.

    4. Re:For systems without wget... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2
      While it won't help the original poster, the installer caches the downloads in /var/cache/redcarpet/packages, so if you are installing on multiple systems then yuo can just duplicate this directory on all of the machines and it will not bother to fetch them from the mirrors. I would not recommend running the install program if you don't have a lot of time though. Out of five installs, two worked and three died half way through and left the RPM database in a horrible state. Of the three that broke, two I could repair and one required a reinstall (it left the system almost unbootable).

      Once it is installed, however, it is very pretty. The menus are clearly layed out for novice users (e.g. Office menu contains things like 'SpreadSheet' and 'Word Processor'). All of the menus are simple and have a 'more' option at the bottom with everything else usually found in that menu.

      The theming of Mozilla and OpenOffice to look like the rest of the system makes it feel a lot more like an integrated desktop.

      Beyond that, I haven't really used it enough to know what is different from a plain Gnome2 install (I use Gnome 2.2 on FreeBSD at home, and only used Ximian enough to check that it was installed properly before moving on to the next system.)

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  17. Best Review ever by MosesJones · · Score: 5, Funny


    Normally reviews are cluttered with screenshots or useless information about how a product actually functions and is better than another product. Or even worse where they talk about limitations that a paticular product has over something else and recommend a best fit.

    This review was exactly what you want, very little useful information, a claim around it being better without really explaining the short-falls of other options, and a killer feature of recognising menus, which is clearly the most important element of a suite of products that aims to present a user-focused simple desktop solution.

    I applaud the Slashdot editors for doing away with reviews that leave us informed or challenged and have instead opted for reviews based just on opinions of someone only a few grades above Joe Sixpack.

    This is truly a change for the better on Slashdot and I look forwards to the Windows Server 2003 review where it tells me that installing IIS6.0 was a breeze.

    --
    An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
    1. Re:Best Review ever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      my real name is Joe Sixpack and i take offense to your comment.

  18. How does Ximian compare to vanilla gnome? by Billly+Gates · · Score: 2, Interesting
    The most recent version of gnome 2.2 is quite nice. Natulus and a mac like file bar is included.

    I do not understand the point of buying ximian if gnome2 is just as good. Is there any goodies that are not included in vanilla gnome?

    What about FreeBSD and Unix support? So far it looks like a mandrake, suse, and redhat only product. Not even debian support is included.

    1. Re:How does Ximian compare to vanilla gnome? by forevermore · · Score: 1
      I do not understand the point of buying ximian if gnome2 is just as good.

      Um, ximian gnome is free....

      --
      Do you really need reason for beer? Wingman Brewers
    2. Re:How does Ximian compare to vanilla gnome? by ubernostrum · · Score: 4, Interesting
      I do not understand the point of buying ximian if gnome2 is just as good. Is there any goodies that are not included in vanilla gnome?

      Software-wise, Ximian includes the heavily-tweaked OpenOffice.org suite which is apparently a lot nicer than the standard version. But primarily, Ximian makes it easy. Installing GNOME is a pain in the ass; you have to download a bunch of packages and compile them in just the right order. Ximian makes it easy by automating the install, and makes things easy afterward with the Red Carpet update service. Insanely easy package management is also something GNOME doesn't do by default.

      Finally, Ximian is a company which will provide support to customers who want it. The people who produce GNOME are (while producing a wonderful product) a non-profit bunch of programmers who will refer you to the FAQ or the mailing list if you have a problem. To corporate customers, that one feature is all the "goodies" Ximian needs.

    3. Re:How does Ximian compare to vanilla gnome? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      Installing GNOME is a pain in the ass

      Indeed. On my FreeBSD box I had to type

      portinstall gnome2
      which is far more effort than I would like to have spent. The main thing that Ximian seem to have brought to Gnome 2, OpenOffice and Moz are a consitent theme (which is actually very nice. Slightly reminicent of Aqua, without being an obvious copy. Looks proffesional, and simple.) and a set of dumbed-down menus (which are exactly what I needed for the lab I was installing it in - a user friendly set of basic apps, with more complicated stuff hidden from people who woulb be frightened by it and easy to find for people who need it.)

      If Ximian released a version of XD2 for FreeBSD which played nice with the ports system (it doesn't seem to play nice with the rpm system on RedHat) then I would pop it on my workstation. If not then I guess I'll just wait until their changes have been merged with the main source trees. OpenOffice 1.1 seems to be almost ready for use, and so it's a shame that Ximian based their version on 1.0, as it will probably take them quite a while to make a new version based on 1.1.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  19. Hrmmm by Bruha · · Score: 1, Troll

    Well considering I wrote the review I could of went into all that mumbo jumbo about it had this feature, it lacked this feature.. Frankly my criteria was very short.. Stock install of RH 9 then ran the command to install XD2 and logged back in and performed the baisc things a desktop user would do..

    You cannot do that with a stock install of RH 9 with the KDE/GNOME interface at all.. you've got a ton of 3rd party utilities you may or may not have to install depending on your use of the web.

    If you want something detailed then instead of taking 3 hours I'll put in a weeks worth of the freetime I do these things in and prove something useful to you.

    Or perhaps everyone's complaining becuse the word Microsoft or SCO was not included here.

    But all this feedback is quiet useful since everyone can learn from critics :)

    Thanks

    1. Re:Hrmmm by LinuxInDallas · · Score: 1

      I think people consider the review worthless because there was no information contained in it that has not been covered elsewhere. In short, it was too short. Mentioning that you like the way the menus are arranged does not a review make.

      That review was about as informative as the book reports I used to write in grade school that were entirely based off the summary printed on the back cover.

    2. Re:Hrmmm by perimorph · · Score: 2, Funny

      Wait.. It took you three hours to write that..??

    3. Re:Hrmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, if you can't learn from English class, you're not going to learn from critics.

    4. Re:Hrmmm by Guilly · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Let me get this straight. You're a drop out of high school who got a lousy job as a Perl programmer because he can spell Linux and writes shitty reviews with no details, nothing new and no useful information whatsoever while at work. Is that it?

      I'd like to know how many beers you have to buy to Taco to get this nonsense posted...

      WARNING: I put as much thought writing this as you did writing the review.

    5. Re:Hrmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No, everyone's complaining because it was a badly written, uninformative and utterly useless review. Don't try to pawn it off on people just not liking what you want to hear, it's not going to work.

      1) Read the definition of "review" in a dictionary. I don't think you fully grasp the meaning yet.

      2) Learn to write. You know, properly. "Redcarpet really looks cool." Oh, wonderful. What looks cool about it? Guess you forgot that part..and just about everything else that entails a review.

      3) Make sure you've finished one and two before you ever submit a story again, if for nothing else than respect for the other visitors.

    6. Re:Hrmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't even bother, I mean look at the site. The only reason the stupid thing was ever written was probably so he could rack up the hits to his page, maybe make a bit off the banner clicks. His fucking copyright notice at the bottom of the page is a longer paragraph than you'll find anywhere in the "review."

    7. Re:Hrmmm by LordNightwalker · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Well considering I wrote the review I could of went into all that mumbo jumbo about it had this feature, it lacked this feature..

      *sigh* I hate to be the next guy bashing your review since it's gotten bashed enough by now and people already get the idea, but... all that mumbo jumbo as you put it, is by many considered to be the basis of any decent review. A review that just says "I tried it, I liked it, it has nice colors" is not a review. It's good enough to be used in a conversation with your pals, but a review consists of a little more than subjetive shallow remarks about a product. When writing a review, and especialy before posting it on such a high traffic website as slashdot, you gotta ask yourself if the world realy needs to hear your message; if this is important enough to bother tens of thousands of people with. In fact, too little people think about this before they post something on the web. You could just as well have written this in 10 seconds instead of wasting 10 minutes of your day on this by just writing: "Ximian Desktop 2: Ooh, shiny!!!"

      --
      Install windows on my workstation? You crazy? Got any idea how much I paid for the damn thing?
    8. Re:Hrmmm by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      You could just as well have written this in 10 seconds instead of wasting 10 minutes of your day on this by just writing: "Ximian Desktop 2: Ooh, shiny!!!"

      Actually, when I installed XD2 my first reaction was exactly that. 'Ooh, shiny!!!'

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    9. Re:Hrmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He "would of" learnt English but it was to hard.

    10. Re:Hrmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man, that was the most gramatically evil post I have ever read, even on slashdot. How the hell did you get to write reviews anywhere without even knowing the basics of the English language? And I'm only picking on you because I doubt that you're not a native speaker -- those generally don't commit such attrocities. My god!

    11. Re:Hrmmm by demaria · · Score: 2

      As a professional product reviewer myself, here are some hints.
      1) Don't hide that you're the guy who submitted the story to slashdot. It's rude, at least in my opinion.
      2) MS Word has a grammer checker in it. You may wish to use it. "First impressions were of the clean interface it provided just like Windows XP you start out with a mostly blank desktop." This sentence grammer poor. Slashdot posts, usenet or personal web pages that's acceptable. I am not an English major and do make mistakes. But the quality of this review is plain awful. It looks more like the notes you take before writing the review. Using complete sentences would only take a few more minutes of time.
      3) Download size is more informative than download time. The site could of been slow, and not everyone is on DSL.
      4) Don't refer to Microsoft Office as just "Office" when talking about OpenOffice in the same paragraph.
      5) "The OpenOffice.org office suite included is supposed to be even more compatible with Office documents though I did not really do any testing in that department since Iâ(TM)m focusing on the desktop user" That's something desktop users need to do, especially users switching from Windows. Big oversight. You might also of wanted to mention which version of OO is installed.
      6) The paragraph on Red Carpet is unreadable. And why is it sad that users will eventually install 3rd party software?
      7) Pricing information? Is XD2 free and how much is the pro?
      8) In the 'how to get' section, if you're not suppose to put the periods before the wget, then why are they there? It's also not really the smartest idea to promote wget | sh, but that's just the security guy in me talking.
      9) You didn't really say much. There's very little information actually transferred to the reader. It's not the length of the review that matters as much as the content. All that mumbo jumbo is important. And please, don't just list mumbo jumbo features, say if they're good or not. And say what's lacking. Otherwise, I'd just read the press release.
      10) All this complaining is criticism of a poor review. If you did not submit this to slashdot yourself, it'd be more forgivable. But since you published it and advertised it via slashdot, it has to hold up to a certain level of professionalism. Next time, if you want to do it half ass, don't purposly show it off. It just makes you look bad in front of a large audience of your peers.
      11) Don't include this version of the review in your portfolio. If you try to use this as an example of your work when trying to get a freelance paying review, you'd be turned down right after reading the first sentence. Use the advice posted throughout this thread to not only improve the XD2 review, but future ones as well. Many times editors will want to see example work before giving you a freelance job. If your goal isn't to be paid to write, which I don't see why not as you obviously have a strong passion for writing/reviewing, you can still use these pointers to improve yourself in a business setting.

    12. Re:Hrmmm by .com+b4+.storm · · Score: 1

      Well considering I wrote the review I could of went into all that mumbo jumbo about it had this feature, it lacked this feature.. Frankly my criteria was very short..

      "Could of"? Your "criteria" was "very short"? Sorry, but with grammatical errors such as these, I don't think you're capable of writing a real review at this point.

      If you want something detailed then instead of taking 3 hours I'll put in a weeks worth of the freetime I do these things in and prove something useful to you.

      Despite the fact that you said this sarcastically, that's a very realistic definition of how one does GOOD reviews. Anything less and you really can't call it a review - it's just a "first glance" opinion of what's there on the surface.

      You cannot review something as complex as a software package in a whopping 3 hours. With anything of significance, be it hardware, software, a book, etc. that is being reviewed, it is essential that you put time into it. Your review is about as insightful as me firing up NetHack and astounding my readers with such observations as "it uses text for its display" and "it is an adventure game that is very cool."

      Or perhaps everyone's complaining becuse the word Microsoft or SCO was not included here.

      Or perhaps because it lacked any depth, pros and cons, detailed comparisons of Ximian vs. other desktop environments, etc. Tell me why I should or should not use Ximian's desktop. Does it bork my custom menus, as others here have said? Does it bundle crashy components? Is this going to convince me to use Linux as a desktop vs. Windows? Tell me why Ximian might be worth my while, or not - and back it up!

      But all this feedback is quiet useful since everyone can learn from critics :)

      Now there is an excellent thing to say! While Slashdot isn't exactly the most mature crowd at times, there are plenty of intelligent people here with constructive criticism. In all seriousness, if you (or someone) wrote a well thought out and interesting review of Ximian, it would blow Slashdot away. Then again, rarely does content of significant quality make it to the front page, but one can dream...

      You've hinted at some interesting things (such as plugins not being bundled with XYZ distro, and so forth) that would be excellent to flesh out in a real review. The ideas are there, but it would need more work. Oh and one more piece of advice - don't submit news postings about your own stuff and talk about yourself in the third person. It looks really lame, and there's nothing wrong with saying "I've spent a lot of time working with Ximian Desktop 2, and discovered [review teaser here] and [another teaser]. Check out my full review of it here for the juicy details." Or something like that.

      --
      "Wow, you're like some kind of superhero able to ward off happiness and success at every turn."
      -- Ryan Stiles
    13. Re:Hrmmm by steveg · · Score: 1

      Just wanted to comment on a well thought out and presented criticism.

      However... You did tell us you weren't an english major (nor am I) but I've always found it painful to read sentences that used 'of' where 'have' is meant. It just jumps out and slaps me in the face.

      I don't want to take away from what you were saying, but that was bugging me.

      --
      Ignorance killed the cat. Curiosity was framed.
  20. Bruha = Lewt = Karma-Whore by HardcoreGamer · · Score: 5, Funny
    Let me rewrite the intro to more accurately reflect what this is about.

    Bruha writes "Lewt [THAT'S ME!!!] over at Warcry News Network has written his [MY] review for Ximian Desktop 2 targeted at the home users that are looking for a good desktop solution. He [I] mentions this is a good product that could be bundled with Redhat or Mandrake to provide a one stop solution for the desktop user where they dont have to install any extra software to fully surf the web. Which you do with KDE/Gnome installs of most distro's. Thanks for reading my crappy so-called review, boosting my site's traffic and increasing my Karma, my pageviews and my ad revenue.''

  21. What are those font spacing problems? by Chemisor · · Score: 2, Interesting

    On all those screenshots there are many "holes" in the words, as if the layout engine had trouble figuring out glyph sizes. What is that caused by? Did they get signs wrong in the kerning tables or something?

    1. Re:What are those font spacing problems? by rm_monterey · · Score: 1

      Now that I have it installed, I see these gaping holes in my open office fonts on XD2.

  22. Re:Bruha = Lewt = Karma-Whore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so jackass why don't you have a link to your review?

  23. Very affordable! by spaic · · Score: 2, Insightful

    for the 99 dollars it really stands as very affordable for the home user also.

    If you value 10 minutes of work for installing java and flash to $99, then it's definitely affordable.

  24. Review summary! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Since many of you do not have the time to read such an elaborate, sprawling column, allow me to summarize:

    "0MGz!!!1! X1m14N 1Z t3H r0X0R!!!1!"

    You will note that, in summarizing, I have attempted to remain consistent with the author's breathtaking command of the English language, meticulous attention to detail and stunning grammatical prowess.

  25. Does it still break your system? by jeramybsmith · · Score: 5, Insightful
    My biggest problem with Ximian is that it breaks your distro's dependency tree. Sometiems they will use split packages wheres your vendor doesn't. Installing ximian means you break your upgrade path, now why would anyone want that?

    It seems to me a trifle thing to use the same package names your vendor does and work within how things in your distro are already done.

    --
    Never overestimate the end user. -jeramy b. smith
    1. Re:Does it still break your system? by bheerssen · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That is a valid concern. Ximian is not right for everybody - if you do a lot of tweaking to your system, lots of upgrades and whatnot, then you would probably be better off without it. If you are running IT for a business, Ximian has a lot to offer - simple install, consistant, bundled with many third-party applications. That last point is a big time saver when rolling out numerous new desktops.

      As far as distribution support, that's like trying to hit a dozen different moving targets all at the same time. Better to settle on a common target and leave it to the administrator to take care of his/her distro's idiosyncracies.

      --
      (Score: -1, Stupid)
    2. Re:Does it still break your system? by cyborch · · Score: 1
      As far as distribution support, that's like trying to hit a dozen different moving targets all at the same time. Better to settle on a common target and leave it to the administrator to take care of his/her distro's idiosyncracies.

      All the different distros are hard to comply with all at once, but that is a large part of what ximian do: package gnome (and some 3rd party software) in a nice and sleek bundle. That should include packaging it for all major distributions (that includes debian).

  26. The Obligatory NPG Statement. by inKubus · · Score: 1

    I love the (insert failed human interface device here); It's so bad.

    --
    Cool! Amazing Toys.
    1. Re:The Obligatory NPG Statement. by 13Echo · · Score: 1

      "Yeah., well... Just keep your (insert failed human interface device here) off her, huh?"

      I must be the only one that got the "Wizard" joke there. Thanks, Lucas. ;)

      http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~rhwu/gifs/power glove.mpeg

    2. Re:The Obligatory NPG Statement. by LordNightwalker · · Score: 1

      I must be the only one that got the "Wizard" joke there. Thanks, Lucas. ;)

      No, actualy I'm a slashdot reader too... Imagine the odds; two slashdot readers meeting on... *gasp* Slashdot of all places!!! This can't be coincidence... ;-)

      --
      Install windows on my workstation? You crazy? Got any idea how much I paid for the damn thing?
  27. MODERATORS PLEASE MOD THIS DOWN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    its the lamest review i've ever read.

    no i didn't RTFA

    1. Re:MODERATORS PLEASE MOD THIS DOWN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sadly, you have in fact read the article in its glorious entirety.

  28. Re:Shiny Happy Mystical Dragons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    REM?

    You mean the "We-found-the-hooks-to-let-us-play-AM-playlist-dre ck-on-FM-and-make-millions-posing-as-serious-artis ts-at-the-same-time" REM?

    Or is there another?

  29. Just Wait... by reallocate · · Score: 1

    >> ....this is one of the worst and least informative reviews of anything I have read...

    Just wait....Reviews are getting progressively worse around here.

    Readers deserve reviewers who are literate, who place their review in context (is the reviewer an adolescent gamer or a corporate exec?) and actually demonstrate enough competence to warrant our time and attention.

    --
    -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
  30. Re:pet peeve #32 : 'definate' by bheerssen · · Score: 1

    Spell checker?

    We don't need no stinking spell checker.

    --
    (Score: -1, Stupid)
  31. Nope 10 minutes by Bruha · · Score: 1

    I was at work maximizing shareholder value ;)

    1. Re:Nope 10 minutes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please mod this fucker down.

    2. Re:Nope 10 minutes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i.e. Probably having a dick-waving contest with the people who didn't believe you'd get your shitty site posted on the Slashdot front page. Congradulations..not only are you a prick, you're also a prick that'll be well-known for all of about 10 minutes!

  32. Re:Bruha = Lewt = Karma-Whore by reallocate · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Nice. You'd think if someone was going to hype his own review to /. he'd at least manage to use an email address that didn't identify him as the review's author.

    --
    -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
  33. Re:FP... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You fail.

    You are a failure... how will it feel to walk to the mirror and see a failure looking back?

  34. Free will never get it on everyone's desktop by Bruha · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I'm sorry but cheap with support will always win over free without support.. 40 dollars for redhat with support and 99 dollars for XD2 so the consumer has some tech support to help them out with problems.

    Yes free software has support in many cases but when you pay a company for something that means they'll usually provide you with support and secondly you're helping the economy by giving someone a job and they pay for other services and give others jobs..

    though freeware/gpl and such does have a place in products that nobody really wants to pay for and fills the gaps that companies who dont care to make their product work on Linux.

    Anywho I'm too busy here to worry about this arguement right now. I'll get something coherent someday on that subject.

    1. Re:Free will never get it on everyone's desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, it sure doesn't seem like today's going to be that day...

  35. Konqueror-KDE integration by ThreeFarthingStone · · Score: 2, Informative
    ALL distros I have ever used that set up a KDE or GNOME desktop for you, have a web browser, normally Mozilla/Konqueror. In fact any version of KDE since 2 always includes the browser, it is as integrated into the desktop as MS Internet Explorer into Windows.

    GNOME 2 however doesn't have a browser, unless I add something like Mozilla, so this Ximian Desktop 2 idea is great. KDE has Konqueror and you can install Konqueror on top, but I think OpenOffice and Mozilla are more powerful. KDE 3 needs its competition, that would be XD2.

    Problem with XD2 is that its really only available for a few distros.

    --
    ==========
    There are two types of people: those who are in the world, and those who aren't.
    1. Re:Konqueror-KDE integration by Lennie · · Score: 1

      Supposedly it's Galeon who is the GNOME browser ?

      --
      New things are always on the horizon
  36. No support for my distros. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well it was expected it wouldn't work on gentoo. But SuSE 8.1? I don't want to splash out on another £40 just to get support for Ximian Desktop. Does anyone know how to trick the installer into thinking I have 8.2?

    1. Re:No support for my distros. by spydir31 · · Score: 2, Informative

      it's somewhat close to the redhat trick of replacing the rpm module redhat_release.
      A quick googling brought me this and this.
      looks like you can just change the version number in /etc/SuSE-release to "8.2"
      (the better way would probably be to install a new suse-release RPM, though I can't seem to find one)

  37. My thought on XD2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'd had to say I agree with the comments from "A look at Ximian Desktop 2" @ lwn.net. LWN look

    While this type of lockin and setup is fine for the home user I don't see this fitting into the corporate environment at all. First off OO simply CANNOT import all word docs correctly. Basic text is does fine, but as soon as you add a bullet point or any other basic formatting OO chokes on it. Sure the person who recieves your editted file can do some tabbing and fix some messed up spacing but how unprofessional is that? I wouldn't return a MS word doc that I had editted in OO to anyone using Word. I'd make sure and tell them I only do .rtf. Contrary to the Ximian marketing and PR until OO can perfectly edit and decode MS Office docs its simply not ready for Enterprises that need to constantly exchange MS docs with other companies.

    Another point which someone at lwn made as well was the lack of "corporate management tools" to go along with Ximian. This is something that I think KDE is starting to have and shipped with Windows 95 eight years ago. You can't just call something enterprise ready and then not measure up to the products that were released almost a decade ago. Looking at the local security policy tool in Windows XP shows just how featurless XD2 looks in comparison

    So basically you have a word processor and office suite that can't reliably exchange docs with the most widely used Office suite and you have a desktop that has none of the management features that Enterprises need. Like I said this isn't what you need to play with the big boys.

    Another thing I question is with the advent of Gnome 2.2 is there even a need for a Ximian desktop anymore? As someone who has used Red Hat 8 and up I just don't see the value in letting Ximian take over my already excellant desktop.

    In the end I think Ximian is fine for home users and possibly small businesses who dont' need to exchange docs with the outside, but its not the Enterprise Windows Replacement just yet.

    I continue to be a fulltime desktop linux user and strongly belive in its future, but when you compare reality with what XD2 offers XD2 really comes up lacking. Possibly its just one of those beginning milestones where we can say "see look how polished linux is", but beneath the surface there are still a ton of issues that need to be addressed before you can expect to just plonk a linux desktop in front of a someone and expect them to be able to function just as well as they did with Windows and MS office.

    * Fulltime RH 8.0 and OpenOffice user who wishes MS Office formats weren't hidden.

    1. Re:My thought on XD2 by chetohevia · · Score: 1

      Dear Troll:

      XD2, even without the Professional edition, does an excellent job of importing complex Word documents. I've done it and tested it-- eight page forms, weird spreadsheets, long presentations, whatever.

      The Ximian art team put together a bullet-point font just for OOO/Word integration to match the bullet points.

      The Professional Edition comes with Agfa fonts that are the same size/shape and translate from the MS fonts, so you don't even lose page length or pagination.

      Nice try.

      a.

    2. Re:My thought on XD2 by swv3752 · · Score: 1

      Exchanging documents with different versions of MS Office will screw up formatting . How unprofessional is that?

      --
      Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
  38. From a real user's perspective by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I installed it the day it came out. I've been mucking with it for a week now and have some observations.

    1) What is the "integration" with OpenOffice? Aside from a different splash screen? OK, my theme fonts come across to the user interface, and it uses Ximian icons now, but it loads (the first time) as slowly as ever.

    2) They should have left the GDM splash screen scheme alone. It took a while to figure out how to replace their splash screen with my old (custom) one.

    3) Mozilla is broken and shouldn't have been released. When on a page that uses javascript to open a smaller window (like TV Guide listings is where it can easily be reproduced) then sometimes the text in the child window is randomly truncated. There are other bugs but that's the most glaring.

    4) Ximian cripped Galeon so that it can no longer use themes!!! Bad Ximian.

    5) Ximian's installer destroys a users custom menus even when told to leave them alone. My RedHat "system tools" menu is gone, along with my Crossover Office menu. There's got to be an easy way to restore my old menus but I haven't found it yet.

    6) The RedHat "alert" icon no longer works. I miss it - it was a nice way to tell instantly if there were any updates (yeah I know, RedHat sends out emails for their updates, but I still miss it).

    7) There are some nice improvements like the "network proxy" setting that doesn't workin the default RedHat 9 install works now, so you only need to set the proxy once, and panel applets that need network access actually work now.

    8) I know this sounds harsh but overall I do like it. Bugs have been filed so we'll see how it goes in the next few weeks...

    1. Re:From a real user's perspective by justsomebody · · Score: 1

      1) GnomeVFS support in Open/Save and opening in Evolution?
      2) GDM > Install theme ... Select theme
      3) Mozilla is broken, yes
      4) System theme is the best
      5) Don't know about that one maybe somebody else knows
      6) Redhat alert icon is now in red carpet if you subscribe to chanell
      7) Yes
      8) I like it too

      --
      Signature Pro version 1.13.2-3 release 83.5 beta3try7 after-breakfast edition
    2. Re:From a real user's perspective by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      4) Ximian cripped Galeon so that it can no longer use themes!!! Bad Ximian.

      Wrong. Galeon 1.3.x doesn't have themes anymore, since gtk 2 takes care of that.

  39. RH9 Galeon won't start?! by pete0t2 · · Score: 1
    I just installed XD2 on RH9 and Galeon won't start. Here's the error:
    $ galeon&
    [1] 14570
    $ trying to load bookmarks from /home/user/.galeon/bookmarks.xbel

    ** (galeon-bin:14570): WARNING **: I could not load the bookmarks file, will load the default bookmarks.
    Detected version of bookmarks file: galeon2
    INTERNAL ERROR on Browser End: No manager for initializing factory?

    System error?:: Success
    Anyone else have this problem? Know a quick fix?

    Thanks! Peter
    1. Re:RH9 Galeon won't start?! by TheFlu · · Score: 1

      I had this problem as well, read this for the fix.

    2. Re:RH9 Galeon won't start?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can shed more light on this: the problem is in the Java plugin by Sun. You need to remove it and install the blackdown java plugin, that doesn't have this problem (dunno why).

    3. Re:RH9 Galeon won't start?! by angle_mark · · Score: 1

      You have to make sure you download the gcc 3.2 compiled version of Blackdown Java, otherwise you'll get the same error again.

  40. Illegal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't this technically illegal? I mean, to bundle such tools with whatever software you like?

    I'm sure Real, Adobe and Sun have something to say about that (with lawyers) if their tools have been repackaged into Ximian Desktop without their permission.

  41. Awful review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not only does the author not provide much information but, in addition, he clearly is another by-product of the deficient education that so many people in this business seem to have been able to pick up throughtout the years.

    I do no trust the clarity of thought to assess anything of a person who seems to be unable to understand the difference between "its" and "it's".

    1. Re:Awful review by Nick+of+NSTime · · Score: 0, Troll

      Your post is stunningly ironic.

    2. Re:Awful review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Your post is stunningly ironic.

      So, you are another of those who ignore (in the etymological sense - oops, you may not know this one either!) the difference between "its" and "it's"? I'll explain it in gory detail so even the most abjectly illiterate can eventually grasp it:

      It's "it's" if it's the same as "it is"; otherwise, it is "its."

      Read as many times as required to gain understanding.

    3. Re:Awful review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think ol' Nick was referring to the text "have been able to pick up throughtout the years" in his parent post.

  42. Best joke! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What the hell is that? 99$ for fonts? Holy shit, I can pay 199$ for Windows which offers much more than that!

    Haha, if you purchase this, please let me know so I can laugh my ass off at you!

  43. PARENT IS AN IMPOSTOR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The parent poster is not the 'real' Miguel de Icaza. Troll, Troll, Troll.

  44. Re:pet peeve #32 : 'definate' by estes_grover · · Score: 1

    ... does no one believe in spell checkers?

    A resounding 'know, of coarse knot!'

  45. Holy shit what a crappy review! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "It had a good beat and it was easy to dance to" ... that's what he might have said. I suspect they never even tried it! I'd post the whole review here, but this bit I've written was longer!

  46. Re:pet peeve #32 : 'definate' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Amen to that, brother. How about this one:

    "[...] so everything looks it's best."

    So everything looks it is best. Sure thing. Why bother with spelling and grammar when your "review" already makes you look stupid?

  47. [OT: apt] Re:Extra Software by legLess · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Can't speak for Debian (but come on, apt often still leads to dependancy hell, which means that things don't get installed).
    I've seen the thread below this, but hate replying to ACs :).

    I've used nothing but Debian for years and I've only had dependency issues in two situations:
    • First install on a new system, when apt is still trying to get a working base config.
    • Installing packages from unstable, which is always caveat emptor.
    Not that apt is perfect or anything - some people will happily tell you it shits roses, which ain't the case. But I can count on one hand the number of times I've had to manually mung a package or any other files apt controls. Files which control apt - sources.list and whatnot - I do change every now and then, but mostly as mirrors appear and disappear.

    Not that it doesn't have a bit of a learning curve. Apt sometimes isn't smart enough to figure things out on its own and needs intervention. But in those cases you can nearly always use apt's (or dpkg's) public interface to solve its own problems.

    So ... I don't want to evangelize or flame yer ass, but depending on what you want from a computer you might try Debian again. Red Hat is easier to install, comes with more stuff OOTB and is more integrated; Debian is easier to customize and keep stable and up-to-date.
    --
    This isn't as much "normalization" as it is "don't take so many drugs when you're designing tables."
    1. Re:[OT: apt] Re:Extra Software by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 1

      (2) the (unofficial) packages hadn't been subjected to Debian's usual quality-control process.

      Right, and to be fair, most of the criticisms for RPM come from people who are installing RPMs from someone other then RedHat :)

      And then there are the legitimate gripes about RedHat not having a good tool to automatically download files to resolve dependancy issues (but red-carpet does that pretty well).

      I don't want to evangelize or flame yer ass,

      Go ahead, evangelize, educate :) You make smart posts...

      --
      "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
  48. Mine too by El+Volio · · Score: 1

    It's not very in-depth, but I posted my thoughts on XD2 the other day on my weblog.

    --

    "You can never have too many elephants on your team."

  49. The full conversation... by cliveholloway · · Score: 1

    Lewt: Hey Taco, we need some traffic over to 'warcry'.

    Taco: Slip me a couple of G's and I'll put something up at the weekend - do you have any interesting content?

    Lewt: Nah, any old shit will do. I mean, we don't really have a life - we're too busy playing games. Hey, I suppose I could review the 133t new Ximian Desktop that my older brother's using at work.

    Taco: Err, that'll do. If anyone complains I'll say Katz did it.

    Taco, you're the man. Maybe soon we'll be more famous than our namesake

    Seriously Taco, how much did they pay? Or is your ability to spot good copy really that bad?

    .02

    cLive ;-)

    --
    -- Trinity in high heels carrying a whip: The donimatrix - there is no spoonerism
  50. Re:Nope 10 minutesReally? by cliveholloway · · Score: 0, Redundant
    Re:Nope 10 minutes

    Really? I'd have never guessed.

    cLive ;-)

    --
    -- Trinity in high heels carrying a whip: The donimatrix - there is no spoonerism
  51. Ok... by Averron · · Score: 1

    I'll definitely support them with my money and you can download and install it free over the internet if you have wget installed open a terminal su to root and type in ... without the periods of course :) and their sleek installer will download and launch. Ok, now... breathe...

    1. Re:Ok... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Holy shit are you the author of the review?

      What is this fanboy nonsense?

  52. Re:Bruha = Lewt = Karma-Whore by Lennie · · Score: 1

    ad revenue ?

    I didn't I used lynx :-)

    --
    New things are always on the horizon
  53. Re: mmm, vanilla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Finally, Ximian is a company which will provide support to customers who want it."

    Shit, so is RedHat...

  54. Extra Software by joshsnow · · Score: 1

    where they dont have to install any extra software to fully surf the web
    Good point, where's the equivalent of kppp in Gnome? Having searched high and low i can't find it.

  55. Re:pet peeve #32 : 'definate' by christoph_s · · Score: 1

    worse yet: distro's. what languages use the APOSTROPHE TO PLURALIZE? none i'm aware of.

  56. Re:pretty easy to recompile by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

    Um... isn't the ENTIRE point of this desktop to make it easy to use for people who don't understand what compile means? Matter of fact, they likely wouldn't understand source, comment out, recompile or dependency either.

    Do not make the assumption that the user is intelligent... he will hate you for imposing your unrealistic expectations upon him.

    --
    -1 Uncomfortable Truth
  57. My quickie review of XD2 by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'd been waiting for XD2 impatiently - after all, XD 1.4 was such a big step over what was bundled with Red Hat at that time. So when XD2 finally came out I immediately installed it.

    My impression, summed up in one sentence: I've now gone back to a stock Red Hat install.

    Slightly more information:

    The bundled fonts were certainly superior to Red Hat's. I do like Ximian's file selector. But that's about all that struck me as being better.

    On the downside, my RHN applet suddenly refused to work - not sure why since it didn't look like Ximian did much with my Python packages. Also, after I tried to back out of Ximian's version of OpenOffice I found that "regular" OpenOffice wouldn't work - I had to delete my .openoffice directory tree before it'd work again. The help browser would not work either, which is a pain since I find that a preferable way to read man/info pages. Additionally, the Ximian menus seem to be missing a LOT of programs (in comparison to Red Hat).

    Ximian's shining jewel, Evolution, no longer seems to be a superior e-mail client. Mozilla Mail or Thunderbird are just as fast and work better. As Mozilla has been adding features, Evolution seems to be removing them.

    Final summary: I'm not sure why this took a year to produce. It's just not worth it - there's not much value added in XD2.

    --
    #DeleteChrome
  58. are there Slashdot-like sites that are,,, by BigGerman · · Score: 1

    .. completely community driven?
    Since this "review" represents a new alltime low as far /. article goes, it made me think of defection to that imaginary world where so called "editors" would not push to me either pimp-for-money articles or digest of recent edition of "Wired".

    1. Re:are there Slashdot-like sites that are,,, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  59. Cool by inode_buddha · · Score: 1

    # Config sarcasm=m

    All these years, I had no idea that my RH installs needed another package to "fully surf the web".

    # Config actual_commentary=y

    Nothing against Ximian, I've used it myself; but they deserve more thorough reviews than that sort of shallowness, IMHO.

    --
    C|N>K
  60. Re:pretty easy to recompile-Backhanded compliment. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Do not make the assumption that the user is intelligent... he will hate you for imposing your unrealistic expectations upon him.
    "

    Yeah! I hate it when people think I'm smart.

  61. Re:what languages use the APOSTROPHE TO PLURALIZE? by wbniv · · Score: 1

    Dutch uses apostrophes to pluralize some words.

    For all those interested in Dutch apostrophes. I'm quoting (translating/paraphrasing) from Jan Renkema's book 'Schrijfwijzer' (= style guide), published 1995 by the Dutch Government Printer (Sdu) in Den Haag, pp 174-176, in which he gives the following rules for the use of the apostrophe to form plurals. My comments appear in square brackets.

    1. To avoid inappropriate pronounciation when adding a plural s. So words ending with a, e, i, o, u or y preceded by a consonant or a syllable boundary: collega's, alinea's, ave's, taxi's, foto's, paraplu's, hobby's. [Note that most of these words are borrowed from other languages: Latin, English and French. ] ...Words such as essays, jockeys and sprays do not take an apostrophe, because the y is preceded by a vowel. Hence the distinction [in Dutch] between Scottish whisky's and Irish whiskeys.

    2. The apostrophe is not used for words that form their plural with an s if these words end with an e with an acute accent, an ee, or an e that is a schwa. Hence cafes [accent on the e!], dominees, garages.

    3. [Renkema's rule 5: the intervening rules have nothing to do with forming plurals] To form plurals from acronyms: cd's

    4. [Renkema's rule 7] To disambiguate unusual plurals: al die ach's en oh's, duizend misschien's, vele dank-u-wel's.

    Dutch authors have problems with the plural apostrophe and frequently transfer it into English.

  62. I second that! by Lispy · · Score: 1

    Amen. This was truly the worst.

  63. what is a desktop user by mydigitalself · · Score: 1

    this is the worst review i have ever read in my life.

    and this comment just astounded me:

    The OpenOffice.org office suite included is supposed to be even more compatible with Office documents though I did not really do any testing in that department since Iâ(TM)m focusing on the desktop user.

    so, right, desktop users don't use office producivity applications? right.

  64. re: printing by Kyril · · Score: 1

    To do printing, it installs cups. Unfortunately, it seems unwilling to recognize the "allow raw" option, even after restarting cups, even to the point that a printer configured with the "raw driver" doesn't take raw input. I haven't tried rebooting, but c'mon, this isn't Windows here; /etc/rc.d/init.d/cups restart should suffice!

    Fortunately, the -oraw option mentioned in the comments does work.

    I also have problems with drag-and-drop items hanging around, esp. trying to drag links into a Mozilla menu...

  65. Re:pretty easy to recompile-Backhanded compliment. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At least it doesn't happen very often

  66. Piece of shit... Don't bother even... by pepper_pusher · · Score: 0

    Nothing but a shrinked commercialized gnome this ximian desktop is. Not only that, but it will REPLACE your GNOME installation without asking you. Great, now I have ximian and kde only. Besides removing important items from the menu and changing lookNfeel a bit nothing different. Don't try it.

    --
    girl