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CNN Installs Linux

Almost everybody seems to have submitted this CNN "Ignorant journalist has a tough time installing Linux" story. I'm a little tired of this theme, but decided to run it not only because so many of you submitted it, but also out of nostalgia; I wrote something similar myself back when Slashdot was so fresh and new that "getting slashdotted" meant maybe 200 e-mails max, and now I'm a full-time Linux user. So please be kind to this poor overworked journalist. Everybody (even you) started out ignorant and had to learn, right? ;-)

432 comments

  1. E X C E L L E N T ! by Flippo · · Score: 2
    1) let's be honest, linux (or any other os, for that matter) can always get relatively (even) more nongeek-friendly.

    2) articles are written about nongeeks having difficulty using (incl install) linux.

    3a) developers are encouraged to make linux even more nongeek-friendly versus other os'es.
    3b) some (ok, maybe lotsa) people are (still) scared out off tryin linux.
    remark: the magnitude of 3a) and 3b) is directly proportional to the 'magnitude' of 2)

    4a) ...developers goin about their stuff with even more determination...
    4b) ...nongeeks' patience with winboxes everything but increasing, desire to get better stuff probably increasing...
    remark: apology to the mac-folks for jumping over them in this slight oversimplification of things :-)

    5) hey, linux just got relatively more user-friendly today!

    6) somehow, the word gets out on 5) (perhaps an article on cnn.com?).

    7) more people are tempted into trying out linux (again). [they are able to do so at little or no cost coz it runs on everything and is free.] some stick with it, others don't. this ratio is directly proportional to linux's relative user-friendliness.

    8) go back to 1)

    conclusion:
    - for the developers: keep doin what yer good at.
    - for the non-developers, relax.

    pretty soon (within 2-3 years?), linux could be the easiest os to install and use in our solar system (chances are aliens have even better stuff).

    (the above also applies to functionality etc)

    Flippo from Flanders (Europe).

  2. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by Stephen+VanDahm · · Score: 2

    My first linux installation was maybe a year ago. I created a root and a swap partition on my second HD and installed RedHat 5.0 in 30 minutes with the help of a Sams Learn Linux in 24 Hours book I got for $15.

    I'm not a pimped-out software developer like a lot of people who post, but I still got it to work. In fact, for about a month, whenever I had a problem it was always faster and easier to reinstall the OS than to try to fix the problem (yes I was a real dumbass). Maybe he should have tried OpenLinux 2.3, Red Hat, or Mandrake.

    Take care,

    Steve

  3. Re:What is up with these moderators. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It was already mentioned by like 3 other people.

  4. Re:There are real installation issues by wmeyer · · Score: 3

    Let's settle for inexperienced but intelligent newbies. As to your math and science majors, perhaps they, like so many others, fail to RTFM.

    I've been working with small computers since 1975, and have written in C, C++, Pascal, assembler, and even Forth. I've designed embedded processor systems and designed and written serial protocols.

    In spite of my experience, I have suffered tremendous frustration with Linux. Also, as one who writes user docs, I do RTFM. The source of the problems is as follows:

    1) Linux docs are, to be kind, less than wonderful. They make too many assumptions about the background of the reader. I have yet to find a good presentation of disk partitioning strategies, for example.

    2) Distros which use the RPM installation offer only one safe option: Install Everything. Selective package installation leads to things which don't work, boots which stall for many minutes, and a grand variety of other mysteries.

    3) Red Hat, in particular, has an installation process which is easily fouled by the user making an unexpected response. Why would the user do that? Because the instructions and/or prompts are inadequate.

    4) X server installation and setup is a very interesting source of problems. My video cards and monitors are capable of 1600x1200, but Caldera is the only distro to have correctly set up that configuration on my machines. And talk about user-hostile: tweaking in Hz, KHz, and microseconds is definitely not for newbies. I'm a hardware designer with a lot of experience with deflection systems, and I still don't want to go there.

    5) Sending a newbie to the HOWTOs is a great way to send someone postal. The HOWTOs I have attempted to use have not been very well written, some have been horribly out of date, and for the most part, I was left (after an hour or more) with no solution to the problem they were supposed to help me resolve.

    Now before the flaming begins, I freely grant that Windows docs suck. That is irrelevant. the subject is Linux, and Linux docs suck, too. The difference between Linux and Windows at installation time is that Windows (mostly) does a better job of handling the routine setup issues.

    I've used Windows since 2.0 (which only stayed on my system for a few hours), and routinely install and manage NT installations. I'm getting better with Linux, but only after having invested nearly full time activity for several weeks, and am not by any means ready to commit my company to using Linux in product.

    With all respect to everyone here, the proliferation of Linux will soon be limited by precisely these issues: documentation and setup.

    Caldera has it mostly right, and I will soon install their 2.3, which will likely be still better. Let the others look to their model.

    Documentation is my biggest issue. All the Linux users insist that it's anywhere from adequate to great, but those of us who didn't cut our teeth on *nix know it just ain't so. Until the Linux cognoscenti come out of denial on this, things won't improve.

    My complaints are usually greeted with suggestions that I write some HOWTOs. Hello? I've already stated that I have problems in need of answers. How does that qualify me to write instruction for others? The people who need to write HOWTOs are the Linux gurus who insist there is no need. See the problem?

    I live in hope, but I can only work with reality, so for now, Linux is only a dream.

    --
    --- Bill
  5. Re:RTFM by Compuser · · Score: 1

    Being a Linux user myself I have a
    hard time saying this but here goes...

    This post has convinced me that
    Linux users are as much mindless
    snobs as their BSD counterparts.
    NOTHING is ever obvious, else you
    do not need a user.

  6. Re:Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by frizzo · · Score: 1

    Win98 and NT,

    Always copu the .cab files to the hard drive and then run setup. much quicker and cleaner installs for some odd reason,

  7. Re:Unix sucks! It's too powerful! by Agathos · · Score: 2

    Sorry, but I agree with the first guy: if one doesn't want to use the command line but has to anyway, the software is flawed. Grep may be fast, but it's not intuitive. If you already know how to use it and need to search a huge file quickly, that shortcoming is irrelevant. If you've never seen grep before, though, that shortcoming is real. Yes, you can overcome the software's shortcoming by spending time to learn how to use it, but that's just a workaround, not a true solution (like solving NT's stability problem by rebooting every night). For the occasional user who doesn't use it enough to justify studying it, an intuitive interface is the superior solution.

  8. Re:Don't you dare criticise him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmmm, let's use your car analogy. Assume Linux is a car... lets say something like a Indy-500 race car. Do you think that the Indy was designed with ergonometry (creature comforts) in mind? I didn't think so. An Indy car is designed to minimize drag, accelerate at break-neck speeds, corner at ~100mph...etc. It was not designed to take Mom and the kids to soccer practice. Gee, what would that make Windows in this little scenario...hmmm you decide. The fact is that Windows and Linux are two very different OS with very different purposes. Maybe if he can't install it, then he shouldn't be using it. Same analogy applies for something like a supercomputer's OS...you don't hear anyone trashing Crays because they are "difficult to use." Dammit, I understand nothing about deadlocks or race conditions...this damn Cray must be poorly designed!!! Maybe the author needs to start with a few more "driving" lessons before he jumps into that Indy car and tries to drive it to soccer practice.

  9. Install Shields... by Listerine · · Score: 1

    They may be kinda sticky, but they DO help if you have no idea what you are doing. But by using one you are in no way a computer expert.

  10. This is important stuff by Oxryly · · Score: 1

    It may be instructive to compare the easy of install and maintenance of the PC with Linux to something other than a PC with Windoze.

    I work as a game programmer, and in these discussion I see another perspective that often gets left out. When talking just about games, the console games sell many more copies than PC games ever do. There are many factors that contribute to the situation. I'm fairly convinced however that one of the top reasons is the ease of install and maintenance of the hardware and softare. To play a Playstation game, pop the cd in and turn the thing on (and take both steps by pressing these large inviting round buttons). But how often to people critize Sony for producing hardware or software for idiots? How often do "power" users scoff at Playstations because the hardware and software is for the simple minded?

    To play a PC game (on Windoze), you must go through potentially several cycles of checking the hardware requirements, looking for the latest DirectX distribution, looking for the latest drivers for your specific hardware, clearing out disk space, installing the game, and installing patches.

    My point is to say that designing hardware (and system software: the OS) to be as simple to use as possible is not a bad thing (TM). Designing the OS to be more useable more quickly and with less research and knowledge of the hardware is not a bad thing.

    Linux advocates scoff when windoze people complain of Linux's complexities, but I question the motivation to dismiss these criticisms out of hand. If Windoze were even less complex than it currently is (and I consider it less complex to use than Linux), potentially I could program games for the PC such that people could pop the CD in the drive and play I'd be happier and less stressed in my job (and probably more successful ;) ). I have to assume that application writers and hardware designers feel the same way.

    Oxryly

  11. Re:assumptions of slashdotters... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What difference does it make if Robin is a guy or a gal? I often use the word guy to mean generically male and/or female.

    We've past the age of women's lib, if Robin can't hack it, back to kitchen with her. I hope she's married.

  12. Re:Tips for Installing an OS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This and a previous post sort of remind me of a parallel slogan. Do you remember the saying "Why Johnny can't read?" Similarly, we should ask "Why Robin can't read" or better "Why Robin can't hack?"!

  13. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by Chandon+Seldon · · Score: 1

    COL 2.2 does, in fact, do video card autoprobing for any card supported by the VGA or SVGA servers.

    --
    -- The act of censorship is always worse than whatever is being censored. Always.
  14. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by Trepidity · · Score: 2

    I'd have to disagree. I've installed Windows 95 twice, and upgrade 95 to 98 once, and all these installations were much easier than my installation of Linux (and subsequent problems getting X to actually start). Windows 95/98 auto-detected my video card and monitor and chose a default resolution that worked, auto-detected my modem, network card, and USB scanner, and set those up properly, and auto-detected my non-IDE proprietary Panasonic CD-ROM drive (an old 2x one). PPP setup took about 2 minutes.

    Linux (Slackware 3.0), on the other hand, didn't auto-detect anything, and my USB scanner never did work. I had to create a special boot disk (sbpcd.i) to work with my CD-ROM drive, had to look up detailed specifications of the resolutions/refresh rates supported by my video card and monitor (XF86Setup apparently can't choose any reasonable defaults), and PPP was *really* annoying to get working properly.

    Now some of these problems are the fault of device manufacturers for proprietary interfaces and drivers, but a newbie can be forgiven for not knowing that it's not *really* the OS's fault - to the newbie, one OS works with his scanner, while the other doesn't. Whether this is the OS's fault or somebody else's fault is somewhat irrelevant.

    Some of the problems really are the fault of the OS and the windowing system, however. XF86Setup could be a lot more friendly with auto-detection. X could start with some decent VESA defaults (like Windows does), so somebody could start X for the first time without even needing to run XF86Setup at all. PPP configuration could be nicer, and (for laptops) PCMCIA support could be built in, rather than having to be added separately.

  15. Wrong, Oracle is harder to install by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's nothing left that is harder to install than linux. Just for fun try installing an Oracle 8.1 server on a BSD Intel multi-processor box, then install the Oracle client on Windows over IPX in a non-default directory. Put any firearms in a inaccessable place before attempting this exercise.

  16. Re:Part evil by MindStalker · · Score: 2

    Mentioning how x86 is old outdated hardware, that is one reason I love linux. The only reason we have stuck with x86 for absolutly so long is because of microsoft. Everybody wants to remain compatible, that makes sence. But if linux can truly take off, people will be able to migrate from x86 to alpha to PPC to whatever easily. As you would mainting the same operating system and be able to aquire the same look, feel, and programs available. We could get some real work done in the hardware architecture buisness. Instead of spending all our time on legacy support. I mean seriously when someone buys a new computer, nothing usually gets transfered over but a few datafile. Have a common tranfer interface, and or network backup available. And we can start to move into the next generation. And transmeta will help us all along :) Thanx Linus

  17. Re:better off without it. by smale · · Score: 1

    Can someone clearly explain to me how RedHat is so "user friendly" and "easy"? I tried RH6 (twice in fact) and I can't beleive that this is the distribution that is the flagship of the Linux "World Domination Tour" I prefer back to basics like Stampede and Slackware myself, and have a better time understanding the install process as well. As far as the article that this thread is for, if the guy doesnt know what a kernel is, or what linux is even for, why is he even installing it?

  18. Re:Unix sucks! It's too powerful! by Gregg+M · · Score: 1

    I hate when people trash the command line. What do you use in real life...... words? Do you talk to people using a complicated syntax with all kinds of rules? OR Do you use pantomime? Walking around pointing to things to communicate.





    --
    Linux is only free if your time has no value. Windows is only free if you threaten to use Linux.
  19. Re:Hmmmm. Perhaps we need a demo mode. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've had that corrupt file system error a lot too. Usually happens when I reboot without shuting Linux down properly. Sorta stupid actually, that Windows handles rebooting just fine (and as much as it crashes, thank goodness :-)) yet Linux throws fits. I just reinstall it over again, because I'm not losing anything important, and it's only 30 minutes of my time. And I agree, there isn't too much of a reason for a home user to switch. The average user can email, surf, and write letters in Windows, which is all they care about, so why switch to Linux? They don't care about rebooting, I know I don't. Big deal, 2 minutes of my life is wasted every week. And most of the time it's the software's fault, not Windows. Wooo, felt good to vent : )

    Posting as anonymous to prevent Linux zealots from flaming my email.

  20. Unfair contest by RichMan · · Score: 1

    The story was basically an unfair contest:
    Journalist: I tried something I was unqualified to do and had a hard time.

    To be fair he should also have tried installing
    Win98, BeOS, Bsd, Os2, Plan 9, ... Well at least Win98 on a system running Linux already.

    Granted the installation should be easier for the general user but this was not a comparison story.

    How many general users install their OS? Was that mentioned?

    Did he mention: The computer was supplied with Windows and he never had to install windows?

    Did he mention: You can order computers with Linux preinstalled just like winTel boxen?

    I would call it a slightly unfair article.
    Would you consider a story about a fast food employee attempting to repair a car for the first time and finding it hard a fair story?

    1. Re:Unfair contest by witz · · Score: 1

      I believe this was a Linux focused article, not a general OS article. It wasn't a contest. Don't be so damn defensive.


      -witz

  21. just a hunch.... by Mr_44 · · Score: 1

    but i have a feeling that the author knows more about computers than he lets on, but by acting the way he does accomplishes two things:

    1) Prevents the alienation of Lo-Tek readers (remember: CNN and /. have vastly different target audiences).

    2) Squirts in a dose of humor for the more well-informed.

    i just think it's something to consider...

  22. Re:Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by RayChuang · · Score: 0

    Fortunately, installing the OEM version of Windows 98 is not the painful experience that some people make it out to be.

    Just as long as your hardware is on the Windows Hardware Compatibility List, installation should go fairly easily. Remember, the Windows 98 CD-ROM disk is self-booting, so if your system can boot from an ATAPI 1.2-compliant IDE CD-ROM drive or a SCSI CD-ROM drive attached to an Adaptec host adapter, the installation actually is pretty automatic.

    Once you get Windows 98 installed, create an emergency boot disk, and copy FORMAT.COM from the \windows\command directory onto the disk. Unlike the older emergency boot disks for Windows 95, the Windows 98 Emergency Boot Disk DOES load the appropriate CD-ROM drivers, so you can actually do a full reload of Windows 98 in case of a major system crash.

    --
    Raymond in Mountain View, CA
  23. Re:Autodetection is not evil! by Trepidity · · Score: 2

    Yes, autodetection is your friend. If it can be optionally bypassed, I don't see what's wrong with adding it in.

    I find it fairly pathetic that X can't even run with some decent defaults. You have to run XF86Setup before starting X, or else X won't start *at all*. It should at least start at 640x480x16, as you mentioned, and then inform the user to run XF86Setup if he wants to configure his display beyond what the defaults have set.

  24. Re:He has no business installing an OS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK. Let's pull it from the grocery shelves so those poor innocent people won't waste their money buying those $25 to $70 distributions! Yeah!

  25. Oh yeah? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In that case he should try Red Hat 3.0 since he only tried Caldera 1.3 and NOT the latest 2.3.

    1. Re:Oh yeah? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the caldera install lizard is REAL easy, it has been called "linux for dummies"

  26. What's RTFM.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and how do I use it?

  27. Re:Retract your flames... by Zarf · · Score: 1

    I just find it amazing that someone who used to program is actually that ignorant of his computer that he had to check what kind of mouse he has.

    I am also upset that he is using Caldera 1.3 and not 2.3 if he's checking out the Linux scene using Caldera 1.3 ... that's like saying... I wanna check out that internet thing so I'm getting MSIE 2.0!

    Afterward I can hear them complain... ugh! the internet stinks... it keeps crashing!

    --
    [signature]
  28. Re:well, of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You said:
    But "software professionals" who write unix code and have bachelor's degrees can't install Linux? Give up and say "it sucks"?

    No, it's because they've used quality UNIX distributions like Solaris and know the real thing. Linux has taken UNIX software developers a step backwards.

  29. Re:RTFM-II by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well I save myself a lot of grief by saving ALL the documentation that came with the computer.
    That and the PC was built with components of my choosing.

  30. better off without it. by Zurk · · Score: 2

    He'd have better luck is he tried Redhats install after going thru the kickstart on the web (www.fezbox.com) or trying demolinux (www.demolinux.org)..wouldbe been a lot simpler. This guy did it the hard way though..im impressed.

    1. Re:better off without it. by Eponymous,+Showered · · Score: 1

      > He'd have better luck... The article was written by a woman

    2. Re:better off without it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Relative to Slack, Bughat has Autodetection of VideoCards and Network Adapters and SoundCards (after installation) as well as a more visual partitioner and canned installation options that require minimal input.

    3. Re:better off without it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. I used to be a DOS user (I could even program quite a few DOS functions in asm/C/pascal without looking up an interrupt reference). Now, with no choice, I use Win 9x/NT since most computers available to me only have Win on them - yet I still open up a good ol' trust DOS box :) My first encounter with Linux was with Slackware. Being very comfortable with DOS, this felt like an extension rather than something totally new, and with a trusty HOWTO that gave the Linux equivalent commands of the ones available in DOS, I had no problems at all. On the other hand, people who've only used Win 9x/NT, who have never used a CLI, and know nothing about their computer are obviously going to have some initial difficulty with Linux. What I don't understand is if that column was to show how to Linux is to install, then why on Earth did he not install RedHat 6.0?

    4. Re:better off without it. by Whyte · · Score: 1

      First off this guy really shouldn't be installing
      any operating system period. It really sounds like
      he would have had a similar experience installing
      Windows 95 and he DEFINITLY isn't qualified to install Windows NT. So....how does this article have any technical backing? Simple. It doesn't.

      Secondly isn't there a newer version of OpenLinux out? I installed the newest Caldera at work the other day and I have to say that is one of the best installation programs I had seen to that point. If he had used the newest distro I think he would have found himself in a much different place at the end of the article(loved playing tetris while the install finished copying!).

      Dave

      --
      -- No matter how great your triumphs or how tragic your defeats, approximately one billion Chinese couldn't care less.
    5. Re:better off without it. by -stax · · Score: 3
      personally, i feel that the best quote one can garner from this article, and the one that MOST all of us should pay attention to is this:

      "Now in the 1990s, I'm dual platform and can read some HTML -- in other words, I know nothing about the innards of contemporary PCs.

      "My advice is if you've just barely mastered Windows, extremely literal and never touched a computer in the DOS/UNIX era, stick with Windows or go with a more user-friendly Linux distributor like Red Hat.

      "If you've opened up a box and know all about UNIX, perhaps you'll even find this fun. "

      This is a very honest and true gauge of where exactly linux is:
      A) If you've stayed in your windows all your life, go learn SOME dos and basic Unix commands before you install Linux (OR ANY unix for that matter)
      B) If, then, you DO decide to install linux, try and use an Up-to-date and user friendly version- IE RH 6.0.

      take it or leave it, but that's where linux stands right now. I remember my first time, i had barely ever used unix, and when X didnt detect my video card (some slackware version, don't recall) i junked it and re-installed win95. Now, RH 6.0 is nothing, could do it in my sleep...
      -stax
      /. poster #104543567

  31. Everyone started ignorant? by Joe+Rumsey · · Score: 2

    Well sure, no one's born knowing Unix, or any other OS, but in the olden days, learning how to use Unix was a separate task from learning how to install and maintain Unix. Your college would have machines running Unix with everything already set up for you. A quick intro to a couple of commands (man, ls, vi or emacs, how to start X if you had X terminals, etc.) and you're on your way. No need to set up networking, printing, X, or any of the other systems that are needed. It was all done for you.

    As you use the system, you're bound to start picking up on how some of the configuration is done. So that by the time Linux was available and you decided you wanted to run it, you already knew a whole lot about Unix.

    In my own case, it was Unix at school (SunOS and NeXT), and an Amiga at home, with GCC and an accompanying suite of Unix utils (including a nice port of csh) that helped me learn Unix. I used Unix for years before I ever had to worry about being my own sysadmin.

    So yeah, sure, everyone starts ignorant. But not everyone had to go from Unix novice to Linux expert overnight. That's gotta be rough, I feel for everyone in that position.

    1. Re:Everyone started ignorant? by demon · · Score: 1

      Well sure, no one's born knowing Unix

      Well, maybe YOU weren't. My parents had UNIX knowledge implanted in my brain shortly after birth. It comes in very handy. :)

      </ridiculous>

      --

      Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
      Max: "I'd be peeing my pants if I wore any!"
  32. Dolt by Hard_Code · · Score: 0

    Well I hate to sound inflammatory but has this guy even attempted in install another OS, like, say, his beloved Windows? Does he even know what a "MO-DEM" is? Man, how does he expect to install ANY operating system if he has NO CLUE what hardware he has??? As if this was Linux's fault, like it should omnisciently know what hardware it is on before it is installed.

    --

    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
    1. Re:Dolt by maan · · Score: 1

      Today, imagine the guy at home who wants to go out and buy a computer. He doesn't know much about it, but he wishes to connect to the net, get an e-mail address, surf the web, pay his bills, etc. The easiest way is probably some brand like compaq. The machine is pre-configured for everything he needs. It does wun windows.

      Now we all know that linux is more stable, reliable, faster, blah blah blah... Why should linux stay at the level of those who know how to install an OS (whichever one it is)? If he could get a pre-installed linux box with all the multimedia stuff working and a nice gui, it would be great for him, and for linux in its goal of achieving world domination.

      You're looking at the situation from the perspective of a knowledgeable computer user. That CNN reporter would just like a working computer. And if linux does a better job than windows, then he should use it. But the os of choice for this kind of user should be friendly. And linux can do it with say a well configured kde like mandrake. But he has to overcome the step of installing it.

      This is one of the areas which needs a lot of work and which is, indeed, being worked on. But with people like you who make fun of the kind of user that he is, that's never going to happen. And if you'd like to see linux grow in the desktop market, you should understand that.

      Maan

    2. Re:Dolt by Hard_Code · · Score: 1

      What I see is somebody who doesn't know what he is doing and hasn't taken the time to even consult references whining in the public press when he has difficulties installing Linux.

      Look...we are supposed to know how our car works, how to replace a tire, how to open the hood, what liquids to put in and filters to replace. How difficult is it to make yourself aware of the few components of your computer (um, monitor, hard drive(s), memory, video card, sound card...5 items). You just paid >$1000 for it right? Maybe you should know what is in it? And maybe you should read the manual that comes with it? I'm amazed at the number of people who are totally dumbstruck and desperate for help, which have never even taken 15 minutes to read the intro in their computer manual.

      But I am not denying those people exist. It simply can't be the fault of the computer, or the hardware, or the software, that the user does not take a minimal amount of effort to make themselves familiar with something they just purchased. This "journalist" has been very irresponsible, in my opinion, by airing his gripes originating from ignorance and carelessness, to people who might be scared away because of it.

      --

      It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
    3. Re:Dolt by maan · · Score: 1

      Question: have you ever seen a computer documentation that details your computer components? If you buy a PC at dell or wherever, they never have appropriate documentation that says that you have grpahic card x with x mb of ram and network card y ... (come to think of it...maybe you can have a look at your bill).

      But still, computer manufacturers are not making it easy for users...and you have a point too: users don't use their documentation enough.

  33. He has to learn... sure by Listerine · · Score: 2

    But in the meantime he shouldn't be writing articles about it.

    It would be like SportsCenter doing a segment on Astronomy.... they would have NO idea what they are talking about.

    1. Re:He has to learn... sure by Negadecimal · · Score: 1

      If this really were an "intelligent human being" innocently trying to install Linux in an average environment, it'd be a decent piece of journalism.

      But it isn't.

      First, the reporter demonstrates a nasty bias against Linux in the first place. The fdisk comment has no place in professional journalism.

      Second, his goals don't represent the "common man". We can assume that a person who decides to install Linux, no matter how unskilled, probably has a reason for doing so. This guy can't even name the distribution correctly.

      Third, his approach is far from scientific. He "accidentally" unplugs his computer during the installation, and then wonders why things don't boot smoothly. He presses Alt+F8 and complains that it does nothing. He tries to network the machine without getting help first (I believe that the "common man" would). He lies when asked questions, prevents an error by opening and closing the CD-ROM drive (how would he know anyway?).

      And despite all of this, he still succeeds in getting a login prompt. Disgusting.

    2. Re:He has to learn... sure by Eponymous,+Showered · · Score: 1

      The article was written by a woman.

    3. Re:He has to learn... sure by FugaziMan · · Score: 1

      The whole point is to show how a linux installation looks from the perspective of a
      novice computer user

    4. Re:He has to learn... sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Well, Gee, to destroy Microsoft, Linux has to be usable by the common man, not superlosergeeks only. If this relatively intelligent human being had difficulty installing Linux, I think its a valid point about Linux that the press needs to understand. With the buzz around Linux, I'm sure many people, who probably don't have the super genius computer skills that you do, are interested in installing Linux and should be aware of what they are getting into.

    5. Re:He has to learn... sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > Maybe the common man has to learn how to read the manual.

      ... which unfortunately was written in German, in this case ...

    6. Re:He has to learn... sure by Listerine · · Score: 1

      (Copy of my reply above)

      I think he'd have trouble installing Win(insert year) too...

      A novice computer user should not be trying to install an OS. They should be familiar with it to the point where they are not a novice any more. Get someone else to install the OS, just like a pre-manufactured MS machine.

    7. Re:He has to learn... sure by Criterion · · Score: 2

      >

      Ok, here goes. I just HAPPEN to have a Caldera 1.3 manual, RIGHT HERE in front of me. Let me describe it to you. It is about 3/4 inch thick, with instructions in English, Deutsch, French, Italian, and Spanish. EACH section is 60ish pages long. The ENGLISH liscense is on page 55 of the ENGLISH section. Guess where she was looking? Seem so smart now?

      --
      We have enough youth, how about a fountain of SMART?
    8. Re:He has to learn... sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've installed Windows without ever seeing the manual. It was easy. I tried to install Caldera 1.3 with the aid of a book. It failed to recognise any of my hardware and generally screwed up. It also made life a total pain when trying to fix this - no partial re-install options, no "go back and try again". I'm willing to believe that the later versions are better, but when a Windows install is so easy, it is at the very least in the Linux community's own best interests to be as good.

    9. Re:He has to learn... sure by Mignon · · Score: 1

      And as many have said, that's not really a new theme. Now why don't they try a review of a Linux system after it's been installed? Readers might be curious to know what delights await them.

    10. Re:He has to learn... sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah? He didn't make himself sound so inexperienced. He says he has done programming and talks about science and ATT "hackers?". I can't stand it (catatonic rocking ensues)

    11. Re:He has to learn... sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe the common man has to learn how to read the manual.

  34. Re:Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by RayChuang · · Score: 1

    Tino,

    If you system hard drive has no partitions on it and if your computer can boot directly from a CD-ROM drive (either ATAPI 1.2 compatible IDE or SCSI connected to Adaptec host adapter), you can literally install the full or OEM installation version of Windows 98 directly from a CD-ROM boot. Try THAT with Linux.

    I think the BEST thing about Windows 98 is the fact Microsoft _has_ heard the complaints about Windows 95 installation and has done something about it. On most modern computers, I can have Windows 98 installed and running in about 45 minutes. If you're not used to UNIX, installing Linux will take at least twice as long.

    --
    Raymond in Mountain View, CA
  35. Re:Um really by smale · · Score: 1

    They are obviously "power users" since they are installing win98 on a dual slocket celeron system, with that second cpu doubling as a space heater.

  36. :) by Thrakkerzog · · Score: 1

    Sometimes when you think back to the silly things you did when you were first learning.. :)

    My advice is to install it and play with it till you seriously break it. Then you have a pretty good idea of how it works.

    1. Re::) by toolie · · Score: 2

      I never had any problem installing Linux. Of course, I was so paranoid of screwing up my system that I read the entire LDP Installing Linux twice. If people would just learn to read the documentation available before doing anything they don't understand, life would be so much easier. Oh, and we would quit hearing "you have to be a programmer/hardware/geek type to even begin to understand this".

      -- Not a programmer

      --
      -- toolie
    2. Re::) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      to bad you have to be a geek to understand whats in the LDP sometimes.

      alot of newbies just really need a friend to help them get by.

      oh no. Joe Cocker's song is stuck in my head now.

    3. Re::) by GrenDel+Fuego · · Score: 1

      My advice is to install it and play with it till you seriously break it. Then you have a pretty good idea of how it works.

      Does that mean that someone who can destroy their linux install in 5 minutes is a quick learner?

    4. Re::) by Thrakkerzog · · Score: 1

      Well, you have to do an awful lot in those five minutes to seriously break the system. (not including rm -rf / and the like..)

    5. Re::) by tecnodude · · Score: 1

      Yep. They just quickly learned what not to do to their fresh linux install.

    6. Re::) by ninjaz · · Score: 2

      Regarding newbie-friendly docs, http://www.linuxnewbie.org/ has NHFs (newbieized help files). On the LDP, the Guides - particularly the Installation and Getting Started Guide and the Linux Users' Guide are informative and accessible.

  37. Re:Linux hard? Try Windows! by nion · · Score: 1

    it's not just the bleeding edge hardware, either - i re-installed win98se about a week ago with a STB Velocity 4400 AGP (nvidia riva TNT) and a Diamond Monster MX300 PCI sound card. this supposedly 'new' version of windows couldn't find the drivers for EITHER card.

    luckily i had downloaded the latest drivers a few weeks before and was able to get things straightened out. but these are NOT new items! the nvidia GeForce is soon to come, and the MX300 is at least 6 months to a year old!

    --
    der dee der.
  38. Re:Unix sucks! It's too powerful! by Agathos · · Score: 2
    The command line is not like "real life." In "real life," I can talk to someone using all kinds of variations on English syntax and vocabulary, and that person will understand it. I can say one thing in a million different ways. The command line, on the other hand, demands that you use one particular format for your input. You can't say, "search that file and tell me which lines contain this word." If you don't know how to use grep, you're stuck until you read the documentation.

    A user looking at a graphical search program, on the other hand, will understand instantly what input it needs. Click on the icon for the file you want to search, or type its name in the box. Type your search string in the other box. Click on "search."

    Grep is more powerful, of course, and a user who needs that power will find learning how to use it to be well worth the time. But that does the new user no good when he doesn't need that power. He would spend more time reading the man page than it would take for him to just run the point-and-click application and find what he's looking for. And ultimately, the program that allows the user to finish the job sooner is better suited to the task.

  39. "Linux installation is so hard!" by Pyr · · Score: 5

    As roblimo mentioned, it is an old theme.. and most of the stories share something in common.. the author hasn't even tried installing Windows before, much less linux. They've never installed an operating system before yet they feel qualified to say "Linux is hard to install". Hard to install compared to what?

    This same guy would probably have a hard time doing a windows 98 upgrade. NT would probably take all day, just like linux. Linux is (depending on the distro) often easier to install than NT, so it's not fair to say that linux is harder to install.

    1. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by Dogun · · Score: 1

      I have to agree. I have yet to get a win9x box up and running within 20 minutes of sticking in a cd.

    2. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by The+Bridgekeeper · · Score: 2

      Having started out with slackware 3.somethingorother, I'd like to point out that Slackware is probably one of the most difficult distros to set up. It took me a long time (more than a year) to get to the point where I could set up slackware on most boxen in less than 4 hours and have it be right. Then I switched to SuSE due to the fact that I needed a copy of Linux fast one day and it was the cheapest ($30) thing I could get my hands on. I was amazed at how easily it went in; it was almost on par with Windows. (Not quite, but close.) Thus, as much as I love it, I don't think Slackware is really a fair distro to judge ease of use by...

    3. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by Eponymous,+Showered · · Score: 1

      This article was written by a woman.

    4. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by Oxryly · · Score: 1

      That sounds like the basic "linux is a server side *only* OS, so there" argument. From the thread I gathered people were discussing the desktop end of the linux spectrum. Certainly the CNN reporter was interested primarily in Linux's desktop abilities.

      But as long as Linux is destined to stay server side, serving up the WWW as you say, never trying to be client or consumer or desktop or "grandma-oriented", then the Linux world is looking quite peachy. It competes well with the Solarises, Irixes, SCOs of the world.

      But there's a growing body of Linux advocates who have amibitions to push the desktop forward and not have it dicated to us by M$ forever (witness GNOME, KDE, GGI, Berlin). I'm glad for these ambitious because I'm a game developer, so I'm stuck for the foreseeable future in the world of windows (or else the game consoles :( ) primarily because of Linux's "screw the idiot desktop users" mentality.

      Basically why would you have to learn how to set up your NE2000 "compatible" and your static routing tables and your video card's horizontal refresh rates in order to play a nice rousing game of Starcraft?

      Oxryly

    5. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, I trust a good hardware specification and electronic engineering practices MUCH more than I would trust the general state of software production practices in the computer segment of the computing market.

      ISA PNP is an oxymoron. Any enviroment that claims otherwise is perpetrating fraud on the end user.

      Personally, I'd rather take a few pulls on a MegaBucks machine.

    6. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your examples are funny. They appear to be directed at Linux. However, they more remind me of the bad experiences I had with Win95 that pushed me towards Linux (trouble dealing with an ISA ne2000 & poor support for offbrand monitors).

      If you want to make games for Linux, you simply will. If you want to just whine, you will fail even in the console or win32 market.

      The tools are in place if you care to use them.

      The only real issues at this point are marketshare and OEM support.

    7. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by Demona · · Score: 2
      >Geeks don't want Linux to be easy to use. They don't want the masses to be able to use it.

      The negative traits you attribute to "geeks" are more the province of the flaming idiots who inhabit the lunatic fringe of the religious wars between operating systems. Most of us just want everyone to be able to choose, to have access to a meaningful variety of choices, and to be able to make informed decisions. (Ignorance can be cured, but stupidity is forever.) If Linux is made easier to use without sacrificing its power, efficiency and flexibility, I have no objection, and I don't believe any rational person would have an objection.

      --
      Fuck Slashdot
    8. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by Guy+Harris · · Score: 2
      No, I trust a good hardware specification and electronic engineering practices MUCH more than I would trust the general state of software production practices in the computer segment of the computing market.

      And you trust folks writing BIOS code to act like electronic engineers rather than like software engineers "in the computer segment of the computing market"?

    9. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by Demona · · Score: 1
      The strangest thing is that for an accomplished websurfer, a 404 error should be no big deal. Backtrack along the URL until the server gives you something, and go from there...one of the first things I learned on the web.

      That said, I think it's both more fun and more productive to A) expect to meet a computer halfway, instead of expecting it to do all the thinking, and B) have someone more experienced act as a friendly tutor whenever possible. Half of the fun of free software is the user community. Heck, if I lived near the author, I'd drive on over with coffee and doughnuts and do my best to explain things without dumbing them down. "What do you want to do with this thing? Okay, let's figure out how to do it."

      --
      Fuck Slashdot
    10. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by bmetzler · · Score: 3
      Linux install sucks. Everybody knows that. Why is this news?

      Because a CNN journalist, installing a age old version of Caldera OpenLinux finally figured this out. He's so smart!

      I think that Windows 3.1 was a pain to install also. Big deal. Well, after he recuperates maybe he'll try the latest version.

      Of course, these people don't realize that people *don't* install their own OS. I don't drop a clean PC on my grannies counter and give here the CD and tell her, "Pop it in, there's nothing to it!" In fact, I even have to help my friends who are relativily computer literate to install Windows the *second* and *third* times and even after that.

      No, consumers *always* buy a computer with the OS preloaded. How long well it take for people to realize that? If this guy wanted to do a real comparison between the ease of use of a Linux and Windows desktop, he should have gone to buypogo.com or thelinuxstore.com, and ordered a PC.

      What he did was to "evaluate" the ease of comptuer illiterate's in getting into a computer field. Hopefully no one was too surprised at his answer, it's too difficult. It's supposed to be. Learning something new takes time. Believe me, I'm not going to go out this Saturday with a new transmission and a "Replacing Your Tranmission for Dummies" book, and hope to instantly become a mechanic. Niether can I expect to become a medical specialist by just reading "1,2,3 easy step to doing a heart tranplant". People should get over the idea that they can become a computer expert by just sitting done with a copy of Linux, or an MSCE Exam Cram and spending one afternoon on it. It just won't happen.

      But this guy I think was looking at it from a consumer point of view. And I'll therefore ask, do you know one consumer who has installed Windows 9X unassisted? How about Linux? Consumers shouldn't be expected to install their own OS, and that's that. Bill Gates knows it, who don't these journalists get the clue?

      -Brent
      --
    11. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey..slakware 3.0, you said? that's kinda outdated. Last time I bothered to check, slakware 3.6 was out, and a lot of stuff has changed. X setup is done by a GUI program running at 640x480 VGA, which should work on most of the chipsets out there. But anyway, Slakware is the distribution for the curious and tech-literate guy/girl, and has the best setup of configuration files if you plan to configure your box from the console. I started out as a newbie with slakware 3.0, and after reading some howto's and stuff, i had a good challenge installing it. I've been using linux ever since, and i don't miss any of the M$ bloatware stuff the least little bit. (much thanks to the fact that everywhere else i go, windoze is installed. Sad but true. Their loss etc.)

    12. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by monstar · · Score: 1

      are you putting the CD in with the label side up?

    13. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by jimfrost · · Score: 1

      Starting with the Win9x CD you'll have a real hard time beating 20 minutes; that's about the amount of time you spend waiting for it to just copy the software. Typically with probing and whatnot I find that it takes closer to an hour.

      Is a disk image cheating? No, but to play fair you should realize that installing Linux from images is a snap too. Moreover all the tools necessary to create and install Linux disk partitions are in-the-box; you don't need 3rd-party software like Ghost. That's pretty unusual, though, perhaps because you don't have to reinstall Linux anywhere near as often as Win9x. The only time I've ever had to do a Linux reinstall was when my RH5.0 gateway got cracked and I needed to do a clean install to fix all the backdoors they installed. Not a problem with Windows, but then again Windows couldn't even do the job.

      But of course disk image installs are not really an option for most, they start with the CD. I've found that I can do an installation of Red Hat in about 20 minutes if I know all the answers in advance.

      But if you're working with new hardware you can easily spend ten times that long hunting down details -- even when you know what you're doing. Dot clocks and RAMDACS? Please. I've been working with X11 since R1 (that's circa 1988 kiddies) and PCs for almost two decades -- and I had no freakin' clue what a dot clock or RAMDAC was before I started working with Linux. I don't even have the paperwork around anymore for most of my monitors to look up things like the vertical sync rate. If there's one place where Linux is too hard to install it's X11. It's worse than "too hard" it's "make-a-smart-guy-feel-stupid hard."

      If we expect this stuff to be installed by average users, it *must* improve.

      But, honestly, it's not that good even in the Windows Oasis. Ever see a newbie try to install Win98? It's not a lot prettier, other than that it's pretty good at picking out video hardware. And NT is nowhere near as easy as that. Most people get by because they DON'T install Windows -- the manufacturer does, or the IT department does, or the local geek does. And when it fails they go running for help.

      Linux could work just fine for those people (modulus available software anyway) if it were pre-installed. The nice thing about Linux is that it's install-and-forget; unless the hardware fails you'll never have to do a thing to it. Things don't just become randomly corrupted and you can't accidentally delete all your shared libraries. (To be fair, NT can be set up like this too, though I'm almost the only person I've ever seen do it, and of course NT is rarer than hen's teeth in the home user market.)

      But one place where Linux, or at least Red Hat Linux, beats all variants of Windows hands-down is in upgrades. I stick in the new Red Hat CD and say "upgrade" and 15 minutes later I have an upgraded system. It's so good it's mindless. I wish I wish Windows were that good.

      --
      jim frost
      jimf@frostbytes.com
    14. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If my hardware is going to be reliably auto-detected it will be done so at the BIOS level. This BS about Windows being inherently easier because of presumed better Plug-n-Play is just bullshit marketing. When Windows doesn't manage to explode in your face, more modern hardware is the responsible party NOT MICROSOFT. You get to thank intel & the chipset vendors for what you would like to credit to Windows.

      Those same facilities can be and are exploited by any other PC OS, including Linux.

    15. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by Criterion · · Score: 1

      As does COL 1.3, which she was installing.

      --
      We have enough youth, how about a fountain of SMART?
    16. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by An+Ominous+Cowherd · · Score: 1



      >There's nothing left that is harder to install >than linux. I don't think that excuse is going >to hold up anymore.

      Upgraded IRIX lately? Installed SCO 5? AIX?

      Linux is a very user-friendly *Unix-based* OS. User-friendly is relative. I could care less if WinXX is easier. WinXX also happens to suck. I'm interested in running the Internet, not Joe Schmoe's file server. And I could care less what you run on your desktop.

      MS can't run with the big boys on the big boxes, and they don't get the net. Never have. Therefore, they're irrelevant. Move on. Why waste time trying to make it easy for Grandma to use when we run half the WWW?

      Linux as "Windows Killer" is a sucker's game.

      The net is the killer app, embedded devices are the killer app, and whether your little brother can install it on his Packard Bell is not what Cox and Torvalds and Bob Young should be worried about.

      Want point-and-click? Buy a mac.

    17. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by Guy+Harris · · Score: 2
      If my hardware is going to be reliably auto-detected it will be done so at the BIOS level.

      I.e., you trust the code written by the BIOS vendor more than you trust the code written by the OS supplier (which isn't necessarily Microsoft...)?

      Those same facilities can be and are exploited by any other PC OS, including Linux.

      ...although the Linux on my machine (Debian Slink) doesn't, out of the box, manage to handle the plug-and-play ISA soundcard on my box (no, I have no interest in devoting a PCI slot to a sound card).

      Another PC OS - which doesn't come from Redmond - does manage to recognize and support the card, however.

    18. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by mpe · · Score: 1


      Is a disk image cheating? No, but to play fair you should realize that installing Linux from images is a snap too. Moreover all the tools necessary to create and install Linux disk partitions are in-the-box; you don't need 3rd-party software like Ghost.

      Most of the reason you need imaging tools with Windows is that simply copying OS related files dosn't work.

    19. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by the_tsi · · Score: 3

      Of course, the day will come when Talking Barbie says "Installing Linux is hard!" and both computer activists and womens' rights activists beat up Mattel.

      -Chris

    20. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by Sethb · · Score: 1

      Gee, I set up Windows 98 boxes at work in five minutes every day, starting with a blank hard drive and inserting only one floppy disk. Complete with an installation of Microsoft Office 2000, Adobe Photoshop, Premiere, Illustrator, and Pagemaker. Filemaker Pro, Netscape Communicator, SETI@Home, and all the correct device drivers.

      How? I boot from a DOS disk that runs DriveImage from our Novell Server and download my images that I created for each machine. Cheating? Maybe, but I'm just trying to show you that install time doesn't mean crap.

      What I want from an OS is for it to support all of my hardware with little or no insertion of driver disks even. I can handle doing that, but the main reason I run Windows98 still is that I run bleeding-edge hardware which Linux/Windows NT both can take months or years to support fully, yet Win9x supports out of the box.

      --
      When in danger or in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout. --Robert A. Heinlein
    21. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by Guy+Harris · · Score: 4
      That said, I think it's both more fun and more productive to A) expect to meet a computer halfway

      Some find it "fun" to figure out things the computer should be able to figure out itself; others don't.

      I've been working with computers and UNIX-flavored OSes for over 20 years, and have been doing OS code for over 20 years, and I fall into the latter category. For me, making some piece of software do something cool is fun; digging through documentation, or popping open the machine's case to figure out what hardware I have, may start out as fun, but it gets really old and tired after a while.

      And, after all, isn't making software do something cool such as, well, figuring out what video card you have, and automatically setting up X to drive that video card, fun?

      Or, as Alfred North Whitehead said:

      Civilization advances by extending the number of important operations which we can perform without thinking about them. Operations of thought are cavalry charges in a battle - they are limited in number, they require fresh horses, and must only be made at decisive moments.

      Do you really want to waste a cavalry charge figuring out what video card you have, if software running on that machine could find that out for itself? (I had the impression that on at least some modern X servers, etc. did, in fact, do that....)

      (Yes, I have the source. Yes, I could probably add improvements to installation/autoconfiguration/etc. code in various pieces of software (but, in a lot of these cases, people already appear to be working on that). No, I'm not saying "dammit, it's inconvenient, fix it!", so don't even think of dragging out the tired old "don't whine, contribute!" line - I'm just saying that making a system easier for novices to use may make it easier for us to use, too. Would you rather spend time configuring your computer to make it do something it and the software it runs already supports, such as accepting input from your mouse, or writing code to make it do something it can't do at all yet?)

    22. Re:"Linux installation is so hard!" by Oxryly · · Score: 1
      This same guy would probably have a hard time doing a windows 98 upgrade. NT would probably take all day, just like linux. Linux is (depending on the distro) often easier to install than NT, so it's not fair to say that linux is harder to install.

      Have you tried installing Windows 2000 recently? Everything that was wrong with WinNT's install (apart from the minute or two of blue background text) M$ has fixed. I've installed W2K twice and upgraded it twice and every times its been hands-off, no mistakes, and correct drivers all the way around.

      There's nothing left that is harder to install than linux. I don't think that excuse is going to hold up anymore.

      Oxryly

  40. Re:Positive Story? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It took a day, and someone else's help.
    Not a good record. It is becoming clearer
    by the minute that hardware autodetect is
    what people mean when they say that some
    OS is hard to install. If OS install did not
    ask you about the type of a mouse, monitor,
    video card, printer, etc, but just installed
    appropriate drivers, then all other questions
    would be easy (yes, I'd like an install in
    English please). Just slapping tetris on top of
    install will not work.
    Linux is especially hard to install because of
    scarce driver support. Most likely your scanner
    is not supported, your sound card needs a kernel
    recompile (and the SBLive is not really
    supported), your modem will almost certainly
    not work if you are converting from retail-built
    Windows box, your video card will have zero or close to zero 3D acceleration unless you are lucky or informed, your USB peripherals are not
    supported, at least for now, and even your mouse
    may not be supported (I have a GyroPoint 4-button
    mouse and have yet to see a default install option
    for such a mouse).
    The next kernel, and the next XFree should
    help, but they are vapor until released.

  41. RTFM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If this guy just took the time to read some HOW-TOs instead of complaining. Furthermore, it should have been obvious to anyone with half a brain that the following the monitor cable into the computer will take you to the video card.

    1. Re:RTFM by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      'Scuse me?

      What happens when Win98 doesn't know what hardware it is? Say for example you have a video card that doesn't have built in support in 98. Like oh, a SiS 6326 chipset AGP card. (Speaking from personal experience here) Win98 will detect it as a "PCI VGA Video Device" or somesuch. How does that help in linux?

      There should NOT be an "Idiot Distro" for linux. You can't get an insurance quote on your car if you don't know the VIN number/Engine Type and other related Data. Why should your computer be some appliance that any moron can sit down at and use?

      When you dumb it down, you kill it. The idiot proof measures take up finite resources that end up not getting used for functionality.

      If you don't know how to find out what video card or network card you have, maybe you should be installing ANY OS.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    2. Re:RTFM by Sethb · · Score: 1

      So what if your graphics chip resides on your motherboard? Following the monitor cable might lead you in the general area, but can your mom tell me which of the fifty chips on a motherboard is the one that identifies it's video card? I think the easiest way for any newbie to know what hardware they have is to install Windows98 first, write down all their devices, then install Linux, that's what I do when installing it on unknown hardware when I'm too lazy to open the box and play the model guessing game with Network cards.

      --
      When in danger or in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout. --Robert A. Heinlein
    3. Re:RTFM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless, of course, the video was on the motherboard, Mr. Full Brain...

    4. Re:RTFM by abliz · · Score: 1

      As a complete newcomer to linux, I have to agree
      with the rtfm comment. I installed a redhat 5.2
      on an old 486 after reading the install guide, and
      didn't have any of these problems. But I did take
      the trouble to note the devices listed in the Windows control panel.
      I can't wait for the story about the difficulty in
      programming a vcr. I guess it blinks 12:00 still.

    5. Re:RTFM by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      "but can your mom tell me which of the fifty chips on a motherboard is the one that identifies it's video
      card?"

      Was that part of the deal that terminates at "user friendly?"
      I must have missed that.

      Nevertheless, "mom" can learn that nifty bit of tech know-how from the same places everybody else does. (I was born with such abilities, but I don't expect that from everybody.)

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
  42. That EARLY?!?!?! by gnarphlager · · Score: 1

    Saturday, 11:10 a.m. This is when most computer savvy people get to work, right? Are you kidding?!?! I try not to even get out of BED before 2 on a Saturday!!!

    --

    Bad things often happen to good people,
    It is up to them to see that they remain good.
  43. Hmmmm. Perhaps we need a demo mode. by Stonehand · · Score: 4

    I'm reading something along the lines of, "Ok, it's supposedly installed. Now what?"

    Perhaps there needs to be a tutorial of sorts, to point out what tools are available? (Problem: they may or may not have been installed...). A novice, after all, isn't necessarily going to have a clue what he or she has just installed, how to start it, or so forth, and handing 'em a pointer to the HOWTOs and LDP guides may be just a tad too overwhelming in terms of reading material.

    So, what do y'all think? Is it better that they be encouraged (just) to read, possibly driving people away; or should they instead be shown a demo, featuring the various apps and so forth?

    --
    Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    1. Re:Hmmmm. Perhaps we need a demo mode. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, its because of the way the Linux filesystem is. The journalling file system from SGI should fix all that.

      Fdisk should fix the corrupt file system error, but that's usually run at the start anyway when shutdown hasn't worked properly.

      If that's so, there's no reason for them to buy a PC in the first place huh? Just get a WebTV. This is basically what all those NC prophets are counting on. Mindless users who just browse, email, and possibly put up webpages. Games will probably come later.

    2. Re:Hmmmm. Perhaps we need a demo mode. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A short tutorial, right after installation would probably help people, especially new users, get a handle on many things within Linux. Give them an overview of the directory structure, how things are organized, where stuff is located, etc. Tell them how to start up Xwindows. Where to find XConfigurator if it doesn't work. If the major distro's would add something like this (as an option) then we may not see as many people run screeming away once they finally get the system installed. Myself, after my first attempt at installing Linux, took almost 6 months to go back to it (granted, I screwed it up myself the first time...) John

    3. Re:Hmmmm. Perhaps we need a demo mode. by infojack · · Score: 1

      He shoulda just installed redhat, they don't have that know what feel to it. You get it installed.. log into X and its there with alot of programs you can play with.

    4. Re:Hmmmm. Perhaps we need a demo mode. by HydroCarbon10 · · Score: 2

      I agree, an interactive tutorial covering the basics would help tremendously. Also, it might be helpful if there were a team of people dedicated completely to hardware autodetection, so Linux can be installed without the person having much knowledge of the details of their hardware (just the basics, i.e. "I know I have a video card made by ATI, but that's all I know"). Something like what Windows 95 does when you install it, except no thrashing of the hard drive and lock-ups (thought as I understand it, due to the way the PC architecture was designed lock-ups are inescapeable in auto-detection).

      --
      The best way to accelerate a windows box is at 9.8 meters per second square.
    5. Re:Hmmmm. Perhaps we need a demo mode. by Criterion · · Score: 1

      Why would you think its any different with Caldera? Maybe because you've never tried it?

      --
      We have enough youth, how about a fountain of SMART?
    6. Re:Hmmmm. Perhaps we need a demo mode. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Adding a demo ?
      It depends on what you want to make out of linux :
      - the coolest desktop os in existence
      or:
      - a windows clone

      Quite frankly, it doesn't matter if linux is hard to install. If it proliferates it will become pre-installed. And a demo is something I would NOT want to see popping up after the install.

      I even got frustrated by the install of the latest redhats, because of that blasted Xconfigurator, that doesn't seem to get it right (while I though XF86Setup was more then enough).

      Maybe if manufacturers of PC's would start supplying a component chart for when people start installing other OS's itr wouldn't be such a problem, since they could just look at the chart instead of having some crappy setup choosing the wrong videocard for them.

      OK, maybe I'm a bit harsh. But is it really worth duplicating windows' so called ease ? It's like asking car engines would be made so simple everyone could change a part. It's nonsense.

      Leave the dirtywork to the mechanics.

    7. Re:Hmmmm. Perhaps we need a demo mode. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I installed RedHat6 a few months ago. Although I had very limited prior expirience with UNIX, I was able to make it through (but I did read most of the FAQs on the web site). After I got it installed, I fooled around a little bit with the GUI. After about 3 days, there was some sort of error with the file system that could not be fixed automatically. I tried running the program they suggested from the command prompt. I tried the program in all different options. Nothing worked. I went as far as to purchase Linux for Dummies. It's superficial explanation of how the program worked proved to be of no use. I haven't used Linux in 3 months. Eventually, I'll just install it from scratch again and start over. It would help if I could justify my using Linux. Fact is, there is nothing I can do with it that I can't do on Windows. If there was something I actualyl wanted to do with it, I would have gotten it running by now. I also never figured out how to change the resolution. That didn't help ...

  44. Should have used 2.3 by craw · · Score: 1
    This is weird. I just installed Caldera's OpenLinux 2.3 today on a dual processor home-made system. Matrox G200, dual Celerons on slot 1 adaptor cards, 3Com network card, Asus mobo, and virgin eide HD. Put the install CD in and away we go.

    This was an incredibly simple and clean installation! The user interface is very nice and the installer automatically figured out the various devices and cards that were installed. The only glitch (and one pointed out by Caldera) is that I had to manually tell the installer how much video memory I had. BTW, I did a complete installation (not customized) to see what is available. Tomorrow, I will do a customized installation on another system. Right now, the RedHat installer looks rather feeble compared to this one. I can't wait to see what the Caldera customized installation looks like.

    As far as I'm concerned, this CNN review is totally bogus and pathetically out of date. The 2.3 version is extremely clean and fairly idiot-proof. Somebody should send this person the newer package (it only costs around $30 with an additional $10 rebate offer). Then they could see how far Linux has progressed. Finally, I should also point out that I violated the RTFM doctrine. This was a blind-trust installation.

  45. yeah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    like, take a box that you dont know what hardware is in it, and tell me you dont swear a few times. someone send this guy a redhat cd, quickly.

  46. Re:Unix sucks! It's too powerful! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tell us how you would replicate grep without a command line of some kind, otherwise we are quite justified in considering you the troll. GUI's are by definition a mere subset of what a general purpose computer are capable of. That is generally their point. They trade lesser complexity for lesser functionality.

    Even a GUI junkie such as myself can understand that and utilize the occasional 'stupid shell trick' rather than just being content to being grossly inefficient or just being less capable.

    Something like grep is less about 'gui vs. cli' and more about being aware what your needs are vs. having no clue what your needs are.

  47. Re:Don't you dare criticise him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He has every right to be flamed. He's basing his rant on a mediocre and OLD distribution. His claims that something is 'broken' is at best questionable (COL != Linux), at worst libel.

    He can walk into a Borders or Best Buy or check Caldera's homepage and get a clue.

    Also, Microsoft DID NOT bring software to the masses. They duped IBM with a poor 8086 port of somone else's OS. Others made useful software for this CP/M called DOS and it's decendants.

    MS is just a sandbagger. Even it's promises for '10 years later' were delivered 3 years late, if ever.

  48. Re:Your alternate "geek-centered" reality by sec · · Score: 1

    Nah.

    I'm a veteran of at least two dozen Linux installs on various configurations. The _ONLY_ time that I've run into difficulties is when hardware problems arose: once, a bad cache RAM chip kept crashing the system, and another time, the CD-ROM drive failed in the middle of the install.

    I've also installed Win95 over half a dozen times -- each time on the same machine, I might add, because it keeps screwing itself up.

    The most recent install went without a hitch. You could have knocked me over with a feather duster -- this is the first time that this ever happened.

    All of my previous installs were beset by a host of silly problems that Microsoft could easily have fixed if they cared one iota about their operating system.

    What's more, there were no HOWTOs to contact, and the install manual was totally useless. I searched the Internet (from my Linux box, which I had previously set up without any difficulties) in vain for any documentation that might help.

    In the end, I got it to work, no thanks to Microsoft.

    Windows installs are just plain TOO DIFFICULT. My personal guess is that it will take at least two years before Windows has a user-experience (from install, to GUI, to maintenance) that rivals Linux/BeOS/MacOS.

  49. My 2.3 cents by HarveyOpolis · · Score: 1

    My big question, and I am sure someone else has asked this... is why is he installing Caldera 1.2?

    I am not familiar with Caldera, I'm a mandrake/redhat user, but... I do know they're on version 2.3 and that 2.3 is supposed to be really easy to install. Hell, version 1.3 of Caldera has been out for a while!

    I realize that we all went through the painful install process at some time back way when. Back when I was using pre1.0 beta of slackware on and off.

    Most people at least know to use the latest release version if they're doing something new.. even if they have no clue to what they're doing.

    All I can think of is that this is some sort of cruel joke. I admit it would be funny to give a guy a P90 with a weird no name video card and a Red Hat 3.0 CD. In fact, I think I might just do that.......

    --
    - Hugh Buchanan
    - Userfriendly.com
  50. Why the World? by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 2
    I am not sure I can see any reason for the Linux community to be so worked up about "World Domination" Why do we need everyone and their grandmother to be able to use Linux.

    Call it "economy of scale".

    If you have a Hot New Product (be it software or hardware) being introduced into the Home and Buisness computing marketplace, it will support Windows. Why? Everybody and their grandmother uses it. Most likely your potential customers do too.

    It would be nice if that situation changed. If every other person and their grandmother used Linux, Hot New Products will most likely support Linux too. If it doesn't, there's a good bet that a competative product will. We, as Linux users, get more choices. Choice is good.

    We as professional IT workers could bennifit also. I would love to make my living off supporting Linux platforms. Right now I support Solaris and HPUX systems. My organization's IT budget is amazingly slim. Linux could help us augment our existing environment at a price we could afford. However, the apps we use aren't available in Linux... yet. The developer for our primary app has made some noise about doing a Linux port. Why? Everybody and their boss is interested in it.

    "World Domination" is good for Linux. And one key aspect about Linux' version of Domination lies in its configurability; if you don't like the features that lead to "World Domination", don't use them. Its all about choices. Its all good.

  51. Who is the writer by HenrikN · · Score: 1

    Everybody seems to think the writer is a guy.

    It seems to me, Robin Lloyd is female.

  52. Re:Dont take it easy on anyone by Xafloc · · Score: 1

    Well put. When I started experimenting with Linux about 2 years ago, I didn't even know what .tar.gz was. As I tried to ask others about basic *nix tools, I was told RTFM. Its by these experiences that we learn the most.

    RTFM is obviously a topic that attracts the trolls from the caves as well as any other topic. But Im willing to bet that 99% of those that complain about the RTFM principle, when asked seperately would agree that being told all the answers all the time doesn't help anyone in the long run.

    And for those who complain that the manuals are so cryptic that you need to read the manuals just to understand the manuals, there are endless amounts of information from other sources out there. Be it newgroups, or mailing list archives, I can assure you, that you will find someone, somewhere that has had your problem....and solved it.

    --
    -= Xafloc =-
    alinuxbox.com
    N
  53. The problem is not with the users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    First off. It is totally unfair to call this guy ignorant in a derogatory sense. I'm willing to bet that most of you don't know how a nuclear reactor work, yet you use it's products all the time. Does that make you stupid and ignorant? No. You shouldn't have to know how a nuclear reactor works. Computers should be the same way but unlike nuclear engineers, computer scientists seems to think that everybody should understand how computers work. This poor journalists experience is one of the major problems with computers today. In this respect M$ windows is much much better than linux. People hate microsoft so much these days they are blinded to the good that is in microsoft software. I can hack linux as good as the rest and find it easy. But when I tried out win2k beta was I ever impressed that it automatically found and configured every peice of hardware that had a win2k driver. Linux should be moving in this direction as well. Userfriendlness is nowhere near where it should be. Linux is nowhere near surpassing windows until it equals or betters it in the user interface area. In my opinion this will require major coding effort. So don't look at this article and think how dumb the poor guy is. Think how smart you should try and make linux. Let linux take care of linux and computer stuff. Let it's users worry about things that they care about. And don't go telling me to go hack the source code because I have other things to do like learn and earn money to pay bills.

  54. Re:Your alternate "geek-centered" reality by elflord · · Score: 1
    and have only gotten it to "work" ONE TIME. And that time was pure hell, trying to get X to work correctly, finding decent programs that do things I've grown accustomed to (you know, crazy things like browsing my file system).

    Maybe you had unsupported hardware. Seriously, if your hardware is fully supported, you shouldn't have to do anything more than throw the CD in and click "OK" several times. It's not the distributor's fault that your hardware vendor doesn't want you to use linux.

    accustomed to (you know, crazy things like browsing my file system).

    Try "man ls". If that fails, all the recent distributions come with KDE.

  55. Linux Elitism sucks... by brianvan · · Score: 3

    Ok, this isn't directly on topic. So sue me.

    This guy tried to install Linux. So did I, about 2 months ago. He knew very little about his computer equipment and was somewhat unprepared. I, on the other hand, was intimately familiar with everything in my system and was extremely prepared. At the end of the day, both of us were in the same place... at the ugly prompt. Sure, being ugly isn't a sin, but being useless IS. At that particular junction, I was forced to boot back into Win98 to read e-mail/burn CDs/web surf/type documents/play games. I can do all of those in Windows, but after 2 months I still cannot do all of those things in Linux. (the read email and web surf things were solved when I got PPP to work in Linux - but I just never knew where to look for getting anything else to happen)

    Linux is not hard to install. It's actually quite simple if you're well prepared. But it's not nice to learn how to be a Linux power user.

    Here's why: In the computer world, there's two kinds of software/UI design: software that's designed by programmers, and software that's designed by professional designers. Linux is the former, Windows is the latter. Windows is much better to look at and deal with, which makes it SEEM easier. Also, everything's easy to find if you know how to look, and in Windows since looking is universally better, finding is also universally better. Finally, there's better tools in Windows for that kind of stuff, tools which are easy and obvious to find. Even though the tools are there in Linux and they are comprehendable, they are damn hard to find and still not entirely as easy to use as their Windows counterparts. Although intelligent programmers who spend hours and hours learning (no one learns how to be a Linux guru in 60 min or even 60 days) are able to get around, most of the humans on the planet don't have the willpower, patience, time, blood, sweat, and tears to put into Linux like the real wizards do. And that's assuming that all humans are as highly intelligent as those big programming brains, which they're unfortunately not. Oh, and anywhere from 5-50 years of intense experience with computers does give some of the linux guys an edge over others.

    Naturally, I knew how to change directories, run certain programs, get around X-Windows, etc. But that was all. God knows I had thousands of programs before me in myriad subdirectories, but as I was walking through the directories I felt like a lost child in a store who kept walking into rooms I wasn't supposed to be in. My biggest problem, however, was the lack of a nice centralized place to go to when I needed to do something and wanted to look through the available programs for something to help me.

    For example: I had to set up PPP. Didn't know how. Read the HOWTO, but it confused the hell out of me (and I have an exteral modem, so configuring it SHOULD have been trivial). Finally a week later, I heard someone mention linuxconf. Then I used that to get PPP to work, so I downloaded Seti@Home. Didn't know how to unzip/untar/un-rpm it.(I didn't know the specific command, and didn't know where I could find it) That took a week to find out too. Then I did, and couldn't figure out how to run it properly. Another two weeks to figure out it needed a chmod. This is for an easily configured program that runs from the prompt! Imagine what it would be like to try and write CDs? Or if I downloaded source that needed compiling or a kernel patch?

    My point? If you show me how to do it, I can figure it out easily. If you don't show me, then I'm not dumb for not knowing. There's too many of you elitist swine out there who think everyone who says they are having a hard time with Linux are against Linux and are the "enemy". I nor the author of the article are the "enemy", yet you damn well treat us like it just because we don't have 50 years to scour our hard drives and man entries for simple commands. Yes, I still want to know how to use it. No, I don't want 50 replies with "go to freshmeat and there's cd writing programs there". Yea there are programs like that on freashmeat. I just don't know which one is best for me. Until I can figure out this stuff easier (not easily, cause a lot of it is a bitch in Windows too) I won't use Linux until I feel comfortable using everything that I need to use that works fine for me in Windows.

    This guy who tried to install Linux is ultimately on our side. He wants to learn. You think that he's dumb because he needs help to learn. But he's not. In the end, if he can never get Linux to work like you can, then he at least can probably write better news articles than you can.
    But I digress... he represents the next big wave of Linux users. They are going to be OKAY installing it (not without pain, but neither is Windows) but clueless on how to get around in it. RTFM is a useless strategy here because:
    1. It's the system that's hard to use and understand (and it does have SERIOUS room for improvement), and RTFM just helps you learn specific things. It doesn't let you "poke around". Well designed tools and tips will help the situation, but it's Unix. It's hard to begin with. Even for geniuses, it takes a while to sink in.
    2. How can you RTFM if you can't FTFM? (Find The Fucking Manual)
    So, a better way of helping people explore will need to be created. That way, people can look around and figure out what they want (or need) to use rather than need help every time a different situation comes up. Until then, if you want Linux to grow past being a tech fad, then you'll cut out the shitty attitude toward anyone who's not the level of Linux Guru that you are.

    If you harbor no malcontent toward those who are seemingly clueless about computers, my apologies for this article... it doesn't apply to you.

    1. Re:Linux Elitism sucks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a strange topic for this post, considering that your goal when installing Linux was probably to become a Linux elitist, eh? ;) Well even though the topic is inflammatory I'll respond anyway. First of all let me say that if you think becoming a "power user" at anything is easy, you're wrong...you only get the illusion of such in windows because the users have no power. In order to become proficient in Linux you might have to actually sit down and do some homework...will that really kill you? That being said here are some helpful tips for Linux newbies:

      1) IRC and Usenet: A couple good places on IRC I know of are #linuxhelp on efnet and #linux on irc.openprojects.net. You can go there for trivial newbie questions, although you won't always get a response. Newsgroups are a great place to go if you have a particular question about, say, a piece of hardware you're trying to get working.

      2) Your local bookstore: A big thick Linux book with an index is your friend. Any good UNIX book will tell you how to use the tar command, and any good book on Red Hat will tell you how to use the rpm command.

      3) Freshmeat: Read http://freshmeat.net at least once a day and browse the appindex thouroughly for any programs you want to install (say, for example, cd-burners). Almost all packages come with installation instructions in the INSTALL or README files...READ them carefully; after the first few you'll probably begin to get the hang of it.

      4) Expand your horizons: Believe it or not there are more things you can do with a compuiter than surfing the web looking for warez you can burn to CD's. Why not try and pick up a programming language or two?

      5) Think like a hacker: Users look at a UNIX filesystem and say: "Oh no help, I feel completely lost." Hackers look at an unknown area with a sense of adventure...they find it fun to explore new things and learn about them. If sit there and let yourself be easily frustrated when things aren't handed to you on a silver platter, then you're going to get nowhere.

      -W.W.

    2. Re:Linux Elitism sucks... by hime · · Score: 1

      When I started reading your post, it was marked score 1. When I clicked to read the full thing, it was up to 2. Would that I were a moderator, it'd be a 3. There is a definite ivory tower vibe to a lot of what gets posted here because people lack perspective. Yes, we all may be cool, hip, happening compustuds, but we are far outnumbered.

      Myself, I don't use Linux at home because I haven't got the time. I have a shell account that went from Linux to FreeBSD and I like that (elm, tin, ircII - they all rule, they are the right way to do stuff for the most part). But I don't have the time to sit down and learn the admin end at home. I do tech support all day, I get home, I just want my computer to do things and do them relatively quickly.

      And yes, I have installed Windows. 95, 98. On different machines, not just my 350 at home. They almost all went painlessly. I usually recommend to friends that they grab 98 now if they want to install one since it has newer drivers, even. Sort of like the difference between a 1.3 and a 2.3. :)

      The point has been raised a few times now: most of you want Linux to be everywhere. So work towards it in some tangible way if you really want it that bad. And don't expect the users to do the work, because they won't. It's like asking people to do the 30 mile commute to work on a bike. Yes, it's better for the environment... (and don't take this too literally, it may have more to do with enduser perception when you tell them there's plenty of docs instead of them just clicking Next).

    3. Re:Linux Elitism sucks... by hime · · Score: 1
      4) Expand your horizons: Believe it or not there are more things you can do with a compuiter than surfing the web looking for warez you can burn to CD's. Why not try and pick up a programming language or two?

      Some people want to use their computers to accomplish their goals, not change them. In other words, some people don't want to become computer programmers.

      Besides the fact that you're preaching to the converted, offering places to get Linux tips on Slashdot. :)

    4. Re:Linux Elitism sucks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok. Here's an interesting point for you. Most users don't even have to read the manual to figure out windows. And that's how it should be. Did you ever read the manual for your tv? And as for your windows users have no power remark, can you install any program in less than 2 miniutes with about 4 clicks of a mouse in linux? And does linux have the selection of programs that windows does? Right now windows can do a lot more than linux can. Linux has a lot of negative points to. I can't stand it when people get so caught up in hating someone or something they are blinded to reality. And by the way I use linux and find it very easy to use to. I've been using computers for many years. But I still want linux to be many many times easier.

    5. Re:Linux Elitism sucks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately most developers aren't perfect or clairvoyant. Being able to fill in your own holes is considerably better than just doing without. This is EMPOWERMENT, not elistism. Elitism is giving up and just waiting for gifts to be bestowed upon you by the priesthood.

      What you are really describing are people who want to use their computers like toys, not people who have any real self awareness of what their computing goals are.

    6. Re:Linux Elitism sucks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      TV's are not PC's. I don't think I can put it any more succintly than that. No I am not "blinded to the truth", I run various windoze drek on various boxen and it does have more commercial software (although the selection of free (no price) software on Linux is generally better), and it's also better for playing games. The users having no power is a result of dumbing down an OS such that anyone can install any program in less than 2 minutes with about 4 clicks of a mouse. It's really nice that any shmuck can install tons of useless crap and destroy his Win98 install within two weeks, that means more money for MS tech support I guess. The main problem is that the consumer-oriented version of windows is still an ugly hack on top of DOS which leads to all kinds of problems.

      But I digress. The original post was a reply to someone asking for help on where to find Linux resources. I'm not sure how your post relates to this, but oh well.

      -W.W.

    7. Re:Linux Elitism sucks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some people want to use their computers to accomplish their goals, not change them. In other words, some people don't want to become computer programmers.

      Dabbling in code is fun even if you don't want to become a full-time computer programmer.

      Besides the fact that you're preaching to the converted, offering places to get Linux tips on Slashdot. :)

      Huh? He said he wanted to know the info.

      -W.W.

    8. Re:Linux Elitism sucks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can't find the manuals? Can't find the apps?

      Can you at least use a web browser?

      This isn't rocket science. You put keys into a web search engine, or go to a site that specializes in what you need.

      If you can't be bothered to track down apps, in the age of the web, your sincerity is VERY suspect.

    9. Re:Linux Elitism sucks... by brianvan · · Score: 1

      Wow. That's how ideas are started...

      You know, if they WERE to make an RTFM command, the program should be useful, but it should also be in the style of DOS programs where a lot of them were ridiculously obvious and overbearingly assistive and instructional. While it sounds like a recipie for an annoying and unusable disaster, it would probably be the most popular program since Myst.

    10. Re:Linux Elitism sucks... by brianvan · · Score: 1

      I'll admit that I don't have a lot of time to spend on becoming a Linux guru. That said, the time I've spent with it (and I do have a big book too) has yielded very little in progress. Basically, if I see something cool or some blazing tip that helps me on the 'net, then that's how I figure something out. Like the RPM stuff. I tried man RPM but for some reason I gave up when it was 20 screens long (I was tired, I wanted to go to bed for other reasons). So later that week I was browsing, saw an "rpm (options) file" command line for ANOTHER program on the net, and then applied the command to my own file and voila! it worked. Still wouldn't know how to get the programs installed in the directory of MY CHOOSING, but that's a reasonable compromise.

      Why does IRC seem to want to be helpful but really isn't... for EVERYTHING?

      Bookstore - visited. Freshmeat - Red. (bad pun)

      Initially installed Linux to expand horizons. But real world constraints (I needed to burn a CD. I needed to encode an mp3. I needed to do both within the next hour, not a month of relearing everything under linux) prevented me from putting more effort into that.

      Finally, there IS a sense of adventure in getting around. But when you're looking for something specific that you need NOW and you're looking at HUNDREDS of directories to see if you can find what you need, then after an HOUR it gets to be tedious and frustrating. If I have a day to do man commands, then I WOULD because that would be very useful and effective for me. But I don't have a day. I usually have fifteen seconds, and by the time I reach this dot . there were only five left. What pains me is that this is all OBVIOUS and certainly understandable, but somehow there's a lot of linux cultists out there that somehow would conclude that I STILL must be either really lazy or really stupid.

    11. Re:Linux Elitism sucks... by brianvan · · Score: 1

      Well, I DO THAT. I have tracked down apps, I have used the web/search engines to get help. It's been sucessful so far, but the majority of what I need to do on a computer is still impossible for me right now under Linux. It'll take TIME. Most people don't have the time, and I don't right now either. But I WILL get it figured out eventually because I WANT to. My point is, it's way too hard to LEARN. It's like the difference between having a good calculus textbook and a bad one. Windows is like a good one that doesn't go very far into the material. You learn what's there. Linux is like a bad one that is the most COMPLETE calculus reference ever, but it's written in broken english and there's not one single graph or diagram or picture in the whole book... as a matter of fact, it's all ONE CHAPTER run on into each other for 1,000 pages. And the text is small. But if someone could rewrite the textbook and add graphs and diagrams, then it would be universally enjoyable. (Which is why we have Open Source. I'm sure many of the OS programs out there could use a UI overhaul that would make them twice as good) But most people think that all you need to do is add more stuff to learn at the end (and have that written in broken english too). And although some people have had sucess learning calculus from that textbook, that doesn't make me STUPID for getting frustrated with not being able to learn from it easily (or quickly).

    12. Re:Linux Elitism sucks... by jflynn · · Score: 1

      "How can you RTFM if you can't FTFM? (Find The Fucking Manual)"

      A reasonable point. One thing to do would be to turn the joke into reality and implement an RTFM command for real that gave an index to places to find help, on the local system and on the web. If you want to get fancy, allow keyword parameters for where to look for specific kinds of help. Not a help utility like man, but a help indexing utility. Then telling the clueless ones to RTFM might do some good.

  56. Re:Uncoordinated driver having hard time learning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Next thing he'll do is to put this thing down and never touch the box again. i bet. just like so many other linux i helped installed. I'm no longer a Linux user so i don't feel any unfairness or whatever. good thing. Kudo to Caldera that they made the installation so damn good that this clueless guy can get the distro installed!! i'm impressed.

  57. Nipples by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nipples are the only intuitive interface out there, obvious too.

    1. Re:Nipples by Criterion · · Score: 1

      Tell this to all the new mothers out there who have problems teaching their babies to nurse. (just another viewpoint, yes from firsthand experience)

      --
      We have enough youth, how about a fountain of SMART?
  58. Re:Dont take it easy on anyone by JatTDB · · Score: 2

    I definitely have to disagree with your statements. You learn MORE by reading the documentation and working it out on your own. If you were to ask me something, say, "how do I get the files out of this .tar.gz file", I could just say tar zxf filename.tar.gz. And you could do what you're trying to do. But, if I instead just told you to read the tar manpage, you'd learn why the z, x, and f are there. By knowing that z means to treat it as a compressed file, x means to extract files, and f means to read the data from a file rather than a device, you will probably actually REMEMBER it the next time instead of having to ask me or someone else again.

    As far as "information irrelevant to you at the time", this is actually a good thing about reading the documentation yourself. To go back to the tar example, let's say you read the man page and found what options you needed for the task at hand. 2 weeks later, you need to make a tar file. There's a good chance that even if you don't remember the exact syntax to create a tar file, you'll know whereabouts to look in the man page. It's a progressive process...the more documentation you read, the more little bits of knowledge you'll build up without even realizing it. You'll be looking at manpages less and less and using your system better and faster.

    Don't cheat yourself by depending on the minds and skills of others. RTFM, for your own sake.

    --
    "That's Tron. He fights for the Users."
  59. Re:Unix sucks! It's too powerful! by elflord · · Score: 1
    Try explaining calculus without using any mathematical symbols. You're only allowed to use diagrams. Your explanation will be extremely superficial at best. OTOH, you can explain it pretty well without diagrams, even if the explanation is a little less readable.

  60. "This guy" did it in heels by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Check the byline and the little cartoon. Girl, not guy. Of course, I'm sometimes in error on this point.

  61. Re:There are real installation issues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, if you read Roblimo's unedited comments [there was apparently a mysterious, unreported retraction, as the current editorilization is kinder and gentler, as if the parent company has filed for an IPO and lawyers and PR people are filtering] he basically said he was tired of newbies trying to install linux, and he might have said clueless newbie. I've installed various OSs hundreds of times and still find installing Linux difficult unless you accept the efault options.

    Your point about the CS students is pretty moot.

    You and I both know that a CS degree is not a practical education. By that I mean that you can graduate with honours from a top ten university's CS department and know about the idea of computing and programing, but not know how to do it.

    Even for technically astute software people, installing linux can still be a pain in the rear.

  62. Re:In the end, it all comes down to OEM support by elflord · · Score: 1
    RPM may handle dependencies, but that doesn't make things work. Install everything, and the boot goes well. Be selective, and things hang the boot for long periods. I clocked one particular fail-over at over 8 minutes. This is NOT what a newbie needs. In-depth problem solving is an acquired skill. When you're starting, you need something which works, with a minimum of tweaking.

    This sounds like a network configuration problem, combined with a setup that requires a network connection running ( maybe you're running sendmaild ). The best way around this is for the machine not to run services out of the box. I believe if you choose the Redhat workstation install, it probably wont run sendmaild in the default setting. If you choose a custom install -- well, try to know what you are doing.

  63. This is good! by raffe · · Score: 1

    This is actually a good thing. A year ago he could not do it at all or ever heard of linux...

  64. What kind of journalist is she, anyway? by bla · · Score: 1

    This kind: http://www.cnn.com/TECH/space/9909/28/crab.nebula/

  65. Re:Autodetection is not evil! by hipworld · · Score: 2

    Here, here. I fully agree. For Linux to become the Microsoft killer that a lot of people want it to be means it has to get beyond the server market and on to the desktop in significant numbers. How does that happen? Ease of use, of course. That means hardware autodetection, default drivers, plain english instructions for set up, and other "hand holding" features that will walk the average computer user through the installation process.

    If you want to bypass all the ease of use stuff, have an "expert setup" that will allow you to customize the kernel to your heart's delight, create modules and so on (one of the real strengths of open source software), without all the little help features along the way. That way we can have the best of both worlds.

    Until Linux can address the ease of use issue, it's not going to dominate the world.

  66. Re:Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by Brian+Knotts · · Score: 5
    If you system hard drive has no partitions on it and if your computer can boot directly from a CD-ROM drive (either ATAPI 1.2 compatible IDE or SCSI connected to Adaptec host adapter), you can literally install the full or OEM installation version of Windows 98 directly from a CD-ROM boot. Try THAT with Linux.

    I have. It works. Has worked for some time with RedHat, at least.

    I think the BEST thing about Windows 98 is the fact Microsoft _has_ heard the complaints about Windows 95 installation and has done something about it. On most modern computers, I can have Windows 98 installed and running in about 45 minutes. If you're not used to UNIX, installing Linux will take at least twice as long.

    The only difficult steps in installing RedHat Linux (other distributions can vary in difficulty) are: partitioning the disk (still difficult with Windows) and selecting the video adapter (can also be a pain in Windows if your adapter is not auto-detected, which seems to be about half the time). If you do know your video adapter, RedHat will ask you if you want to automatically start X. If you do, it will set up xdm to run at startup, so you never even see a command prompt.

    My last Linux install took about 45 min...but that was because I was doing an remote FTP install from ftp.varesearch.com...try THAT with Windows. :-D

    --
    Interested in XFMail? New XFMail home page

  67. How many self righteous linux geeks does it take.. by wannabe · · Score: 3

    .to screw in a lightbulb. Answer: they'd have to live in the dark because noone could give anyone else any advice on how to fix it, therefore noone would ever learn how to change the lightbulb. The attitude expressed by some of the posters in this situation amazes me to no end. Constantly belittling these people. At least the reported tried to install the operating system. As a new user to Linux it amazes me that older users would have such a pompus attitude to a person in this situation...for any reason. I've installed NT, 98, 95, 3.1 etc, etc., and must admit that with minor bumps I found my first full Linux install pretty easy, just different. If I were to have had a problem though I would like to think that there are people out there that would help and not look at my email client or my browser info or whatever else and reject me because the only computer that's currently hooked up has win98 on it. Look around people, Linux is something special as in it's an old concept reborn in new technology. If y'all can't grow up and learn to be supportive and helpful of someone who at least tries for whatever reason, ya might as well go find someother operating system to worship because Linux won't survive much less grow.

    --
    "Draw them in with the prospect of gain, take them by confusion." Sun Tzu
  68. Linux.. Hard to Install?! by rpsoucy · · Score: 2

    Ok.. I don't think this guy is in any place to say "Linux is hard to install" he doesn't know crap about computers (it's not that hard to figure out that the card the monitor is pluged into is the video card) and from my understanding has never installed any other os. I'm 15 years old.. and i had no problem installing Linux on sevral difrent Computers.. . I will admit that to the "webUser" (users who only use a computer for word processing/email/web) Linux can seem dificult.. But what about win98? the only Reason it was easyer for them is because it came PREINSTALLED. these people are the type of people who want to run linux to make themselfs look like a hacker or a computer wiz.. . well, right now.. linux is not the right os for those people.. . linux is a powerful network/server os w/ alot of featurs and stabelity.. . not some AOL style user interface.. made for only email and web browsing.. . althoue companies like RedHat and SuSE are makeing Linux much easyer to install and configure.. there's still the fact that people just don't want to see a prompt and type 'startx' to get into a gui.. these are the type of people who would be beter off w/ an imac.. Linux is not some "fad" it's an os that was designed to offer the power of the unix os for the pc.. and it's exceeded that expectation.. Linux is getting more user freindly.. but do we really want it to be? when it gets to the point that we need to click throw 20 questions to delete a file or hear a cute little message whenever we have new mail.. or even see a nice little animation when copying files.. then it becomes annoying.. and loses some of it speed and power.. people were forced to learn how to use a mouse and how to use windows.. why cant they learn linux and like it for what it is.. if they want a "computer game" of an os they can stick with windows and suffer the countless lockup's and data loss's.. or they can do a little work and learn a bit about there computer and linux and be rewarded with a much more powerful os.. if i can learn it they can as well.. i spent a grate deal of time learning linux.. and most of them spent even more learning windows.. they just want a free windows.. thats what it all comes down to. anyone with a little common sence and a bit of knolage can install linux. i love linux the way it is.. i admit.. there are somethings that i would want to change.. or add.. but thats reserved for the years when i decide to make myself my own distro ;) for now.. my hat goes off to SuSE for provideing one of the Best overall distro's of linux i've seen.

  69. Re:Maybe we should sit back (and rock) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course it is. I take it you never have used a NextStep workstation(Mach based). And when MacosX comes out they'll get to play with BSD. Unix isn't technically prevented from being easy to use. Unfortunatelly most of the people complaining about unixes difficulty fail to keep that in mind.
    And act as though the 'difficulty' is inherent in the os.

  70. Re:Try installing Slackware as a newbie! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I installed Slackware as a newbie because it was the only Linux that I could warez off a friend.(No one else had a disk, and I had no idea how an ftp install is supposed to work). Overall, I found the install process to be very simple and easy to understand, but it was probably a pretty recent Slack version.

    The only problems I had were an X configuration script that forgot the quotes around one of the variables, the fact that I couldn't get a sound card or mouse to work, even after trying several different sound cards and mice, and that I couldn't find any information on how to use the keyboard to get around X since it's pretty useless without a mouse.

    All in all, it was a case of RTFM. I found some docs on the CD and read them very carefully, and was completely confuzzled by the docs until I started the installation and could tell what was going on. The only things about the install process that gave me pause was rawriting the floppies, and that the docs had no idea that CD-ROMS existed and assumed I either was using FTP or a stack o'floppies.

    Yes, I'd say it was harder than a Windows install. Windows can never seem to accurately detect my hardware either, and it installs shitloads of useless cruft, but seems to be easier. Probably because it doesn't ask permission before installing shitloads of useless cruft.

  71. Re:assumptions of slashdotters... by Roblimo · · Score: 1

    I believe *Robin Lloyd* is female, but I take issue with your characterization of Robin as a "girl's name." My wife is *not* a lesbian. ;-)

  72. Re:Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by twixel · · Score: 1
    If you system hard drive has no partitions on it and if your computer can boot directly from a CD-ROM drive (either ATAPI 1.2 compatible IDE or SCSI connected to Adaptec host adapter), you can literally install the full or OEM installation version of Windows 98 directly from a CD-ROM boot. Try THAT with Linux.
    Redhat does that (at least from version 4.2 (1997) ), Mandrake, Suse.....
  73. Re:There are real installation issues by elflord · · Score: 1
    1) Linux docs are, to be kind, less than wonderful. They make too many assumptions about the background of the reader. I have yet to find a good presentation of disk partitioning strategies, for example.

    The LDP docs are written by volunteers. If you want better documentation, buy a book.

    2) Distros which use the RPM installation offer only one safe option: Install Everything. Selective package installation leads to things which don't work, boots which stall for many minutes, and a grand variety of other mysteries.

    Firstly, the Redhat install has a "workstation" option. Secondly, the "components" you can choose are all self contained. Your hanging at boot is probably caused by the fact that you are trying to run some daemon which expects you to have a permanent connection. ie you chose custom install and picked daemons that you shouldn't be running.

    4) X server installation and setup is a very interesting source of problems. My video cards and monitors are capable of 1600x1200,

    Very few users use this resolution

    5) Sending a newbie to the HOWTOs is a great way to send someone postal.

    Buy a book.

    Documentation is my biggest issue.

    No one is obliged to write you docs for free. Buy a book. There are a ton of linux books available.

  74. Re:In the end, it all comes down to OEM support by elflord · · Score: 1
    Plug-N-Play monitors are starting to be supported, but the fact of the matter is, you pretty much need OEM support for video setup to be easy, be it Linux or Windoze.

    Multisync monitors already are supported. All of them. You can feed practically any modeline into a monitor provided that you are staying inside your video card and monitors limitations. It's the video cards that ar the problem.

  75. Re:Don't you dare criticise him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MS did not bring computers to the masses. If that were true the answer would be Apple. IBM brought computers to the masses with open hardware standards. "Apples were for wimps" remember, at least until MS decided to become a "wimp" too. Everyone assumed IBM was inevitable so MS became inevitable.

  76. Re:old days, bah!!! by TheKodiak · · Score: 1

    "Someone with no experience with Windows will take about as long with it as he took with Linux."

    And the only time I've had to restart a LINUX install more than once on the same machine, it was because the CD-ROM I was installing from across the network kept crapping out. I've often had to restart a Win95 install four or five times, just to get through the 'Detecting your hardware.' phase.

    --
    -=Best Viewed Using [INLINE]=-
  77. Re:Linux by cdlu · · Score: 1

    I beg to differ.

    I've installed Win95 a half dozen times, Win98 more then a few times, several MacOS installs, and several linux installs.

    The difference is that the linux install only had to be done once on any computer to which it was done.

    And linux (debian/2.0 at the time) had _no_ trouble autodetecting and auto-configuring my pcmicia devices (3com 3c589b and UsRobotics something-or-other, the latter of which was both a modem and a network card in one - linux had no trouble handling this). Its no mistake that I use linux now, I'm not a brain-washed anti-microsoft heretic. I used Windows for a while, was frustrated that hacking up the system often resulted in the words "Error in explorer.exe.\Reinstall Windows\[OK]". The hacks were mostly minor and should not have caused that.
    Windows installs its own idea of what everything should be instead of what things should be. On my system, it was absolutely convinced that, since I had a serial cable client-server link with a 386 at the time of install, that it should never leave. The OS every succeeding time spent well over a minute searching for these "removeable" drives, with the mouse slowly bouncing up the screen and BSODing when the mouse reached the top-right corner.
    The install for (debian) linux, using the rescue floppy is nearly flawless, fast (I installed linux on my laptop in two hours over network, largely hampered by quake games and other bandwidth eating programmes *ahem* netbios or netbeui *ahem*) , and needn't be redone.

  78. Linux Install by jime · · Score: 1

    I attempted to install Mandrake Linux 6.0 on my PC at home that has Win98 & Win2K beta dual boot. The first try went very poorly. I had to get a 3rd party program I had to fixup my hard disk & then restore all of the Windows software from tape. The 2nd try worked great although I have to boot Linux from a floppy. I is fun playing around with KDE & Gnome, StarOffice works great. I wish there was drivers for the strange Island sound card that Dell put in my PC. Even Win2K doesn't know how to use it and Dell only has Win98 drivers. Beware of Dell pcs, they often come with "non-standard" devices that it is hard to find drivers for.

    Cheers ... Jim Ellingsen

  79. Re:This IS a problem with Linux!!! by z4ce · · Score: 1

    *sigh* I've been reading so many posts about how linux has a bad install.. and your post even goes as far to say Linus and Alan should be taking a deep breath instead of focusing on the kernel. OK. Linus and Alan work on the _kernel_ they don't work on installers. If they wanted to make installers I'm sure they would have no problem finding a line of employment in that area. If the installation is hard, it's typically the distros fault because typically they make the installer. Linux is a kernel. That's it. A kernel. Not a distro. If a kernel includes a graphical install that also setups the gui, and auto-detects everything, then you get bloatware. You need the kernel to sit there and do it's job of being stable, and you need installers to setup guis, and auto-detect everything. The people who make the installers should take a deep breath, and they now they are taking a deep breath, look at the strides linux installers have made.

    Ian zink

  80. Re:He has a point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I've yet to see a linux installer that a) works properly and b) is low on headaches."

    - RedHat 6 - it's a cakewalk

    "Have you ever looked at all the crap that gets installed?"

    - Yes, and you have a point about the no deselecting modules with dependencies - I also wish this was available (soon).

    "Want to add a user that has ftp access, but no web page and no mail, or has mail but
    nothing else?
    Want to change the permissions of one ftp user but don't want to create a bunch of
    groups?
    Want to make an ftp user that doesn't exist anywhere else on your system?
    Good luck, and good hunting (in the dox)! "

    - These are administrative functions and my experience with experienced administrators is that they prefer to rtf dox.

  81. Re:Autodetection is not evil! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well for the home user they need autodetection period, if you want something different how about install to a text screen and give 2 setup options or something aka choose: 1. Linux for dummies 2. Linux for geeks. Besides I work with NT extensively and it doesnt do any autodetection either really. Altho the video defaults to VGA 16 colors after install and the boot.ini adds a boot option if you hose your video driver. x:\Winnt /basevga /sos for basic VGA video everytime.

  82. Re:uhhhhh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, for those newbies who have never used anything other than a pre-build system, there is nothing to suggest that they have a graphics card. It is assumed that the video works automagically and that a graphics card is an extra thing that makes those neat 3-d animations in video games. So the question "Do I even have a graphics card?" is not so much dumb as ignorant. They have never asked themselves before.

  83. Linux is for the curious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you strip away the Mac / Windows gui it is like openning a car's bonnet - any engine is just like another engine for an average person. The element here is the gui - the product's packaging. I can customize my system to boot up in kdm and run a Window Maker desktop that an avery person will find it fun to play with, but that is after hours of customization and finding the right package. In the end it is always about packaging and putting the right stuff together. The fact that she had choosen a really old Caldera without even visit Caldera website to found out the latest version was a bad move. If she did, she would have had a better experience.

  84. Superlosergeek by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, Gee, maybe the "common man" has no business performing neurosurgery either...maybe that is the exclusive domain of superlosergeeks called neurosurgeons. Maybe your use of the word "superlosergeek" qualifies you as the "common man" and clearly not one who is qualified to perform neurosurgery.

    1. Re:Superlosergeek by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > So you are saying that only "superlosergeeks" should run linux?

      No. He says that only "superlosergeeks" should install Linux. Others can use it, but please buy it pre-installed, or ask a friend who's more in computers than you to do it for you.

    2. Re:Superlosergeek by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you are saying that only "superlosergeeks" should run linux? If so, then how will it ever compete with MS on the home user market? Remember, the majority of home users are the same ones who use (cough) AOL and call it "the internet," not computer experts.

  85. Re:Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by styxlord · · Score: 1

    If you don't know what a video card looks like then you're sure as hell not going to know what a BIOS is let alone that you should hit DEL (or some other key) whilst the computer is booting, delve into the settings and change the boot order to have ATAPI go first (which they will obviously correlate with a CD-ROM drive) and then save the settings before rebooting to initiate the proceedure. Assuming he didn't inadvertantly change the processor voltage and blow his system up the machine should start the Win98 installation ... and that's only step one.

  86. Sure, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On the other hand, he couldn't identify the video card. He made a semi-joking comment about not even knowing if he had one. Now, the video might have been integrated into the motherboard, but the bit later on in the article where he talks about someone else pointing it out to him makes that seem unlikely. So, anyway, I'm just wondering why he didn't check to see which card the monitor was plugged into if he's experienced? Not that I'm doubting he's done programming, but he doesn't seem to have very well rounded computer experience, which is the sort of thing you need for installing operating systems (i.e. the bridge between software and hardware). That doesn't mean that he should not be installing Linux. It is, after all, a great way to _learn_ about computers. But no-one should expect that knowledge to come without effort.

  87. Re:Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by IMarshal · · Score: 1
    Run smartdrv.exe before starting the DOS-mode file copy and you'll be astonished at how NT setup flies!

    Goes to show you just how awful BIOS disk access routines really are.

  88. Re:Dont take it easy on anyone(paper or paper) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually I find the whole thing humerous.
    First we have a question on slashdot about paper. Paper is determined to be better. Second we have people complaining about the documentation. So we write more and make it better. Now we have people who throw a hissy fit when told to read the paper documentation that someone slaved over to satisfy the complainers. There's no satisfiying some people.

  89. Minor observation/rant about gender by phutureboy · · Score: 1

    Many people posting to this thread have said "this guy..." in reference to the author of the story.

    The byline says "By Robin Lloyd", which could be either a guy or a woman. Not that it's relevant to the story, but it kind of bugs me to see assumptions about gender like that.

    Just like there are plenty of male nurses, I'm sure there are also plenty of female tech journalists who have problems installing really, really old versions of OpenLinux :)

    OK, you may now flame me for being nitpicky and go back to debating the finer points of autoprobing vs. editing init files with vi. I personally am going to sleep now.

  90. The word of the day is 'Novell' by mosch · · Score: 1

    Yes, you have the machine up in 5 minutes, due to the fact that you use... Novell! Software distribution with Novell is insanely simple and IMO, the best thing that I've used. It kills SMS and SMS 2.0. (SMS 2 is nice, but can it verify that the machines installed correctly? is the message informative if not? no and no.) If we want to be accurate about the install time, please also include the time neccessary for the home user to setup a lan, and install and configure novell properly. I think even Slackware 1.0 wins for ease of use there :)

    As for me, my average Linux install time is about 20 minutes, FreeBSD is about 20 minutes as well, NT is about an hour, and 98 was about three hours on my last machine, due perhaps to the fact that it was on bleeding edge hardware which win98 second edition didn't support out of the box. (Note: windows 98 comes with USB mouse support only AFTER the installation is finished)

    For machines with SMP and RAID, I stick to Linux and NT though seeing as 9x is a bit... bass ackwards in that arena. I wish 9x supported dual processors well, my NT machine runs nicely on a dual celeron 468mhz system. :)

  91. Perhaps we should ask them to install NT... by Tino · · Score: 4
    I've installed Linux, Windows 95, 98, and NT (among other OSes), both on computers originally fitted with another OS and on vigrin machines.

    Sometimes it's easy, sometimes it isn't -- with all OSes, with different mixes of hardware, etc. I've had Windows NT install with no tears (okay, with few tears), and I've spent days struggling to get Linux installations working worth a damn. On different occasions, I've had the opposite experience. My current theory is that it's the phase of the moon.

    We should try to get a major news organization to attempt installing Windows NT on a machine that has Linux pre-installed. Send 'em the machine and a shrinkwrapped copy of NT Workstation. I'll even volunteer to provide the machine and the copy of Windows to CNN if they promise to try to return them safely.

    The reality is that despite the efforts of various Linux vendors to change this, no operating system is simple to install for someone with little or no computer knowledge, and that it's more confusing still for them to install an OS over another, pre-existing one. It's about time that that fact gets reported in the press, rather than just that "Linux is hard to install".

    1. Re:Perhaps we should ask them to install NT... by Dethdoc · · Score: 1

      Excuse the whisper, BUT
      installing Mac systems is not that hard. What does on occasion get tricky is getting all of your old apps to work with said system.

  92. Re:assumptions of slashdotters... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Rob*n is a gender neutral name....Robin is usually a guys name, and Robyn is usally a girls name...although I knew a girl named Robin.

  93. Re:There are real installation issues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Linux docs are, to be kind, less than wonderful.

    I actually like them. I hate it when a manual for, say, a word processor, starts out by talking about the mouse and menus, like I have never used a computer before. What a waste of space that could be devoted to better covering the product I purchased.

    They make too many assumptions about the background of the reader.

    This is, perhaps, true. While I think manuals should avoid duplication of effort, I think they should also state what you are expected to know already, and point you in the right direction if you do not. Linux HOWTOs sometimes do this, but often do not. Point.

    I have yet to find a good presentation of disk partitioning strategies, for example.

    Linux does have a "Partition" mini-HOWTO, which does a good job of explaining it all, but it is not for the faint-of-heart. Most new users will need to read through it twice (at least).

    Unfortunately, if you want to dual-boot, there is no magic bullet that will make your life easier. This is a fact of life, and there is nothing Linux can do about it.

    Distros which use the RPM installation offer only one safe option: Install Everything.

    Incorrect. One of the key design goals of RPM is dependency management. If package A depends on package B being installed, and you attempt to install just A, the installer will not move on unless you agree to install the dependencies.

    Red Hat, in particular, has an installation process which is easily fouled by the user making an unexpected response.

    I have never had this problem, but I have no doubt that you have. Installing an OS is generally rather a difficult process. Sometimes things go wrong which break the auto-install. Red Hat usually falls back to a menu at that point, at least. Windoze locks up the machine.

    X server installation and setup is a very interesting source of problems.

    I think that it is universally agreed that configuring X is about the least fun thing you can do on Linux, with the possible exception of writing your own sendmail.cf file.

    Plug-N-Play monitors are starting to be supported, but the fact of the matter is, you pretty much need OEM support for video setup to be easy, be it Linux or Windoze.

    For example: It took me about 10 seconds to get my Samsung SyncMaster 900p 19" monitor working under Linux. Why so quick? Because Samsung posted mode-lines for XFree86 on their website, bless 'em.

    The difference between Linux and Windows at installation time is that Windows (mostly) does a better job of handling the routine setup issues.

    I disagree completely. What Windoze has that Linux does not is OEM support. If every computer company under the sun committed to supporting Linux the way they do Microsoft, then your problems would be solved. Since they do not, however, you are limited to the small set of hardware which has been figured out by third-parties.

    Documentation is my biggest issue. All the Linux users insist that it's anywhere from adequate to great, but those of us who didn't cut our teeth on *nix know it just ain't so.

    I really have to disagree here, as well. Have you ever looked at what comes in the box of Windows9X for docs? A 60 page booklet that explains how to use the mouse! Please! Linux's documentation may suck, but Windows' is much worse!

    It is not documentation, online help, auto-installers, or other stuff that makes Windows easy and/or Linux hard. It is OEM support:

    • OEMs generally install Windows for you.
    • If they do not do that, then they check their system configuration to make sure Windows installs cleanly before they ship it to you.
    • They provide device drivers for Windows to Microsoft, so Microsoft can include them on the Windows CD.

    If the OEMs did all that for Linux, Linux would install much smoother. I know; I was careful to pick supported hardware when building my system, and Linux installed like a dream.

    Windows98 will not boot at all. Despite weeks of hacking, it appears to be a fundamental conflict with the OS. Microsoft agrees.

    In the end, it all comes down to OEM support.
  94. Re:well, of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not sure how taking a windows product off your home computer and relacing it with Linux, when you use Unix all day at work anyway, is a step backwards. The "pro unices" you argue for are not available for home PC's, or are pretty weak on a PC platform (Solaris).

    That said, I like pro-unix, but the licensing issues are (in general) terrible. Much worse than anything MS has come with.

    And having used the free Solaris 2.6 on my home PC, well I think we'll be charitable and say : "That partition has been put to better use".

    Finally, Linux gives people a lot more choice over the appearance of their desktop than the commericial unices, runs on a cheap pc, and some of the new GUI stuff coming out for Linux is ahead of Motif in many ways.

    So, I'm not suprised that it "didn't go smooth", but I am suprised at the lack of determination to "do it".

    In fact, the ideology of "surrender" is disgusting to me, and your attitude of linux being "a step back" is pretty much in the same category.

    If you *are* a developer, maybe you should help, rather than hinder, Linux, 'cause if you don't do something, you'll be programming on Win2K before long.

  95. Re:Linux is NOT for newbies by tischler · · Score: 1

    I'd just like to say it would be almost impossible for me to agree more.

  96. Good story, Linux definately needs an overhaul. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I've been saying this forever. Linux needs a dummy install if it wants to get out of the server market. People try and use it for a desktop system, but the fact is, it has a long ways to go. It would be nice, but Linux really needs to autodetect every single piece of hardware and get a nice BeOSish GUI. Caldera is the best ive seen where it goes right into KDE, but even KDE is quite primative compared to other desktop GUI's.

    On top of that we need to start packaging source code in seperate packages, and have packages default with auto-installers and setup wizards like Windows. Having people compile everything is NOT what the majority of users want out of an OS.

    This is, of course, if people want Linux to be a desktop OS rather than a server OS. As a server OS people pretty much expect you to know everything about your system for the mission crital tasks it does. But for Desktop, it's exactly the opposite.

    Then there are the elitists that can't handle that people exist that know nothing about their own systems. Linux was not made for elitists. Nuff said.

    1. Re:Good story, Linux definately needs an overhaul. by Ventilator · · Score: 1

      RPM is a very good installer. I've heard the Debian installer is good too. RPM are actually better than Installshield because they you always have to explicitly tell it to overwrite existing files. RPM keeps a database of what package each file belongs to.

      RPM is good if you only use RPM (or DEB for Debian) and never compile anything yourself. I messed my SuSE (which I think is as userfriendly as RH) with a self-compiled version of Imlib. I had Imlib installed correctly, but since it was not out of an RPM, it was not in the RPM-Database and therefore other RPMs depending on it would not install! Of course I could have forced them to install, but then I'd be forcing every package soon.

      You could go along with RPM pretty well. But think: not every program is available as an RPM. Far worse is that RPM for RH often don't quite work with SuSE (and vice-versa).
      And then is the fact, that I want to have X-applications installed to /usr/bin/X11R6 not to /usr/local/bin !

      Now I changed to Slackware and have WindowMaker, ETerm and all that stuff self-compiled. GTK takes forever to compile, but it works. =:-)

      What I also like about Slackware is that the scripts are not that cluttered (as are in SuSE). From that point of view, Slackware is far more userfriendly.

      --
      --- If OS were buildings, then the first woodpecker to come around would erase 95 % of civilization.
    2. Re:Good story, Linux definately needs an overhaul. by TonyGreene · · Score: 1

      On top of that we need to start packaging source code in seperate packages, and have packages default with auto-installers and setup wizards like Windows. Having people compile everything is NOT what the majority of users want out of an OS.

      The distributions that are most popular with consumers use RPM, and do not involve compiling anything. I installed Mandrake last weekend and found out why it's a best seller. It's really easy to install and is very well configured.

      RPM is a very good installer. I've heard the Debian installer is good too. RPM are actually better than Installshield because they you always have to explicitly tell it to overwrite existing files. RPM keeps a database of what package each file belongs to. That's a lot easier than buying third-party utilities to try to figure it out later why the registry is out of control and DLLs are conflicting.

      But these utilities still require a system administrator to run, but only because of the permissions required to install the package. Allowing non-privileged users to install system software is one of the reasons Windows has so many problems.

  97. plug and play issues in 9x by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Plug in play is much better now than it was. Installing windows on my machine is a breeze on my machine, which is loaded with too much shit: 40X ACER CD-ROM 4X8 Mitsumi CR-R 1x8 Toshiba DVD-ROM 10.1gig IBM Deskstar EIDE hdd Storm Platinum A3D Vortex 2 Sound Card Sound Blaster Live Value (yes, I really do use 2 sound cards, 98 lets you switch on the fly) Creative Labs TNT Shitty CIrrus Logics Winmodem but installing and loading drivers is never a problem, aside from a few modem issues caused by the poor modem drivers, not windows. installing windows is a breeze with the newer version. PNP sucked in 95, but 98 and 98SE are great for PNP. The only down side is that Windows is so fucking bloated that it takes 3 or 4 times longer to install than it would if it didn't have all that extra worthless crap, 5 isps software, and all the bad code.

  98. COMPLETELY wrong. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Even by randomly selecting things for a Windows install or upgrade it will ALWAYS WORK. I know, I watched my dad do this for 4 years now. :)

    He wouldn't go nearly as far with Linux. I think you know this. Linux _IS_ hard to install compared to EVERYTHING out there. But buck up! The installation programs are getting better and more user friendly! It's the new trend, and its GOOD. Keep at it RedHat and Caldera, we want our fathers to be able to stick this on some day.

    1. Re:COMPLETELY wrong. by Tenareth · · Score: 1

      Uhm, no. I've had systems install that wouldn't even boot (Not in the past few years, but now I know what to avoid). But since your father did it for years, he already knew all the caviats to avoid, I'm sure. Watching someone experienced install something doesn't prove that it's easy to install. I've seen guys make developing embedded systems look easy, but It's not quite as easy as an expert makes it out to look.


      -- Keith Moore

      --
      This sig is the express property of someone.
  99. An interesting analogy by PurpleBob · · Score: 1

    Autoprobing is like gambling. Take any game where you bet a certain amount of money, and get back twice what you bet, if you win, or nothing, if you lose.

    On Linux, it's like betting a fixed amount of money. You might win, you might lose, but it shouldn't take too long to recover your losses if you do lose.

    On Windows 9x it's like the "doubling" gambling system, where you keep betting twice what you lost in the last round until you win. You'll probably end up a little bit ahead, but you just might hit that one in 2^x chance and lose everything.
    --

    --
    Win dain a lotica, en vai tu ri silota
  100. Why I stopped reading this article... by Wah · · Score: 1

    I'm baffled because I didn't buy or build this computer, on loan from CNN Interactive.

    get your own machine !!

    I wrote a similar article, i'm going to go find it, check my other posts. I was a communication major (like most of these journalists) I just happen to have found a clue box. It sits on my desk....

    --
    +&x
  101. 1.3? by Thomas+Charron · · Score: 1

    He attempted to install OpenLinux 1.3? That was silly. That version is what, 2 years old?

    --
    -- I'm the root of all that's evil, but you can call me cookie..
  102. Re:He has a point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Install Redhat sans X? Trivial. You might have to BS the installer but that's just a fact of life with ease of use or 'wizard' interfaces. Ditto for ftpd or httpd. Just unclick the packages, or alternately unclick the servers in the daemon configuration dialog.

    Redhat and COL both try to autodetect hardware and I've gone back and forth in the menu systems of both.

  103. Re:Autodetection is not evil! by Jurph · · Score: 2

    The reason we need to focus on world domination is that the world is full of people who would choose a free product over a grossly overpriced one...

    iff they could use it as easily as or with only slightly more difficulty than Windows.

    Why would anyone pay $1.50 for a quarter-pound hamburger when you can get almost 4 times that amount of meat and bread at the store and make hamburgers for yourself and three friends, exactly the way you wanted them?

    Some folks will answer, "I won't pay that much. If I want a hamburger, I'll make one, regardless of hassle, just so I can get extra onions and no mayo without having to say 'extra onions and NO mayo' to the counter clerk four times." These are Linux users at heart.

    Others will say, "I don't want to dine: I want to eat, and fast, so I can get to the movies!" These are Windows users.

    Now, if you (warm-hearted open-sourcer that you are) made burgers, and recalling the adage that two can use a kernel as cheaply as one, invited your friend to drop by on his way to the movies, and have a burger with you...
    He'd take the free burger(install Linux), because it was cheap and easy.

    Don't get me wrong--this is not a free beer/free speech mix-up... just an analogy to explain why we need to work on ease-of-use.

    b.t.w., I'm a Windows user who recently uninstalled Linux because I didn't have time to spend maintaining it. I re-installed Windows in just under three hours. Hate me, but I'll re-install when Linux is easy like Windows.

  104. Re:How many self righteous linux geeks does it tak by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The guy could have clued himself in by just going into compusa, that's COMPUSA.

    He deserves no sympathy.

  105. Re:Out of the Box?!? by daviddennis · · Score: 2

    Looks like what he's actually doing is installing pre-configured Windows98 disk images, so if his systems are all bleeding edge in exactly the same way, it should all fit fine.

    D

    ----

  106. Re:Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. I put in the boot floppy, and the CD. (or put in just the CD on a machine with a bootable CD) 2. I turn on the power switch. 3. I put in the Product ID - nice of them to put it right on the back of the jewel box. 4. I put in the new Emergency Startup Disk when it asks me for a blank disk. 5. Click yes to all the wizards, choose the things I want when it asks. 6. Reboot, restarts, login, and I'm done. What part didn't you understand?

  107. Re:Does NO ONE get it. by JAPH+Doggy · · Score: 2

    I thought that was:

    "Give a man a fish, and he'll eat for a day. Teach a man to fish and he'll drink himself silly all weekend long."

    :-)

    --

    --

    --
    A PC without windows is like chocolate cake with no mustard.

  108. Re:What about doing the same with Windows? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gads... A CHIMP could install a new version of Windows 98.

  109. Lothar by Booker · · Score: 4
    Well, hell, it's probably way to late for anyone to actually read this comment, but does anyone remember the Lothar Project? It's a hardware autodetection package that Mandrake is working on. It was mentioned on Slashdot a while ago. The hope was that geeks would read about it, and help.

    Maybe you should do that now?

  110. Butt ugly prompt my ass! by RichMan · · Score: 1

    The prompt is beautiful.

    Back in 1984 I resored an old PDP8. Careful hardware installation of various cards into the backplane. Cables to the console. Playing with the toggle switches. Probing the memory 12bits! of magnetic core!! A 12x12 bit multiply hardware extension.

    Paged memory access: are we destined to repeat past mistakes.

    Connect the disk drives RT11. Dig out some old 8" floppies. Toggle in a boot loader. The OS loads and runs. OS9 (? I think) it did not accept a date after some time in 197[4-6] (talk about a Y2K problem). Playing HANOI on a VT52 was heaven. Booting off of floppies with pin holes was cool.

    The prompt is beautiful.

    Sorry for the nostalga. All inaccuracies due to failing memory.

    I just wish I had completed my display project using the core memory, some sheets of glass and iron filings.

  111. Well of course it's cheating. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I imagine your job is made much easier by the fact that all the machines that you're installing the image onto are identical or close to it. What happens if the vendor decides to change the components they're putting into the machines without changing the model numbers (I despise vendors who do this, which means that I pretty much have to despise all vendors)? In any case, I'm guessing that it took more than five minutes to set up the original PC that the others were imaged from. To get an honest answer to the question of how long installation takes, that's the machine you have to go by.

    1. Re:Well of course it's cheating. by Tenareth · · Score: 1

      Yes! This has been a major headache with Compaq Desktops, switching the Video card and Network cards mid-stream really mess up the image installs (we use Ghost).

      We can get a batch of 20 PCs (Same exact specs) and 10 will have 1 video, 10 will have another, and about 3 will have different Network cards. (They switched from TLAN to Intel recently). With my Linux images (compressed dd's) I have to rerun Xconfigurator, and change a line in /etc/conf.modules. For WinXX, I have to download the different driver... hmm, no network, grab the old Floppies. Sucks.


      -- Keith Moore

      --
      This sig is the express property of someone.
  112. He is a user, he should write. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why should he not be writing about it? He is a computer user. There are millions of computer users in the world. There are relatively few hacker doodz such as those that hang out on Slashdot and love Linux. Linux will not take over the world unless is becomes easier to use than the "other" OSs. No matter how c00l it is.

    In fact, I'd say he has more of a right to write about it then anyone on this board, considering who is probably reading his article. (Users, not d00dz)

    Garth Shoemaker

    1. Re:He is a user, he should write. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why? Because it is largely irrelevant to the vast majority of his target audience. He would be better off reviewing the low cost prepackaged Linux solutions. You can get preconfigured Linux boxen for $300 these days.

    2. Re:He is a user, he should write. by Criterion · · Score: 1

      I don't think anyone has a right to write about anything that they cannot even correctly read the manual to. She talks about the liscense agreement being in german. Well, it is, in the german section of the manual, it's in english in the english section (I have the Caldera 1.3 manual right here). I don't think one should have to be a hacker dood to figure that out, but yet she writes that in an article, so that she appears the fool for the whole world to see.

      --
      We have enough youth, how about a fountain of SMART?
  113. Re:Autodetection is not evil! by mosch · · Score: 1

    I concur 100%. Yes, I know what kind of scsi controller, video card, etc, i have. But I'd really prefer an installation that says 'Detected a Diamond Viper 770 Ultra with a NEC multi-sync 90 monitor, is this correct?' or if you're in dummy mode perhaps just decrement the 'time remaining' clock and don't say anything at all.

    There's nothing mutually exclusive about a good OS to hack on, and one that can be userfriendly. I just want to make sure it's not JUST userfriendly, I appreciate the ability to twiddle the bits when neccessary.

  114. In the end, it all comes down to OEM support by DragonHawk · · Score: 5
    Linux docs are, to be kind, less than wonderful.

    I actually like them. I hate it when a manual for, say, a word processor, starts out by talking about the mouse and menus, like I have never used a computer before. What a waste of space that could be devoted to better covering the product I purchased.

    They make too many assumptions about the background of the reader.

    This is, perhaps, true. While I think manuals should avoid duplication of effort, I think they should also state what you are expected to know already, and point you in the right direction if you do not. Linux HOWTOs sometimes do this, but often do not. Point.

    I have yet to find a good presentation of disk partitioning strategies, for example.

    Linux does have a "Partition" mini-HOWTO, which does a good job of explaining it all, but it is not for the faint-of-heart. Most new users will need to read through it twice (at least).

    Unfortunately, if you want to setup your own partitions (required to dual-boot), there is no magic bullet that will make your life easier. This is a fact of life, and there is nothing Linux can do about it.

    Distros which use the RPM installation offer only one safe option: Install Everything.

    Incorrect. One of the key design goals of RPM is dependency management. If package A depends on package B being installed, and you attempt to install just A, the installer will not move on unless you agree to install the dependencies.

    Red Hat, in particular, has an installation process which is easily fouled by the user making an unexpected response.

    I have never had this problem, but I have no doubt that you have. Installing an OS is generally rather a difficult process. Sometimes things go wrong which break the auto-install. Red Hat usually falls back to a menu at that point, at least. Windoze locks up the machine.

    X server installation and setup is a very interesting source of problems.

    I think that it is universally agreed that configuring X is about the least fun thing you can do on Linux, with the possible exception of writing your own sendmail.cf file.

    Plug-N-Play monitors are starting to be supported, but the fact of the matter is, you pretty much need OEM support for video setup to be easy, be it Linux or Windoze.

    For example: It took me about 10 seconds to get my Samsung SyncMaster 900p 19" monitor working under Linux. Why so quick? Because Samsung posted mode-lines for XFree86 on their website, bless 'em.

    The difference between Linux and Windows at installation time is that Windows (mostly) does a better job of handling the routine setup issues.

    I disagree completely. What Windoze has that Linux does not is OEM support. If every computer company under the sun committed to supporting Linux the way they do Microsoft, then your problems would be solved. Since they do not, however, you are limited to the small set of hardware which has been figured out by third-parties.

    Documentation is my biggest issue. All the Linux users insist that it's anywhere from adequate to great, but those of us who didn't cut our teeth on *nix know it just ain't so.

    I really have to disagree here, as well. Have you ever looked at what comes in the box of Windows9X for docs? A 60 page booklet that explains how to use the mouse! Please! Linux's documentation may suck, but Windows' is much worse!

    It is not documentation, online help, auto-installers, or other stuff that makes Windows easy and/or Linux hard. It is OEM support:

    • OEMs generally install Windows for you.
    • If they do not do that, then they check their system configuration to make sure Windows installs cleanly before they ship it to you.
    • They provide device drivers for Windows to Microsoft, so Microsoft can include them on the Windows CD.


    If the OEMs did all that for Linux, Linux would install much smoother. I know; I was careful to pick supported hardware when building my system, and Linux installed like a dream.

    Windows98 will not boot at all. Despite weeks of hacking, it appears to be a fundamental conflict with the OS. Microsoft agrees.

    In the end, it all comes down to OEM support.
    --

    dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
    I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
    1. Re:In the end, it all comes down to OEM support by wmeyer · · Score: 1

      Thereby implying that not all the dependencies were met, which takes us back to the point. Your argument is bogus for proper RPMs.

      Sounds nice, but I'm talking about RH 6.0 out of the box. If the RPMs aren't proper, then RH has screwed up.

      I have installed RHL 6.0 in full, selective, or minamalist configurations, and I have not had a single problem with hangs at boot. Your information is old.

      My experience is quite recent, with 6.0, and is at odds with your own. My information is not old, and as is so often the case in talking about Linux deficiencies, your response is arrogant and glib.

      If this is not a comparative issue, then why do you keep comparing Linux to Windows? If you want to take Linux on its own, then fine. If you want to compare it to Windows, that is fine, too. But do not compare it to Windows, and then dodge the reply.

      I'm not dodging, and my references to Windows were in response to comments in the message to which I was replying.

      You are perfectly correct here. My point was that you were jumping up and down and pointing at Linux, when the problem lies with OEMs, not Linux itself. If you want to point fingers, point at your hardware vendor who is not supporting Linux. Linux is practically helpless without their support. I find it completely amazing that it has come as far as it has with practically no OEM support.

      OEMs will not support until they perceive a demand. OEMs are, by definition, money-driven, so they cannot simply decide to develop drivers for Linux on a lark. In the beginning, there is never OEM support for a new OS. I won't blame the OEMs because they have no obligation to support any OS, in fact. For a new OS to build interest it is necessary for developers outside the OEM sphere to undertake driver development.

      Blaming Linux is not the answer.

      You misread me completely. I do not blame Linux; I blame weak and/or absent documentation. In particular I blame distro vendors, such as Red Hat, for failing to provide better docs.

      Now there you may well have a legit complaint. I do not have data on how accurate distribution compatability lists are. I just know that I looked for good equipment that was praised as Linux friendly, and Linux worked perfectly.

      I have a number of legitimate complaints, whether or not you happen to agree. I also have made sure that my hardware is on the list of supported devices for all of the OSes in which I have an interest. Except for the issue of monitor modes under all but Caldera, I have not found a problem with hardware support under Linux.

      Let me state it as clearly as I can here and now: My only complaint with Linux is not with the software -- it is with the altogether inadequate documentation.

      I want an alternative to Windows. I would like very much to make Linux my choice, but I can't do so while the documentation leaves me scrambling for answers to problems everywhere I turn.

      The first topic on which I looked to the HOWTOs for support was programming a serial port. The document is outdated, and was written by someone who freely admits he doesn't fully understand the issues. It raised more questions for me than it answered.

      My sole interest in Linux is as a tool, a platform. I have zero interest in the politics or religion of Linux or Open Source. If the tool gets in my way, I'm not happy. Windows gets in my way every day. That's why I'm driven to seek an alternative.

      Too often I find responses here from people who have already achieved a level of comfort and expertise with Linux and who deny the existence of problems. The problems are real. I have so far evaluated four different distros, and each has shortcomings. If I am to commit to Linux as a platform, I need to evaluate on the basis of lost productivity during the learning period. To date that estimate makes the price too high.

      --
      --- Bill
    2. Re:In the end, it all comes down to OEM support by wmeyer · · Score: 2

      RPM may handle dependencies, but that doesn't make things work. Install everything, and the boot goes well. Be selective, and things hang the boot for long periods. I clocked one particular fail-over at over 8 minutes. This is NOT what a newbie needs. In-depth problem solving is an acquired skill. When you're starting, you need something which works, with a minimum of tweaking.

      The LDP needs coherent management. It currently suffers from what appears from the outside to be do-nothing management. Linux is good, but it could be great.

      Your opinions on documentation are your own. Mine likewise do not yield to your own. We agree to disagree. This is not a comparative issue. Windows docs suck, too. But that does not make the Linux docs acceptable.

      Whether the support is from OEMs or MS, the result remains: Windows installation mostly handles adapters better. When installation is unsuccessful, no one cares whose fault it is. Linux wears the black eye, or the distro does. Not the OEM. That's life; that's reality.

      I never buy computers pre-assembled or installed. I configure my own, and have for many years. Windows is easier to install. That's based on many installations. It's not good, and I don't like it, and yes, I have a battery of tricks I have learned painfully, but even so, without resorting to those tricks, it's still easier.

      I use only components which are well supported. I have pre-checked the claims of the distros, and all of my components and peripherals are claimed to be supported. Of course, that doesn't speak to how well supported they may be.

      I have installed (successfully) on my machines: Win95, Win98, WinNT, Caldera, Mandrake, Red Hat 6.0, and BeOS. I multiple boot, and I use the boot manager which comes with BeOS (simpler and more sensible than most, and trivial to install and set up.

      My preference? If allthings were equal (and they never are) I prefer BeOS. It installs in just over 5 minutes, and has more of what I want than any of the others, and good docs, besides. (I include 3rd party docs as acceptable alternatives, in all cases.)

      --
      --- Bill
    3. Re:In the end, it all comes down to OEM support by mpe · · Score: 1


      Multisync monitors already are supported. All of them. You can feed practically any modeline into a monitor provided that you are staying inside your video card and monitors limitations.

      WIth the relevant information easily fitting on the components themselves!!!

    4. Re:In the end, it all comes down to OEM support by DragonHawk · · Score: 2

      RPM may handle dependencies, but that doesn't make things work. Install everything, and the boot goes well. Be selective, and things hang the boot for long periods.

      Thereby implying that not all the dependencies were met, which takes us back to the point. Your argument is bogus for proper RPMs.

      Yes, back in the days of Red Hat 4.0, sendmail, amd, or other things could hang at boot if they did not like what they saw. This was, in fact, caused by installing everything as often as not, because a service would be installed to do such-and-such, and fail trying to do it at boot. These were bugs, and they have been fixed.

      Red Hat has worked out the bugs W.R.T. dependencies and boot scripts, and they finally realized that installing a service does not always mean it should be started at boot.

      I have installed RHL 6.0 in full, selective, or minamalist configurations, and I have not had a single problem with hangs at boot. Your information is old.

      The LDP needs coherent management.

      They are well aware of this, and are taking steps to fix it.

      Linux is good, but it could be great.

      I am not saying things are perfect; far from it. As I say below, the problem is, you are blaming the wrong thing.

      This is not a comparative issue.

      Windows installation mostly handles adapters better.

      If this is not a comparative issue, then why do you keep comparing Linux to Windows? If you want to take Linux on its own, then fine. If you want to compare it to Windows, that is fine, too. But do not compare it to Windows, and then dodge the reply.

      Linux wears the black eye, or the distro does. Not the OEM. That's life; that's reality.

      You are perfectly correct here. My point was that you were jumping up and down and pointing at Linux, when the problem lies with OEMs, not Linux itself. If you want to point fingers, point at your hardware vendor who is not supporting Linux. Linux is practically helpless without their support. I find it completely amazing that it has come as far as it has with practically no OEM support.

      I never buy computers pre-assembled or installed... Windows is easier to install.

      I heard you the first time when you talked about this. You are missing my point. OEMs make sure their stuff works with Windows. They do not do so for Linux.

      Yes, if everything goes right, then Windows is easy. The same applies for Linux. The problem is that because few OEMs support Linux, everything goes right for Linux far less often then for Windows. Blaming Linux is not the answer.

      Furthermore, when things go wrong with Windows, you are generally dead in the water. You get useless error messages like "Windows protection error" or "Cannot start Explorer -- Reinstall Windows". If Linux has a problem during install, I can usually fix the problem and move on. Windows prohibits that.

      I have pre-checked the claims of the distros, and all of my components and peripherals are claimed to be supported.

      Now there you may well have a legit complaint. I do not have data on how accurate distribution compatability lists are. I just know that I looked for good equipment that was praised as Linux friendly, and Linux worked perfectly.

      --

      dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
      I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
  115. Re:Adaptec 1520 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I had one of those working on an old 486 with Redhat 5.0, and it did take some work to get it set up. Try looking on DejaNews. I believe I had to set the IO address and IRQ for it in /etc/conf.modules, and put an explicit "insmod" for it in the startup script. Apparently, it doesn't identify itself like the more expensive SCSI cards. I wonder, though, what would happen if you just stuck one in a Windows box. Would Windows be able to find it easily?

  116. Re:Autodetection is not evil! by fishbowl · · Score: 1

    "I'll bet you any money that if the Linux install had popped up a cute little window with a
    penguin and an animated magnifying glass (to show the user that the system hadn't hung) and said
    something like "now looking for video hardware... you have a FooBar video card... now installing FooBar
    video drivers... now looking for sound card...", the guy would have been happy."

    Well, nobody working on the linux project has really made it a priority to make that person happy, except you, and I don't think you're working on it, just grousing about it.

    If it's a worthwhile task to make an installer,
    and after all we're talking about an XFree86 Installer, and maybe an OSS (sound) installer.
    NOT a linux installer, that automatically comes
    up on certain hardware combinations, then somebody do it. But nobody has claimed to be doing any such thing. RedHat expects you to read the manual, and to understand what the hell you're doing.

    So where are people getting the impression that we promised them anything would be easy?

    I need a journalist to come over and get SILO working on my ultrapenguin. furrfu.

    --
    -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
  117. Losers stay away from Linux, please! by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

    The author of this article didn't even give the installation of a new OS as much attention as most people give to washing their cars. It's no wonder that he found it so difficult.

    He kicks around for a while and wonders off to eat some soup. He fiddles for a while and goes to check his e-mail.

    If he'd sit the hell down and actually concentrate on what he's doing maybe it wouldn't be "Sooooooo Hard."

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  118. Are you saying NT can do these things? Not! by David+Jao · · Score: 1
    You lay out a long list of (valid) deficiencies in Linux, and then claim "This is what NT has over Linux." I applaud you for listing the deficiencies, but Windows NT is not by any means ahead of Linux in this regard.

    Why can't the linux installer automatically find your hardware? Answer: it does. The RedHat 6 installation autodetects most hardware as long as it isn't newer than the CD.

    Does the Windows NT installer autodetect your hardware? Nope. For examplem, good luck getting Windows NT 4.0 to autodetect any sort of SCSI card, video card, or sound card.

    Can you install redhat without X? Not easily. Valid point. But can you install NT without the graphical interface? Not at all! How, then, is NT ahead of linux in this regard?

    Can you install Redhat with ftp/http and no X? Probably not easily. Can you install NT that way? Not. (You can't even install ftp/http servers with NT workstation.)

    In Redhat at least you can select packages individually, and the installer keeps track of dependencies. I'd like to see you do that in the NT installation!

    Want to add a user in Redhat 6 that can do foo? Yes, you're right, it takes some documentation hunting. But how in the world do you add a user that can do foo in Windows NT? I bet you need some doc hunting.

    If you want to knock the Redhat installation for valid limitations, fine. But don't go saying that NT is all over Linux in this category. The Windows NT 4.0 installation is not anywhere near as easy, smooth, or customizable as the Redhat Linux 6.0 installation.

  119. Re:One sentence for all of you.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even in '95 with Slackware, I never had to bother with worrying about blowing up my monitor. For, I realized that a very simple rule of thumb would keep it safe: use the smallest numbers available for a particular resolution. This even works in a 4 year old version of xf86config as the canned 'custom' options were so nicely organized.

    This was in contrast to 'the easy OS' which had no good, obvious option available for exploiting my monitor thus making it VERY likely that I would overdrive it.

    Warnings about frying monitors are just proper disclosure, nothing more. Microsoft should be as honest. However, that would be wishful thinking wouldn't it.

  120. Re:Positive Story? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lots of USB peripherials, eh?

    That certainly seems a rather skewed situation.

    Although, even some of those are supported by Linux (USB periphs) with OEM driver developers themselves lurking about.

    SBLive drivers are in production & the top 3 3D chip manufacturers support Linux in one fashion or another. Sound drivers in general are as dynamically loadable as the next module, like for a video capture board or SCSI card.

    Highly proprietary interfaces (USB or Parallel) are the real problem typicall.

    The 'next kernel' and the 'next Xfree' have both been released actually. Although, new drivers don't require either really.

  121. before you all start flaming... by Hurst+Dawg · · Score: 2

    Remember that at least he had the guts to try and install linux. Most just dismiss it as "geek only" and are done with it. Granted there were a *few* mistakes in his article, but he isn't a computer genious. And most of his install problems could have been subverted with a knowledgable friend poking their head over the cubicle wall, but hey, the best way to learn is by doing.

    --

    K]ÏMWý©±Îï$ [½5>VÎG Û 1 ر/M îåMA$ÚT
    1. Re:before you all start flaming... by Demona · · Score: 2

      To add to that, the author's acquaintance who snidely remarked, "You're installing Linux?" when the author showed the tiniest bit of ignorance reminds me of those who have nothing but scorn for anyone who knows less than they do. With friends like that, who needs enemies? The author might just have been writing a news story, but they were also being courageous and curious. No wonder newbies get frightened off. It's not the software, it's the attitude of the loud minority that pimp it and their own insecurities in an endless cycle of DickSizing Wars(tm).

      --
      Fuck Slashdot
  122. Nope Mac was first(again) by about 8 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ever since cdroms came out you could boot a Mac off them ide or scsi. That's why they don't need cli or that antique bios crap. If you have a problem boot it off the cd and run ANY utilities you want. Fix the OS from within the OS.

  123. Re:Try installing Slackware as a newbie! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I did it a few years ago, and loved it :) I had it on CD-ROM, and the pretty cyan background had me hooked. (Well, it was either Linux or Dos/Win 3.11 on my 386)

  124. Linux should remain difficult to install by Fudge · · Score: 2

    ...until the entire OS becomes usable by the average Joe. I don't know any non-technical person using Linux. Linux GUIs don't manage the machine for the user. Ever seen a non-technical person try and install a piece of software on a Linux machine? I haven't - they didn't even get that far.

    Every non-technical person I know that decided to jump on the bandwagon and try to install Linux had trouble. It never goes smoothly. The installs ask questions that novices don't understand. And those that make it through (usually with help from me or another engineer-type) give up a couple of days later. So I say try and head them off at the pass, keep the install difficult, so that they don't waste a week more of their time getting more frustrated and learning to hate Linux!

    I love Linux - because it rewards my technical abilities with power. The fact that it is not Micros~1 Windows has much less to do with it.

    1. Re:Linux should remain difficult to install by Fudge · · Score: 1

      Is there an OS install routine which will not confuse a novice?

      Like it or not, we have to face the fact that Windows is already on the machine, but Linux must be installed. I don't think the point of the original article was to compare installing Windows to installing Linux, rather to illustrate that jumping on the Linux bandwagon is difficult. Besides, linux installs are nothing compared to running linux. It's simply not for the non-technical user. Maybe it will be someday. Maybe it shouldn't ever be. I don't know, but that's a whole other argument.

    2. Re:Linux should remain difficult to install by Criterion · · Score: 1

      Actually, every non-technical person I know that has ever tried to install, or re-install Win has had trouble. Difference is, Win normally comes on a system and they don't have to do that to start using the system. Imagine if everyone got a clean system, and had to install their OS right from the start. How many Win users would there be then?

      --
      We have enough youth, how about a fountain of SMART?
    3. Re:Linux should remain difficult to install by mpe · · Score: 1


      Every non-technical person I know that decided to jump on the bandwagon and try to install Linux had trouble. It never goes smoothly. The installs ask questions that novices don't understand.

      Is there an OS install routine which will not confuse a novice? Installing an OS is not a novice level task. (Even OEM's can make a horrible mess of it.) Trying to have the new OS co-exist with an existing one adds a further level of complexity.

    4. Re:Linux should remain difficult to install by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > How many Win users would there be then? Yes, that's very true I must say. If I have a look at the persons around me, they're not even able to install a simple Microsoft Office! Just the other day, a friend called me up, and asked if I had Microsoft Office. Sure I do, I said, but this version doesn't install right away from the CD. My friends reply: "Well then, it's to complicated, thanks, but no thanks!". Or something in this direction at least. You get what I'm pointing at ? This guy thought that installing was difficult. Well, I don't think so, but that's not the point. Computers I know, that is Winblows and Linux, are way to complicated for the average Joe Dumbo.

  125. Try installing Slackware as a newbie! by StimpyBoy · · Score: 2

    That's what I tried to do waaay back. Now THAT was a challenge. With no documentation, and like 100 odd floppies. I learned how to use fdisk and mount, got it up and running, and was then baffled for an hour, looking how to start XWindows (XDM? Is that it?)

    Of course, I'd like to think I've progressed past that stage today. Now all my downtime is related to hardware problems (says sadly as newly fried 8.5 GB HD sits on desk uselessly).

    1. Re:Try installing Slackware as a newbie! by GreyFauk · · Score: 1

      If I remember correctly.... The version of slackware the
      author installed was the same one I used, three? Four years ago?
      Trying to install it on a 386DX25.
      We're talking clueless newbie from hell. All I knew is that
      I was tired of waiting around for win3.1 to do anything and took the advice of some
      friends. I took on the challenge of installing Linux.

      The vidocard was a Number9 deal that was completely unsupported
      (as far as I could figure out), and I ended up
      using just the CLI. Cooooooooool!!!
      One month later (after I stopped crashing it by doing stupid
      stuff like uninstalling sys V support *grin*) I formatted win3.1 off the 'other' 200M hd. :>

      Nothing sucked worse than compiling a kernel for three and a half
      hours at a screaming 11.3 bogomips, only to have it barf on boot because you misconfigured it.

      Flying with little to no documentation and just poking around, I became competent in less than a year. *shrug*

      Today? Even though I hate some things about it... RedHat 6.0 will install in 20 minutes and in another 20 I'll have all my personal stuff re-installed.

      I'm not a programmer.
      I DO build my own computers. (approx 250 built to date)
      I don't always read documentation.

      AND... I don't bitch and curse about something until
      AFTER I've figured out what a dumbass I am.

      (How clueless can I be? I once forgot the root password
      and decided NOT to hack it and just figure it out.
      I eventually remembered [about three weeks later] that
      I had set the root password to 'dumbshit'. How's THAT for stupid? Hehehehehehe)

      Having done an equal number of both....
      I still prefer Linux installs over M$ installs.
      AS LONG AS I USE SUPPORTED COMPONENTS. (anything else and you get what you pay for)

      *shrug* What else can one say?

      Exclusive Linux user,

      --
      Friends don't let friends buy Compaq's. (Dell/Gateway... same same) You want a good computer? Build it yourself.
    2. Re:Try installing Slackware as a newbie! by jeff.paulsen · · Score: 1

      I did that too. I learned a whole lot about unix, X, and vi, really really fast.

      HOWTOs? Luxury.

      Tell that to journalists today and they won't believe you.

      --
      -- Jeff Paulsen
    3. Re:Try installing Slackware as a newbie! by Tenareth · · Score: 1

      Slackware, shear Luxury! Try SLS, and Kernel 0.94! 14 Floppies downloaded over 14.4 Modem! That was just the base system, then I forget how many floppies to get X installed, and then reading my Monitor/Video specs to figure out which timings I should put in!


      -- Keith Moore

      --
      This sig is the express property of someone.
    4. Re:Try installing Slackware as a newbie! by named · · Score: 2

      heh. I did this too :) Except that the machine I tried to do it on was a brand-spakingin-new P100 (late '94 i think) and it had a (wait for it...) PCI bus in it.

      Sadly, linux didn't support PCI at that time. Boy was i mistified, then disappointed when I found I couldn't use the operating system I'd just spent several hours trying to install.

      I tried again (same stack of disks even) 6 months later and everything just worked. "cool" thinks I, and then I got to learn all about unix admin.

      those were the days (when i had the time and inclination to spend hours/days thrashing about blindly figuring out how things worked)

      mmmm, isn't nostalgia great?

    5. Re:Try installing Slackware as a newbie! by EXTomar · · Score: 1

      Heh...I know what you are talking about! The first versions of Linux I installed was Slackware. I got used to the boot disks, the shell install, and other Slackware-isms(getting the CDROM was an added speed up bonus! :-) ). Was I really surprised when I saw the latest installs for RH and Debian! I'm happy that the install process has progressed beyond this...I know I can do an install like Slackware but I don't think many others would be. :-)

    6. Re:Try installing Slackware as a newbie! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man, are we trying to one-up each other here, or what? This is the honest-to-goodness truth, though... my first linux installation was of Slackware, with disks I downloaded over a 28.8 modem... but that wasn't nearly as painful as my next, which was freebsd the same way. Man, my phone line was tied up for three days!

  126. if you're bored... by Wah · · Score: 2

    I wrote a story like the one mentioned here. check it out, but excuse the rest of the the place, its' und^H^H^Hnot done.

    Go here

    --
    +&x
  127. Re:Unix sucks! It's too powerful! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, the command line will allow you several different ways to express the same idea as well. It all comes down to how expressive of a language you are using. If you're using something like DOS, you're pretty much a Bushman trying to give a Calculus lecture.

    The whole point of tools that you can pull together yourself is that you can do things that no developer has cared to program for you yet.

    You can get done what needs done without the middleman assuming you can decompose your goals into tools you have available.

  128. Contact info... Also a pointer to another one... by seebs · · Score: 1

    Anyone got contact info for him? I think he'd
    benefit from a pointer to the fact that Caldera
    2.2 and even 2.3 are now available, and supposedly
    easier. :)

    Also, gotta point out my Mom Runs NetBSD story:
    http://InsideDenver.com/seebach/0418seeba.shtml

    And yes, she's still using NetBSD at home, and
    she's still happy with it.

    --
    My blog: http://www.seebs.net/log/ --- My iPhone/iPad app: http://www.seebs.net/seebsfrac/
  129. Re:What about doing the same with Windows? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please try installing win98 before posting please...win98 has a nice boot disk that automatically loads up cdrom drivers.

  130. Re:Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by fireproof · · Score: 1

    Apparently the concept of satire is quite over your head.

    --

    /* "A fool does not delight in understanding, but only in revealing his own mind." */

  131. Re:There are real installation issues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Regarding 1600x1200. Redhat 6 will gladly set me up with that resolution on my 19" monitor and TNT based vidcard. Although, I prefer my display to be 72dpi.

  132. Re:Um really by witz · · Score: 1

    quick FYI... 8+gb drives that are IDE require SP4 or higher to work under NT4. New atapi.sys which supports that particular IBM drive standard.


    -witz

  133. Be nice and recrute more help for Malda :) by Forge · · Score: 2

    Go easy on this writer. Ho or She made an honest go at doing an install and lets not forget how much fun we have had with all the other Linux newbies who did just that and got slashdoted with _ADVICE_ and very little if any pure flames.

    I.e. RobLimo started this way and I was one of the people holding his hand from 4,000 miles away. He has graduated to Slashdot host now. As has Katz. An interesting tidbit is that RobLimo had pretty much this attitude when he did his 1st butched install and I thought he was a kid ( 19/20 ) and said as much ( in a nice way ;).

    --
    --= Isn't it surprising how badly I spell ?
  134. My OS Tuesday.. by Wah · · Score: 2

    ..here's a link to paper I wrote about a day I decided to install a couple of OSes. Please excuse the rest of the site, revolution in progress.

    --
    +&x
  135. Positive Story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    They guy's story is actually rather positive. Though he seems to know next to nothing about computers (he had to ask someone if he had a video card), he still managed to get Linux installed.

  136. Hope for Linux by Armspazm · · Score: 1

    I used to predict a certain doom for Linux because of the mentality of the loudest Linux users. Of course there are still many RTFM people out there, but I am reading more posts from people who agree with my belief that in order to truly love Linux one needs to be able to criticize its faults. This is a great step for Linux. I am glad random flames get a 0 score sending the message against elitism.

    As to the article itself, I thought it was an interesting read, but the comments made are deprecated due to an older version of COL. It would be like criticizing Win 3.1; What's the point? I am just annoyed that such a misleading article was published on CNN.

    But even with such a blatant mistake as using a terribly old OS, they got it running, and the flames haven't flooded /. which is a big success for Linux. Now perhaps I'll be able to suggest a solution for the bug in Linux known as the sound architecture (or the lack thereof). :)

  137. Part evil by Felinoid · · Score: 2

    My view is it's not in Linux becouse it's not reliable. Thats really a running theam with Linux, not supporting unreliable technology. Linux dosn't do FS compression while Windows dose becouse it's not safe but it is neat.
    Of course thats also why Windows and Linux are for two totally diffrent users, Linux users stress reliability Windows users want neat toys.
    On a PC autodetection is more of a "neat toy" than a useful and reliable technology sence it dosn't work a lot of the time.
    There are horror storys of people fighting Windows over trying to get a sound card driver installed. I find adding new hardware to Linux much more fun than installing hardware on Windows becouse Linux dosn't try to do it automaticly. Linux dosn't go "Ohhh you have ABC multifunction data transport card" when you have a "ZXY soda machine addapter".
    To be fair Microsoft is TRYING to make Windows user friendly and "Plug and play" is part of that but the PC wasn't originally a plug and play system and the PC plug and play support is a joke.
    To do this right the system has to be designed for it from the start like TIs Explorer and the Mac II line where plug and play ment the driver was built into the card.. not that you couldn't use an optomised driver but if you were a clueless newbe you didn't have to.
    In short it's just one of those legacy issues. Any PC OS is "Hard to install" excluding maybe PC/MS-Dos before hard disk support was added and CP/M 86 again before HD support. After that it all heads down hill.

    --
    I don't actually exist.
  138. Not half as difficult as installing Microsoft by Morgaine · · Score: 1

    He should consider himself lucky that he didn't try to install a Microsoft O/S. That would have been utterly beyond him, and vastly more frustrating too because of the multiple reboots.

    People forget that installing Microsoft is "easy" only because they don't have to do so as it's almost always preinstalled. In reality it's a bloody nightmare.

    --
    "The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra
  139. Upon Reflection ,,, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When I first read the article I was incensed that this idiot [the author] was getting this published by CNN.

    Then I slowly came to realized he was being flip and it was supposed to be funny.

    After considering the installation he attempted I begin to realize he had to know this could have been much easier. He intentionally chose an arcane installation -- linux fdisk for God's sake! He was configuring a LAN connection too. That is no average home desktop installation.

    This article was meant to be humorous and informative and intimidating. Maybe inspiring intimidation is ok. ...

    users who are a little frightened might be excited by actually learning something -- it may even become more "cool".

  140. This isn't that bad by danish · · Score: 1

    Hey,

    This article isn't that bad, and I even think that the author did a fair job. Really.
    The guy is a newbie. Fine. While wondering if his computer has a video card may seem a bit silly to all of us geeks, the average Joe Schmoe thinks of his computer as a magical black box - not much can be done to change that. It's a very, very good thing that the guy at least admits he's a newbie, and needs help.
    And another point in this guy's favor - he's not afraid of the dreaded DOCUMENTATION! I've seen many a [l]user on linux IRC channels that blatantly refuse to read instruction manuals, HOWTOs, or manpages. They just expect everything to work without any effort on their part - this guy at least tries, which IMO is commendable.

    Last thing - the guy is truthful. He doesn't attempt to hide his lack of knowledge about computers, or the fact that Linux isn't ready for him yet. He says what is currently right - Linux, especially the install, is NOT for the average person. However, as the article points out, someone who's mucked around with UNIX, or maybe some UNIX and DOS, might even enjoy it.

    I hope I'm not repeating too much of what others have said, I didn't read too carefully through the comments :-)

  141. "Warning - this distro is too damn old!" by Mija+Cat · · Score: 1

    Hmmm.

    --
    Yes, that's really my e-mail. Don't change a thing.
    1. Re:"Warning - this distro is too damn old!" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or should that be "warning! this mimics a 30-year old OS!"

  142. I remember Caldera 1.3! by daviddennis · · Score: 2

    I think that was the one I tried installing on my ThinkPad about a year ago. It was horrible.

    But it was also prehistoric - according to their web site, Caldera 2.3 is the latest version, and I remember reading a review here saying installation was wonderfully easy.

    I can only conclude that someone at CNN made a dumb mistake in issuing him a mouldy old copy of the software.

    D

    ----

    1. Re:I remember Caldera 1.3! by odaiwai · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I remember Caldera 1.3 as well. It was my first Linux setup on my ollivetti laptop. X was an absolute BITCH to get working. COL didn't like my pcmcia cards, hated the screen and was pretty unfriendly.

      Recently I installed RH6 on that same machine. (It's been DOS, WIN95, WIN98, Linux, and now it's dual boot Win98/Linux 2.2.10) RH went on and was working in 30 mins or so.

      RH5.2 was a pain as well for similar reasons, and on my main machine, it didn't like my SCSI (adaptec) or video (matrox). RH6.0 is *so* much easier. Autodetect, install.

      Face it, your first Linux install, if you know nothing about linux or unix will be difficult. Setting everything up for the first time *will* be a learning experience.

      dave

  143. Some sort of class would be nice. by Listerine · · Score: 2

    I have only installed Solaris, and all I had to do was click.

    But when it came to setting it up, I had to call people over, for I am no expert in such matters. It seems that the only real way to learn is for other people to tell you how to do while you are actually installing and setting it up.

    A (one-time?) class on this would be nice... like something at a Comm. College or of that sort, but there don't appear to be any.

    Oh well.

  144. OEM by fireproof · · Score: 1
    Actually, not it's not. I appreciate the changes that MS made to the installation procedure. After installing it the 250+ times that I have, I know.

    Rather than demonstrating that Windows was as difficult to install as Linux, I rather meant to demonstrate the sheer absurdity of someone who can't find their video card trying to install an operating system without as much as asking for advice.

    I'll happily admit that Windows is easier to install than any version of Linux I've played with as of yet (I haven't tried the new version of Caldera).

    In reality, the post a bit lower down concerning the person trying to pilot an early Ford automobile while running over various and sundry items close by is closer to what I was attempting to achieve.

    --

    /* "A fool does not delight in understanding, but only in revealing his own mind." */

  145. Re:Don't you dare criticise him by drivers · · Score: 1

    Exactly. That poster did imply that the author found linux easier to install, and if that were so then we rabid linux advocates should break some china or something.

    Besides, in the CNN article the author did say (to paraphrase), Linux is too hard to install, I will stick with my warm cuddly Windows.

    To which I reply, Windows is easy to install from scratch? Not.

  146. Re:Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by Tino · · Score: 2
    Windows 98 is indeed much, much improved over 95 for installation. It's certainly easier to install than any Linux distribution I've ever installed. God help you if you don't have a 98 startup disk handy (if you can't boot from the CD), though, or if you need to re-partition the disk, or anything else out of the ordinary. Then you start getting odd messages like "Incorrect DOS version" and such, and you start reaching for the antacids.

    Windows NT installation is truly hell, though -- and face it, NT is the real parallel to Linux -- even when everything goes perfectly. Go have lunch while DOS sloooowly copies just abour everything off the CD onto the hard drive (don't have DOS handy or a disk partition that DOS can read? Sorry!) and then actually begins to install the OS. Oh, and it waits for you to say "OK" several times while doing this, so you'd better eat lunch at your desk.

    In fairness, NT 4.0 *is* getting long in the tooth, and it appears that Windows 2000 is a lot better about this.

  147. One sentence for all of you.... by mosch · · Score: 1

    'How to setup X without setting your video card on fire'.



    Does anybody else remember this? and I remember being thrilled at something that would allow me to sit with a calculator and figure out my modelines.



    That, in a nutshell, is why I like things that make *nices easy to use. I want to code, I want to solve new problems. I don't want to spend all day trying to solve previously solved problems.

  148. I think you'd be surprised... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If society can teach chimps like you how to type, how much longer before they master the DOS prompt?

  149. Re:Complexity for the Sake of Complexity by cr0sh · · Score: 1

    Learn to program.

    Then compare COBOL to C.

    Now tell me, which would you rather have to code that oh-so-complex data-mining application - "arcane soundbite" (C) or "plain English" (COBOL)?

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  150. Re:Server by tUne74 · · Score: 1

    There are bout 19 or so web servers at CNN in Atlanta and some more in Europe and in Japan... If you ever have problems with speed, try linking to a specific server:

    www1.cnn.com
    www2.cnn.com
    www3.cnn.com
    www4.cnn.com

    I might add that all content servers are running some from of UNIX... with a few inside servers running linux...

  151. Re:Retract your flames... by tUne74 · · Score: 1

    Don't just assume that Robin is male....

  152. Re:Your alternate "geek-centered" reality by monstar · · Score: 1

    >>Windows installs are just plain TOO DIFFICULT. My

    huh? come on now, i support & install NT/98 in work and use linux et al, at home.
    i can personally install most mainstream OSs in my sleep almost.

    anyone who can't install win9x in under 45min probably takes most of that extra time finding out where to put that little plastic square with the three pins sticking out of it....

    if after 10+ installs you have only succeeded 1st time once then you are doing something MAJORLY wrong or you have MAJORLY fucked-up kit.

    if you are using unsupported/non-standard/broken hardware then you *will* get problems, and you damn well deserve them for not looking up the HCL.

    in conclusion, IF YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT YOU ARE DOING THEN YOU /WILL/ HAVE PROBLEMS - whether its installing the OS of your choice or changing the oil in your car (something which mine goes back to the garage for, btw:)

  153. On OpenLinux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've been using slackware for a couple of years and think it's the most wonderful distribution there is, so I've got a good amount of experience with Linux. But I can sympathize with this person from CNN: OpenLinux sucks if you try to install it on anything less than a 300MHz Pentium II.

    Here's my story:

    One night, my dad came home with a book on Linux. I was impressed that he had finally made the decision to try it out instead of passing it off as a bad DOS clone like he usually does. The book came with an OpenLinux CD. He tried to install it that night, and all I can say is that it was most horrible experience I've ever had in installing Linux.

    The first thing my dad did was drop the CD into his CD-ROM drive while he was still in Windows. A nice "installation" program comes up. It was hardly helpful. The version of Partition Magic that came with it only allows you to select three partition sizes. This is frustrating because they are 300MB, 500MB and 1GB.. 300MB is supposed to be a "minimal" installation. 40MB should be a minimal installation. I can already see what's to come when we're stuck with installing 500MB of software just to get a "functional" system. So we create a 500MB partition, create the boot are root disks (or Install and Modules disks, as Caldera calls them).

    Booting from the boot and root disks, I see something I've never seen before when booting the Linux kernel: a GUI. This frightens me all the more. It's slow and actually caused the system to reboot on its own once in the middle of the half-hour long boot process that should only take at most one or two mins (on a 486DX4/100 with 36MB RAM).

    Once we were done sitting around waiting for the kernel to boot, we finally got something that looked like an GUI installation menu. We configured all of our hardware, and went on to the software installation part.

    Software installation made me extremely uncomfortable. It gave absolutely no choice as to what packages you want to install.. only an amount of disk space you want the apps to take up. The installation took nearly 2 hours. Then there was a strange "Post-installation process" that took another half hour.

    Having done all of that, we finally got everything running. We booted the slowest and most over-loaded linux system I have ever seen. I certainly hope the creators of this distribution expect to be successful with anyone using anything older than a Pentium II, because they'd be really disappointed to find out their distribution sucks.

    Lizard looks nice, and that's the only nice thing I have to say about OpenLnux.

  154. Caldera 1.3? by rsidd · · Score: 2

    Exactly why did he try installing Caldera 1.3, when the current version is 2.3, I wonder. Yes, we all had a hard time installing linux the first time, but we didn't write articles on CNN about it. Total newbies can go for a preinstalled system, the way they do with windows. Even here in India I know dealers who preinstall linux.

    1. Re:Caldera 1.3? by rsidd · · Score: 1

      As a followup to my post above: for newbies who want linux
      installed on their existing computer, this could be a
      useful "service" provided by linux service providers.
      Does anyone actually do this? Say, rather than
      pay $50 for just the CD, pay a bit more for the
      CD plus installation service.

    2. Re:Caldera 1.3? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he/she went down to the store and found 1.3 on the shelf and just bought it. I've seen some pretty moldy old distributions in some of these places.

    3. Re:Caldera 1.3? by Dr_LHA · · Score: 1

      > Yes, we all had a hard time installing linux the first time

      Not my experience. 19 months ago I bought my first x86 PC (having previously being an Amiga owner). I built the computer myself (also a first for me) and after construction was faced with the decision - what to install first. I had a Windows 95 OSR2 CD and a Redhat 5.0 CD (cheapo CD). Went for windows as I wanted to try out some games :o) Had no end of trouble with windows - ended up formatting my HD from scratch and trying RH5. Within 30 minutes I was up and running, X, sound everything.

      OK - so I'd bought my hardware specifically with Linux in mind - but Linux hard to install? Bollocks. The hardest thing about Linux is working out what to do with it after you've installed it.

    4. Re:Caldera 1.3? by mcrandello · · Score: 1

      Makes me wonder if that wasn't a typo or misprint...

    5. Re:Caldera 1.3? by wmeyer · · Score: 1

      And here I thought I was the only one who noticed. It's a shame (s)he didn't try 2.2 or 2.3, as the article would have had a completely different theme. I've tried RH, Suse, Mandrake, and Caldera, and Caldera has far and away the best installation package I've seen.

      It's also a shame that there is no e-mail path given for the author. Sorta puts the article in the troll-bait class, doesn't it?

      --
      --- Bill
  155. Re:What about doing the same with Windows? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't know about Win98, but I did a Win95 installation on a harddrive containing a Linux partition, and that was a real pain! I couldn't use the automatic installation process, because that was designed to revert the computer to its original state (one large windows partition, nothing else). In all, the RH Linux installation took about half an hour, the Win95 installation worked only after several days of repeated rebooting.

  156. Ignorant Journalist? by counterpart25 · · Score: 2

    I think it's just as naive to jump all over the
    poor author for saying it was hard to install as
    it was for him to try installing it without
    knowing what he was doing. I'm probably beating a dead horse here, but to those of you that are
    part of the development process, it would behoove
    you to not dismiss people like this guy out of hand. Yeah, yeah, I know, elitism this and we
    don't want the morons that, but if you plan on
    World Domination, you have to learn to convince
    the unwashed masses. And sometimes even smart people aren't adept at computer use. Imagine that!
    Different kinds of intelligence! Anyway, just think twice before you jump down some Linux
    newbie's throat. We all had to begin somewhere. Let the moderation as 'Redundant' begin!

    --
    -cp
    1. Re:Ignorant Journalist? by trb · · Score: 1
      So please be kind to this poor overworked journalist. Everybody (even you) started out ignorant and had to learn, right?
      I started out ignorant, but I didn't parade my ignorance in a very highly visible forum like CNN. Such an ignorant display can distract and mislead large numbers of people, that's what makes it particularly troubling.

      If this person or anyone else tries to install both Windows and Linux on a raw PC, they'll find that either is somewhat daunting to the novice. Reporting that only one is, is just misleading and irresponsible.

  157. Linux is NOT for newbies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you have no DOS/Unix experience and you are just getting into computing you should be using a Mac, period. They are simple to use, easy to understand, and just plain work like they are advertised complete with plug and play. This is coming from a hard-core Linux advocate. I would NEVER advocate Linux to anyone that is not at least an intermediate level unix person.. it is NOT for newbies. Linux doesn't belong on the desktop and for that matter neither does Windows. Both of them if given to a complete computer newbie just leave their head spinning wondering what the hell a "window" is and why you would want to change their sizes. Think about it before you flame me guys. I've setup my share of computer newbies and I know they are completely ignorant when it comes to that Win9x screen sitting in front of them.

    1. Re:Linux is NOT for newbies by stu · · Score: 1

      Oh come off it - UNIX cant be that hard to learn, can it?

      I mean, You learned it, I learned it - I bet even BillG could write a shell script if he put his mind to it.

      When I first got started in computers, DOS & UNIX were pretty hard for me to get my head around (I was used to my Commodore 64 BASIC shell - whaddaya mean, directory listings? :-).

      But I stuck with it & learned how stuff worked. There is absolutely no reason why anyone else couldnt do the same. Sure, you may have some bad habits from using Windows/Mac, but any moderately intelligent person ought to be able to adapt to using a command line, etc. They may not *like* the CLI, but that is where good GUI design comes in - giving you power, but with ease of use.

      Congratulations to the journo concerned - She did pretty well considering her self confessed limitations.

      --
      -- Stu
  158. Think, don't whine! by Masa · · Score: 1

    This kind of articles are extremely good. We all should learn from them. This is because the world is moving towards information society. And this means that everybody should have a computer. But we can't expect that everybody knows what is inside their computers. The point is that we should actively develop simpler solutions for soft/hardware.

    Majority of all replies in Slashdot are saying things like:

    "he should has tried to use a newer version of the distribution"
    or
    "why not use RedHat?"
    or
    "he's stupid because he doesn't know what is inside of his computer"

    And this is all wrong.

    The problem isn't the user, the problem is that computers should be like kitchenware. User uses the hardware (and the software) but doesn't know what is inside of it. And he doesn't even want to know.


    (It is possible that I didn't make my point clear or I lost it but who cares...)

  159. World Domination(tm) by Coda · · Score: 2

    Let's assume that we want Linux to achieve World Domination(tm). In effect, we want to displace Microsoft.

    How do we do this? By making the best software? Hah. Pull the other one. The best does not always win, especially when the mediocre has a stranglehold on the market.

    There are at least two ways Linux can inflitrate the desktop market: (1) display Microsoft as the OEM OS, and (2) get people to defect over once they get sick of Windows, or see The Light(tm).

    Now, (1) doesn't look very possible. MS will shoot on sight anything that looks like a competitor.

    (2) is much more possible, however, and the key to it is simple: **MAKE LINUX EASIER TO INSTALL THAN WINDOWS**. They pop in the $5 CD, Tux waves at them and looks for their hardware, and poof, X is up and running with replacements for all of their Win9x apps.

    This is not the current state of events. I'm not a Linux guy, for various reasons. I tried to help a friend install RedHat 6.$latest. He has some duct-taped suped-up video card. X ran at 150x150. I could see the GNOME toolbar and part of a menu. Not fun.

    Now, for a couple of computer geeks hanging out after-hours in the local computer store, this wasn't a big deal. Now imagine your mother faced with this problem.

    So, in order to make inroads into the desktop market, Linux needs to be the drool-proof choice. It needs to be as easy to install as a small application.

    Now, why do we want Linux to take over the desktop market? Because power users should not have to suffer idiots. Hardcore computer people shouldn't have to put up with the closed-source/closed-mind/shortsighted mindset common to most computer companies. If the users change, the companies have to, or they go out of business.

    How do you kill bloatware? How do you stop insecure server software? You get people used to fast, lean applications, and robust server apps. Then the crap will stand out like crap in a rose garden, not crap in a shit exhibit.

    This doesn't mean dumbing Linux down. This means making the amount of rope variable, from "Enough To Power A Yo-Yo" to "Enough To Hang Yourself From The Empire State Building". Start new users off with Tux The Magical Penguin's Guide To Linux, and they can work their way out of the GUI if needed. Most people won't. Power users could always click on the "skip the bullshit" button and get dropped into the real thing.

    But *please* don't keep that elitest "make the users learn" attitude. If you really want people to learn, make it easy for them to learn. If you just want a clubhouse, keep at it.

    --
    -- I can't think of anything witty to put here. Sorry.
    1. Re:World Domination(tm) by JoostT · · Score: 1

      Beos is way easier to install than any version of Windows or linux, but if your hardware is not supported, you're out of luck. But everything that is supported, works immideatly.

      I don't see Beos taking over the desktop...

      Joost

  160. Re:Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by Gonoff · · Score: 1

    "Windows 98 directly from a CD-ROM boot. Try THAT with Linux."

    This sounds a little ignorant! You can install just about any 'grown up' operating system sretraight from CD. I have done several flavours of Linux, Netware and Be myself. I even do it with NT (too often!). Can people list all the other OS that can do this? Can OS2 do it now? I haven't used it for a while. Is it still out there?

    --
    I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
  161. Why 1.3? by Mondo54 · · Score: 0

    And not the latest Caldera version? 2.2 (or 2.3) may have some bugs in the installation, but generally, it's as easy as installing Windows.

    --

    But isn't the purpose of the Doomsday machine lost if you keep it a secret!
  162. Re:Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by richieb · · Score: 1
    If you system hard drive has no partitions on it and if your computer can boot directly from a CD-ROM drive (either ATAPI 1.2 compatible IDE or SCSI connected to Adaptec host adapter), you can literally install the full or OEM installation version of Windows 98 directly from a CD-ROM boot. Try THAT with Linux.

    I've installed Debian Linux on a P120 with 16Meg in about 15 minutes, booting from the CD. The part that took longest was installation of a large number of software packages that don't even come with Windows (i.e. C/C++ compiler, Web server, databases etc...).

    Configuring X was also easy because I just used the SVGA X server.

    ...richie

    --
    ...richie - It is a good day to code.
  163. Re:Don't you dare criticise him by abfackeln · · Score: 1

    let me first say, that i had no intention to flame the journalist.

    however, concluding that windows is superior because he had more difficulty installing caldera than windows is nothing short of stupid.

    and it -is- your responsibility to be aware of your options. you do not have to use caldera to install linux and you do not have to use a command line to operate it.

    even the journalist himself noted that his installation would have been easier if he had chosen a more user friendly package such as redhat.

    and further, i have been programming for over 15 years and i do not recall ever admiring microsoft for anything. maybe some people do, but it gives me some serious claustrophobia working within its limited scope and unreliable "conveniences".

    perhaps persons like yourself, who have no motivation to find out for themselves what is available out there, appreciate microsoft because it has been impaled into your cranium several million times and has become an easy name to remember.

    just because someone has a larger advertising budget does not mean that they are better. honest. i know that it is anti-american to say so, but even the most successful companies have flaws too.

    -abf.

    --
    -abf.
  164. Don't you dare criticise him by konstant · · Score: 4

    If he finds Linux is more difficult to install than Windows, it's not because he's stupid. It's because Windows is superior.

    Deal with that. Take a deep breath. If you have trouble doing that, smash some China, then take a deep breath.

    Blaming the user for their difficulties setting up a program is like blaming a driver because when their car breaks down on I-5, they don't understand it's due to a dirty spark plug and a frazzled timing belt. "Well, Duh! Obviously your coolant line is leaking, MORON!" Well designed software, like well desinged cars, let you choose your level of abstraction. If you want to work on your OS at the command line level, that's wonderful. But if there are no other choices, then the software is inherently poor.

    Anybody still out there who remembers the days when they admired Microsoft for bringing software to the masses? I think I do... dimly. And making the complex simple is and admirable thing. One of the most admirable things, in my mind.

    Don't flame this poor man. Fix what sucks about Linux. If there are no things that suck about Linux, then we might as well go home because there is no longer any room for improvement. But we all know that, along with the many wonderful things about a free and community-defined OS, there are also some pitfalls. Wouldn't it be great to impress the world with our response to these concerns?

    -konstant

    --
    -konstant
    Yes! We are all individuals! I'm not!
    1. Re:Don't you dare criticise him by konstant · · Score: 1

      And yes, I'm aware that there are two wonderful UIs available for Linux. But the fact is, this guy didn't feel the love.
      -konstant

      --
      -konstant
      Yes! We are all individuals! I'm not!
    2. Re:Don't you dare criticise him by kevin+lyda · · Score: 0

      "admired microsoft for bringing software to the masses..."

      huh?

      no, i never felt that way. i liked macs because they were dead simple. and later in life found they looked after themselves in an office environment. i liked my c64 because i could write code for it, i liked unix even more because i could write useful stuff for it.

      but microsoft i just found to be an annoying pain in the butt. i first saw their stuff with dos 3.3, and i have yet to see anything of quality come from them.

      i understand why they made some of their choices technically, but in the end their products have always come across like they were done by someone who *thought* they knew everything but reality kept proving them wrong.

      --
      US Citizen living abroad? Register to vote!
    3. Re:Don't you dare criticise him by drivers · · Score: 1

      What makes you think this journalist has installed Windows? No one is flaming this journalist. It is true that this kind of story has been overdone. Specifically: Journalist who has not installed any operating system from scratch (upgrading windows is much easier than installing it from scratch, you have to set up a boot disk with the right CDROM drivers, set on config.sys and autoexec.bat and MSCDEX.EXE, run fdisk and format /s your drive, copy the setup files to the hard drive (so you don't have to keep inserting the CD when you detect new devices) and then you get to get all your device drivers installed and get all your resource conflicts straightened out) tries it him/herself and has a challenging time. Their conclusion: Linux is not ready for the masses.

      I found the article to be very amusing because of the self deprecating humor. Like the bit about using fdisk.

      Or are you upset because Rob said ignorant? That just means they lack knowledge. It's not an insult.

      You are the only one who needs to take a few deep breaths.

    4. Re:Don't you dare criticise him by mpe · · Score: 1


      Journalist who has not installed any operating system from scratch (upgrading windows is much easier than installing it from scratch, you have to set up a boot disk with the right CDROM drivers, set on config.sys and autoexec.bat and MSCDEX.EXE, run fdisk and format /s your drive, copy the setup files to the hard drive (so you don't have to keep inserting the CD when you detect new devices)

      Actually you need the setup files on the HDD becuase if you don't you will end up in a chicken and egg situation where the OS needs the CDROM drivers, which are on the CDROM in order to install the CDROM drivers.

      This is not documented at all in the supplied documentation.

    5. Re:Don't you dare criticise him by mpe · · Score: 1


      Assume Linux is a car... lets say something like a Indy-500 race car.

      Not sure I agree a better analogy is that Linux is a bus, with all wheel drive and the ability to pull a trailer (or road train if you let the Australians near it.)
      Similarly Win9X is a gocart.
      And Win NT is first attempt at building a bus by a company familiar with gocarts, who happen to have bought out a supplier of truck parts.

    6. Re:Don't you dare criticise him by bhirt · · Score: 1

      You (and other) ask "What makes you think this journalist has installed Windows?". First off, what does this have to do with anything? Second, I didn't see anything is the article saying "I have never installed windows" Your assumption is just as bad *and* off topic. The article isn't called "Linux harder to install than Windows" it's called "Can you install Linux? I think I can"

      --
      -- The world's most ambitious and comprehensive PC game database project. http://www.mobygam
    7. Re:Don't you dare criticise him by nevets · · Score: 2

      I believe the poster was refering to the comment remark of

      If he finds Linux is more difficult to install than Windows

      So I have to say that your assumption is bad *and* off topic.

      Sorry ;}
      Steven Rostedt

      --
      Steven Rostedt
      -- Nevermind
  165. Re:Complexity for the Sake of Complexity by dodobh · · Score: 1

    This is offtopic but I don't see any arcane soundbites here. I used MSDOS for four years before I got Linux and somehow Linux from the command line was more intutive.
    No choice about MSDOS (School, college), OS of choice Linux@home.
    Installing Linux is a piece of cake as compared to Windows 9x and NT anyway. I've done all of those, including for a triple boot machine. Installing Linux on weird configurations is simpler than installing Win9x on the same machine.
    Isn't the command line easier than a GUI except for moving files and surfing?

    --
    I can throw myself at the ground, and miss.
  166. Did he pick an easy one? by grepgrep · · Score: 1

    I don't think Caldera would be a very easy distrib. to start with as a novice. I chose SUSE for precisely the reason that I don't know much about insides of PCs - I wanted a machine I could run Apache on, program Perl, use Gimp and build websites. I did it in about 40 mins and most of that was choosing stuff to install with YAST.

    There have got to be distributions for all users. Most users don't care and are happy for the set-up to autoprobe all day. Let them. Some users can recite the serial numbers of their components. Let them.

    Let's not forget that Journo's will exaggerate to make a better story. If this had been written by a Linux advocate it would have taken him five minutes and then he would have benn making coffee.

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~
    As my MCSE friend says: "I'd rather no
  167. No, I don't understand a nuclear reactor. by fireproof · · Score: 1
    But, on the other hand, I don't try to operate one, nor do I attempt install a new reactor core and then write about the difficulties I encountered and the ensuing evactuation of all citizens within a large vicinity of the disaster that I created either.

    To be fair, Windows 98 is certainly easier to install than Linux. For the most part (from what I understand, that is) Win 2000 is a vast improvement over the quite painful NT 4.0 install. Microsoft is improving its products.

    It's one thing to make things easy so that a novice user can easily complete useful functions. It's another thing entirely to fool the end user into thinking that he/she is qualified to do something they have no business doing.

    --

    /* "A fool does not delight in understanding, but only in revealing his own mind." */

  168. Maybe we should sit back and think.... by smoondog · · Score: 1

    I really think there is a message here that many of us aren't really getting. It seems to me that if linux is going to go mainstream, linux is going to have to streamline the installation/administration process. I know unix has a long history and so on, but isn't it possible to build utilities that non-technical users might be able to access without having to even understand what a shell is?


    -- Moondog

  169. Why is it always Linux? by thekla · · Score: 1
    The article was funny. What disturbs me though, is that it's become a trend for every journalist who has no better idea for this week's article to try installing Linux and then have something funny to write about his experiences.

    I'd like, for a change, to see some journalists try to install NT or Win98 on a virgin machine with a fresh, unpartitioned drive and the Microsoft cdrom. I'm not sure that would be a less eventful and tedious experience than Linux installation.

    Besides, given the distro/version that this user is installing, I'd also appreciate seeing occasional articles of pisssed off journalist who can't install DOS and Win3.1 on a Linux machine.

    Nick Moraitakis

    --
    -- say with me: i'm a monkey child
  170. Your alternate "geek-centered" reality by William+Wallace · · Score: 1

    "Face it. You think windows is easy because you buy computers with it already installed." Nah, I install Windows 9x/NT/2000 all the time on machines in various states (brand new, already running some other OS, dual boot, etc). While I have had trouble with some Windows installs, I: a) Can always get it running within a day. b) Have never had as many difficulties as when trying to install Linux. I have plenty of experience with computers (15 years), DOS, Windows, BeOS, and even Irix. I'm a programmer and a CS student. None of this changes the fact that I have started at least 10 different Linux installations on various hardware configurations, and have only gotten it to "work" ONE TIME. And that time was pure hell, trying to get X to work correctly, finding decent programs that do things I've grown accustomed to (you know, crazy things like browsing my file system). Sometimes I think, hey, I've got 500MB free here, why not setup another partition and get Linux running on this thing (along with BeOS and Win2K)? I mean, I'm a CS student, and I do feel a certain amount of "geek peer pressure" to run Linux. But then I think back to all the times I've had to wrestle with getting a good distribution, reading all the HOWTO and INSTALL manuals over and over, trying to decipher prompts and windows written by kernel hacking geeks that wouldn't know a GUI if it double-clicked them in the face, etc. Linux installs are just plain TOO DIFFICULT. My personal guess is that it will take at least two years before any Linux distribution has a user- experience (from install, to GUI, to maintenance) that rivals Win2K/BeOS/MacOS. May the force be with you. -WW
    --
    Once there was a time when religion ruled the world.

    1. Re:Your alternate "geek-centered" reality by elflord · · Score: 1
      So are they set up with KDE ?

    2. Re:Your alternate "geek-centered" reality by William+Wallace · · Score: 1

      "Try "man ls". If that fails, all the recent distributions come with KDE."

      And none of them offer a very nice end-user GUI
      experience, from what I've seen at school...

      -WW

      --
      Once there was a time when religion ruled the world.

  171. what the hell? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They expect COL 1.3 to be easy to install? Why don't they look around the net and try to get the first alphas of the linux kernel to work

  172. Your alternate "geek-centered" reality by William+Wallace · · Score: 1

    Sorry for posting this twice... the first time
    was all fscked up by the default "HTML formatted"
    setting on this damn form (WHY??? WHY???? WHY???).

    ----

    "Face it. You think windows is easy because you buy computers with it already installed."

    Nah, I install Windows 9x/NT/2000 all the time on
    machines in various states (brand new, already
    running some other OS, dual boot, etc).

    While I have had trouble with some Windows
    installs, I:

    a) Can always get it running within a day.
    b) Have never had as many difficulties as when
    trying to install Linux.

    I have plenty of experience with computers (15
    years), DOS, Windows, BeOS, and even Irix. I'm
    a programmer and a CS student.

    None of this changes the fact that I have started
    at least 10 different Linux installations on
    various hardware configurations, and have only
    gotten it to "work" ONE TIME. And that time was
    pure hell, trying to get X to work correctly,
    finding decent programs that do things I've grown
    accustomed to (you know, crazy things like
    browsing my file system).

    Sometimes I think, hey, I've got 500MB free here,
    why not setup another partition and get Linux
    running on this thing (along with BeOS and Win2K)?
    I mean, I'm a CS student, and I do feel a certain
    amount of "geek peer pressure" to run Linux.

    But then I think back to all the times I've had to
    wrestle with getting a good distribution, reading
    all the HOWTO and INSTALL manuals over and over,
    trying to decipher prompts and windows written by
    kernel hacking geeks that wouldn't know a GUI if
    it double-clicked them in the face, etc.

    Linux installs are just plain TOO DIFFICULT. My
    personal guess is that it will take at least two
    years before any Linux distribution has a user-
    experience (from install, to GUI, to maintenance)
    that rivals Win2K/BeOS/MacOS.

    May the force be with you.

    -WW

    --
    Once there was a time when religion ruled the world.

  173. Novice... by Listerine · · Score: 1

    I think he'd have trouble installing Win(insert year) too...

    A novice computer user should not be trying to install an OS. They should be familiar with it to the point where they are not a novice any more. Get someone else to install the OS, just like a pre-manufactured MS machine.

    1. Re:Novice... by Criterion · · Score: 1

      I agree that a novice user should not be trying to install an OS. She had no idea about what hardware was in the system, and thats not a problem for the average USER. The way I look at it, if you are installing the OS, more than likely, you have built the system, and KNOW what hardware is in it. Her job is to USE the system, someone elses job is to BUILD the system. If someone wants to LEARN about the hardware and OS, well, more power to them, but that shouldn't be factored in to the ease of USE of said OS. At least Linux tells you what its looking for, instead of giving a blue screen and saying try again, wrong answer.

      --
      We have enough youth, how about a fountain of SMART?
    2. Re:Novice... by Gregg+M · · Score: 1

      A novice computer user should not be trying to install an OS.

      The problem is that many windows users think they are computer literate, because they installed some install-shield app. They are far from computer literate if they don't know what fdisk is.

      --
      Linux is only free if your time has no value. Windows is only free if you threaten to use Linux.
  174. Re:He has no business installing an OS! by demon · · Score: 1

    Number one is untrue and elitist

    Don't think so. Give your average (l)user a machine with a partitioned hard disk (this is giving them one point IN THEIR FAVOR) with JUST a DOS boot disk and a Win95/98 install CD. I don't think they'd be able to get a machine bootable (i.e., get the CD-ROM usable) to get to the actual install phase. At least with NT, it has boot disks that automate the device detection/enabling (like the Linux installer disks).

    Also, this person (guy?) claims to have "programmed" (?) at some point in the past. Yet this person has no idea what an OS kernel is? I'd think that to program more than 3-4 years ago took a decent grounding in the basics of how the OS and other lowlevel services work. This seems like a lot of bullshit to me.

    --

    Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
    Max: "I'd be peeing my pants if I wore any!"
  175. Retract your flames... by geon · · Score: 5
    Don't start flaming the guy. Please.

    1). He knows he is ignorant. No need to point it out.

    2). He is like most users, therefore his experience is valuable info.

    3). I don't think he really should have known all this stuff. I mean, the guy probably just used his pc for word, email, the web, and maybe a game or two. There is really no need for him to learn all of this stuff.

    4). Don't wail about stupid users - you were once like that too. More importantly, you have to realize that most people don't give a rats ass about the insides of their computers, and don't want to. Just cause you like to putz about with arcane stuff doesn't mean others do.

    5). This was supposed to be funny - and I think it was hilarious. So those of you planning to roast the guy, get the sticks out of your ass.

    This kind of a preemptive strike directed at the very vocal majority who always seem to take these things to heart. I don't mean to offend anyone.

    Cheers, Geon

    1. Re:Retract your flames... by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 3
      I just find it amazing that someone who used to program is actually that ignorant of his computer that he had to check what kind of mouse he has.

      This brings back to mind the quotes concerning "public trust" of traditional journalism and said jouralist qualifications. This guy's qualifications?

      I did some minor programming as a software troubleshooter in the 1980s before I turned to teaching statistics and then technology journalism.

      Now in the 1990s, I'm dual platform and can read some HTML -- in other words, I know nothing about the innards of contemporary PCs.

      No knowledge of contemporary PCs. And he's a tech journalist. Now THATs funny.

    2. Re:Retract your flames... by geon · · Score: 1

      sorry, I meant minority, not majority. Majority is pretty reasonable, but minority is very loud.

    3. Re:Retract your flames... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah - it struck me that he was *trying* to be funny, but ... (no stick intended) it was disturbing to me that he made references to Physics and "hackers at AT&T" to inflate his apparent level of familiarity with things scientific.

      He has a big audience on CNN and I hate the idea that people might actually listen and fear linux. At least he mentioned Redhat, which is alot easier to install and I tingled at the thought "what if I had some of *that* stock?"

      ***END OF RANT***

  176. old days, bah!!! by Christopher+Craig · · Score: 2
    Back in my day there was only one distribution. Slackware, and it was poorly maintained. I remember my first install of kernel 1.1 on a 486 notebook with no floppy. I used a cross compiler and sunsite.unc.edu. It took me two weeks to figure out how to get it on without a floppy drive and a couple more to do all the compiles.

    These days I can have Linux up and running in 20 minutes with either a RedHat CD (yes you can boot directly to the CD) or a single floppy and a decent network connection (try that with Windows 98).

    I'll freely admit that RedHat's install program needs work. For instance I installed on a machine with a 3Com card on it that is supported by the 3c59x driver, but I didn't know that and the menus don't list the supported cards. I also recomend that anyone who thinks 98 is easier to install try it sometime. The last time I tried it it took 3 hours and asked me at least as many questions as RedHat does, the fact that it had a pretty VGA interface didn't change anything, I still had to use text forms to select things.

    Also, I take offense to the fact that this CNN guy says that he, now that he is experienced at it, can install 98 in 45 minutes, but his first attempt at an old version of Linux took him much longer. That's bogus. Someone experienced at installing Linux will rarely take more than half an hour. Someone with no experience with Windows will take about as long with it as he took with Linux.

  177. Windoze is easier, but ... by Real+Timer · · Score: 1

    Without the OEM diskette, can't load Window 95 without:
    1. Load DOS 3.3 off 5 1/4" floppies (6 or so).
    2. Load DOS 5 upgrade off 3 1/2" floppies (5).
    3. Load Windows 3.1 off floppies (5 or so).
    4. Install Win 95 off CD.

    (Eventually, someone points out you can bare install off DOS 5 upgrade).

    DOS 5 diskette gets an error. Crap! Finally get a copy of an OEM diskette for another machine from the guy at the computer store. Guess how to get it to work for my computer (shades of Linux X Config). It works!

    Somewhat easier than my last Linux install, but that was RH 5.2. Linux ain't so bad if you give it its own drive.

    --
    Changes aren't permanent, but change is.
  178. Re:Autodetection is not evil! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Frankly, I don't give damn about people who don;t know if they have a graphics card or not. They can just go hang themselves !! Civilians should go back to using paper and pencil. I'm sick of all the whining and belly-aching about how it is difficult to install. Bullshit. If you want to learn how to fly, you invest time and effort. Its not different with computers. A computer is not a toy, and Linux is not a toy OS. These stooges should stick with their GameBoys and Nintendos.

  179. Re:Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Man I have to say I've used Win95 and WinNT for years, and had installed them on at least 6 or more machines at work and at home. When I went to install win98, it took me way over an hour probably over 2 hours, because...

    a) I was installing after one of my drives with 95 had crashed, and scan disk would not continue the installation with 1 bad disk (which I was not going to install to at all, I wanted to rescue what ever I could from the crashed drive so I didn't want to get rid of it just yet). I had to physically remove the drive, before it would continue.

    b) I tried running setup again in which it did another long scan disk, only to tell me that it would not work with QEMM (I was in dos). So I removed it from my dos.

    c) I tried running setup again in which it of course ran scan disk again, this time telling me I did not have enough memory to finish installing win98. So I went back AGAIN and commented out as many things as I could with out losing the basics that I needed, I barely made the requirement..

    d) It finally went through this time, and I was on my way to installing win98.

    All this for a new version of windows 95 with fancier graphics and an overused browser component.

    Later on I learned I could have used "setup -s" but not where this information is most usefull, when I'm installing it..

  180. Re:Unix sucks! It's too powerful! by Hallow · · Score: 1

    This is flawed. If you hadn't LEARNED english, you couldn't say "search that file and tell me which lines contain this word". You couldn't effectively tell a French or German to search a file for you, because they wouldn't understand what the hell you are saying. Sure, pantomime can help make this easier, but if you don't know the rules of the culture in a foriegn exchange you might accidentally give a hand signal that tells them to do something rather nasty to their mothers, or violate their rules on personal space. Language is language, whether it's spoken, written, or communicated through physical movement. If you don't know the rules, you won't get anywhere.

    Likewise if you haven't learned the language and syntax for communicating with your computer, you can't very well give it commands.

    I'm dealing right now with teaching technology to inner-city elementary school children to get them up to speed for our new state standards tests. Let me tell you, if you've never seen it before, it's not at all intuitive. You don't know how to instantly use a mouse, or a pointy-clicky GUI. You have to learn!

  181. Re:Um really by bamf · · Score: 1

    Have you ever tried to install Windows from scratch on a computer

    It's a royal pain in the ass.

    Not any more.

    I installed Win98 last week on a machine I'd built for a friend from spare parts.

    I stuck the CD in, booted the machine, answered a few simple questions (disk formatting, which components etc) and went off to read my email. When I came back it was finished. Totally idiot proof.

    Even my father managed to install 98 a little while ago on a new machine (home built, hence no pre-installed OS)

    NT is reasonalby easy to install provided the boot disks (or CD) contain drivers for your SCSI/RAID adapters, if they don't (as with new Dell & HP servers) it's a little more complicated, but I still managed to install NT on a new server within 20 minutes last week.

  182. Fake article by invoke · · Score: 0

    This article has to be a fake. Try as I might to be "nice" about this journalist, either the man is somehow completely lacking reasoning skills, or he is pulling the readers' legs.

    For example: The guy claims he doesn't know what a video card is, much less how to determine the brand of card. Yet he does know that it is something inside the computer. Given that one bit of knowledge, figuring out what bit is the video card becomes utterly trvial. Basic reasoning follows:

    "Hey, maybe I should follow the cable from my (running!) monitor. Oh look, the cable only enters the computer in one place. Maybe that's the video card thingie."

    It is a FAKE, no doubt about it.

    1. Re:Fake article by kwerle · · Score: 1

      Not having read the article - what if it was an embeded vid card? A laptop? Oh, look, the cable on the monitor goes to the motherboard - I'm FUCKED.

      They should not have to know what kind of video card they have. At least the system should come up with a VGA driver and let the user try to find better.

      The problem is that installs should detect the card, not that users are dumb. Come on, that's what computers are for, doing things automatically for users!

    2. Re:Fake article by Myriad · · Score: 1
      The problem is that installs should detect the card, not that users are dumb. Come on, that's what computers are for, doing things automatically for users!

      Ack! No no no, thats exactly the kind of thinking that gets everyone into trouble.
      Computers are supposed to do what their told, not act as some kind of magic
      talisman to solve the words problems.

      My car can get me where I want to go, but not without my assistance - which requires that I know how to drive.
      Same applies with the computer: it can do all sorts of wonderful things for me,
      provided I tell it what to do. I can't expect it to do everything without intervention.
      As with driving, without a basic amount of knowledge, you'll never get your PC out of park.

      Computers are a tool, and should be used as such. Once people understand that,
      everything will go much more smoothly.

      --
      "They do not preach that their god will rouse them, a little before the Nuts work loose." Kipling, 'The Sons of Martha'
  183. Re:Um really by bamf · · Score: 1

    Have you ever tried to install Windows from scratch on a computer
    -snip-
    It's a royal pain in the ass.
    -snip-

    Not any more.

    I installed Win98 last week on a machine I'd built for a friend from spare parts.

    I stuck the CD in, booted the machine, answered a few simple questions (disk formatting, which components etc) and went off to read my email. When I came back it was finished. Totally idiot proof.

    Even my father managed to install 98 a little while ago on a new machine (home built, hence no pre-installed OS)

    NT is reasonalby easy to install provided the boot disks (or CD) contain drivers for your SCSI/RAID adapters, if they don't (as with new Dell & HP servers) it's a little more complicated, but I still managed to install NT on a new server within 20 minutes last week.

  184. Pretty pathetic for a technology journalist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    #1 I agree with many other posts, this guys is using the wrong distro, redhat would be easier in many ways. #2 This guy is a tech. reporter, Why the hell doesn't this guy KNOW what a video card looks like. I would be embarrassed if I was this guys manager. that is sad. PS in cladera does XDM, GDM or something like it run automatcally on boot after the install?

  185. Re:Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by ralphclark · · Score: 1

    OK, it's true that the Win98 install is easier than it was - for some "ideal" system configurations. But that's not the whole story. I've spent two weeks so far trying to install Win98SE and although I eventually worked out most of the wrinkles in the subsequent driver upgrade and application installation procedures, I am still fighting a losing battle. I thought I had it last night finally. But on rebootin the PC this morning I found my hard disk trashed YET AGAIN. There's nothing for it but another complete format-and-reinstall. This must be about the eighth or ninth attempt now. I may get to the bottom of it in the end or I may not - I never did with Win95/OSR2. From my experience I draw three conclusions: 1) In comparing the ease of installation of Windows vs. that of Linux, you have to include the process of installing any applications since most Linux distributions automate this for you and in the case of Linux there are rarely any problems with this (SuSE Linux is a shining example). 2) Using this criterion, Windows installations are far from easy. I'm a fairly expert technician and the problems I've been facing with this Win98SE installation have been taxing me to the limit of my abilities. 3) Whatever the cause of these problems, be it buggy applications or install routines, or virus infestation, or bugs in the OS, or BIOS/hardware problems, Windows 98 is simply not a stable platform by any useful measure. The architecture is fundamentally flawed in that the OS is ultimately responsible for the ability of any other factor to bring it down.
    Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
    Thought exists only as an abstraction

  186. Re:Unix sucks! It's too powerful! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Please explain how the grep program could be more useful if it had a GUI?

    This is a troll, right ? There can't still be anyone left who believes that GUIs are supposed to represent the underlying operating system.

  187. Caldera 1.3??? Excuse me sir... by tilleyrw · · Score: 1

    But please OPEN YOUR F***ING EYES and enter the current time frame!!! If you want Caldera, use 2.3 which is a very easy install -- very similar to Windows.

    Excuse me, but I have no patience for people who not only have no mind but who also post web pages that say "I'M STUPID AND UNCONCIOUS OF THE WORLD AROUND ME!!!".

    It just touched a button in my psyche.

    --
    This post encoded with ROT26. If you can read it, you've violated the DMCA. Handcuffs please, sergeant.
  188. OT: Re::) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thanks for the links, Mr. Moss. As I've said before, it's nice to see some linux users who are friendly to those who haven't been using said OS for the past 10 years.

  189. first of all, she... by delmoi · · Score: 1

    and the thing is, she *didn't* have any errors. none at all.

    Aside from the powercut, everything whent acording to plan.

    It's great news for Linux, but I don't know about CNNin...
    "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

    --

    ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
    1. Re:first of all, she... by Negadecimal · · Score: 1

      first of all, she...

      oops.. <blush>

  190. somthing I learned quick by delmoi · · Score: 1

    I tried installing red-hat for the first time again, a few weeks ago... Make sure you remember the root password you give it, It's not 'broken' but its not very usefull ether....
    "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

    --

    ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
    1. Re:somthing I learned quick by Thrakkerzog · · Score: 1

      All you need are slackware boot/root disks. then mount the partition and reset the password to nothing.

  191. Re:Autodetection is not evil! by Rhys+Dyfrgi · · Score: 1

    I re-installed Windows in just under three hours. Hate me, but I'll re-install when Linux is easy like Windows.

    Linux may not be very easy to install, but it's a lot faster. I installed and configured Debian in under an hour, over the 'net, as in, I used no local media other than a boot disk and a file on the HD.

    I've also installed NT. It took hours, and that computer *still* doesn't work as it should, mainly because the NT install is less userfriendly than the Linux install. Want to know what that option does? Too bad, cause the NT installer won't tell you. Installing NT (for the first time) was harder than installing Linux (redhat 5.1) for the first time.
    ---

    --
    END OF LINE
  192. There are real installation issues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I've installed many versions of linux on my systems since late 1994 and always run into a few problems. The last time, about 2 months ago, I ended up installing RH6 3 times trying to get my cable modem and adaptec 1520 SCSI card working. I got the cable modem running fine, but the SCSI card now sits idle.

    The typcal installation documentation sucks for people who are used to the dos/windows filesystems and the standard types of driver installation options they run into.

    Many are hailing Linux as the great Microsoft killer and at the same time complaining about clueless newbies. Sorry, wrong number. MS software may crash all the time due to buggy drivers, layer after layer of marketing department-driven needless OS additions, and general bloat, but even a clueless newbie can usually get it installed.

    1. Re:There are real installation issues by hunterotd · · Score: 3
      even a clueless newbie canb usually get it installed.

      Really? A clueless newbie you say? Strange that many of the Math and Computer Science majors at my college can't install Windows 95 on their machines, and call me instead.

      Time after time I've said (not on here, but in RL) that if you have not done something before, it will be hard. It won't be hard after doing it a couple of times. Operating System installation, sky diving, you name it.

      I find Operating System installation easy, be it Windows or Linux. I don't know the first thing about automobiles, and have never changed the oil in my truck, so if I tried it now, would that be a fault of the vehicle? No!

      You can't make everything so simple that Joe Schmoe can do it easily and quickly on the first try. Heck, my mom didn't learn how to change channels with a remote control until about a year ago. She is of above normal intelligence, she'd just never done it before, and always had someone else there to do it for her.

      Just remember Pig Latin. Really hard until you got the jist of it, and then it suddenly became second nature. The same thing holds true for Computers. If you've never formatted a hard disk before, it will seem impossible to you.

      --
      . when in danger or in doubt, run in circles scream and shout --Robert Heinlein
  193. This isn't a very good article. by thopkins · · Score: 0

    Why is this guy installing 1.3? 2.3 is the current version. I've never used Caldera but I assume that they've improved it a lot by then. Also, why doesn't he try another distribution? Some distributions are better than others for certain people. Maybe he can say Caldera sucks, but until he uses linux more he shouldn't judge it.

  194. uhhhhh. by bano · · Score: 1

    "I open the computer case to look for brand names and memory sizes. I don't even know for sure if I have a graphics card."

    uhhhhhh, i got that far and stopped.
    im affraid ill piss my pants in laughter if i go further.

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

      I have a system who's motherboard has on-board video. So I guess I don't have a video 'card' in that system either. Have you wet yourself yet bladder-boy.

    2. Re:uhhhhh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My point is that the could have found someone alittle better to write this article, possably someone who has worked on computers, yet still never used linux before.

  195. Am I the only one laughing by mplex · · Score: 1


    I could not stop laughing as I was reading this article. I know I wasn't the only one. Personly, I dont care how hard it is for newbies to install linux. Most couldnt install windows either. Things he said I found incredibly funny. The part where he said he hit alt-f8 furing the install and all this code flew by. I was laughing my ass off. Parts like when the kernels were going by and how he lied to it and it still worked. Did anyone else find it as funny as I did? I felt sorry for the guy I guess, but it is still pretty funny...

  196. The ending is good :) by KlomDark · · Score: 1
    No matter what, the ending is funny: "I may have no idea how to use this OS but I won the video game."

    That's about how I felt! :)

  197. Re:Autodetection is not evil! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...which is all old news already.

    This would be more apparent were the 'journalist' not using a woefully obsolete version from distributor that has been historically mediocre in the 'ease of use' department as is.

    As far as 'plain english' goes. As soon as the OS doesn't recognize one device, 'plain english' won't do you much good anymore.

    Lowend generic VGA drivers are pretty useless on any platform.

  198. Re:Autodetection is not evil! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Three hours? You must be joking? You're talking about three hour windows installs and then having the gall to call Linux hard?

    Pulleeze...

    Nevermind that there really isn't anything to maintain on a workstation Unix box.

  199. Re:Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by RayChuang · · Score: 1

    If you're doing a from-scratch installation of any operating system (e.g., there's no partition defined on a hard drive), the installation of at least a workable Windows 98 installation takes about 40 minutes from start to finish if you boot directly from the OEM or full package Windows 98 CD-ROM disk. About 40% of that time is wasted doing a high-level formatting of the hard drive.

    If you know how to create the Windows 98 OEM Preinstallation Kit (OPK) setup boot diskette, the from-scratch installation I mentioned above takes about 14 minutes less, because you don't waste your time with a high-level format of the entire hard drive.

    Getting RedHat or Caldera Linux onto a hard drive is easy, but configuring the OS so it functions to something resembling Windows 98's graphical interface using Gnome or KDE is going to take quite a bit longer. Given that most graphics cards have Windows 98 drivers, taking advantage of the graphics card's capabilities is pretty easy to do.

    In short, my big disappointment with Linux is the fact configuring the OS is still quite complicated unless you have a good working knowledge of UNIX itself. Now we know why Linux Torvalds is working on the Linux 2.4.x kernel, which will have Plug-and-Play like installation of drivers and other hardware support.

    --
    Raymond in Mountain View, CA
  200. Some people shouldn't even ATTEMPT.... by iceT · · Score: 1

    Quote:

    I open the computer case to look for brand names and memory sizes. I don't even know for sure if I have a graphics card.

    Ok. I'm thinking that if this guy didn't know if he even HAD a graphics card, he has no place installing an OS...

    Just my opinion.... :)

    --
    -- You can't idiot-proof anything, because they're always coming out with better idiots.
  201. Re:How many self righteous linux geeks does it tak by Serenade · · Score: 1

    to screw in a lightbulb. Answer: they'd have to live in the dark because noone could give anyone else any advice on how to fix it, therefore noone would ever learn how to change the lightbulb. The attitude expressed by some of the posters in this situation amazes me to no end. Well.. i must say that i somewhat agree.. but this is kind of general for all os'es , no? And anyway, i was, until 6 months ago, running suse 5.0 , but got tired and removed the part. It didn't have what i needed (midi/audisoftware) But if i want that software, well i guess it's up to me to write it. Anyway, 1 week ago, i dl:ed Slackware 4.0. First of, i had had a problem with my ftp-client. (had to use the crappy built-in windows version since i didn't give myself the time to dl a working one). Secondly, while installing, the dang ftp-client had skipped some files, in various disksets, so everything was fubar. But i got my ass around to getting a working ftp-client, got all the slakware disksets on my drive, went home, and installed. It was a dang smooth ride. Until i got to ppp section. After 2 hours, it starts smoking from the modem, so i figured it was somewhat broken. Funny thing is: in minicom, when i did ATZ, it said OK, but didn't work with pppd. Anyway, changed modem, et voilà! Set up my Xserver ,no problems, started x. *ummmfff* KDE! Never in my life on my box! So i just shut down x, dl:ed WindowMaker, since that is the wm of my preferences, installed. Configured. and damnit.. still kde, what is this? MicroSoft KDE??? Easy to install, wont uninstall.. hmm.. anyway, i went to #linux on efnet, and i got great help there, actually found out that the .xinitrc was global, not by user. (is this new, or has it always been like that in slackware?) Anyway.. some people are friendly, some are not.

    --
    VIDI , VICI, VENI. (Go figure.. )
  202. Re:Complexity for the Sake of Complexity by Pretender · · Score: 1

    I don't know if many here use OpenVMS, but OpenVMS addressed several of these things. Most commands worked using parameters that were formatted similarly, and they tended to use something closer to plain English.

    Examples (albeit not perfect ones):
    UNIX: ls -l
    VMS: DIR/FULL (or) DIR/DATE/OWNER/PROTECTION

    UNIX: lpr -PPRINTER_1 filename
    VMS: PRINT/QUEUE=PRINTER_1 filename

    I do miss my regular expressions, though.

  203. Re:Unix sucks! It's too powerful! by HeghmoH · · Score: 1

    Well, I'm replying late, so probably nobody will read this, but what the heck.

    Why do you stipulate that I must be allowed to use only diagrams? Does your keyboard shut off every time you fire up a UI or something? If so, you might want to get your computer looked at....

    A GUI allows you to use both hand-waving as well as words, where each one is appropriate, assuming you're using a well-designed GUI. It should not limit your ability to "talk" if you prefer that, but it should allow you to wave your hands around, effectively, to your heart's content as well. Any argument based on the ineffectiveness of hand-waving without any verbal communication is foolish.

    --
    Mod down posts with a "Free Mac Mini/iPod" sig, they're spam!
  204. Linux hard? Try Windows! by Monty+Worm · · Score: 3
    I remember having similar sort of troubles adding hardware to my Win98 PC (all the software I have is Windows based. I use my PC mostly for gaming, and Linux support lags way behind.).

    • Add Voodoo Banshee. Install drivers with supplied disk. Throw away S3Virge. Discover half stuff crashes. Download new drivers off web. Most things run better. Except Quake II based stuff. Go off to 3dfx and pickup new 3dfx.dll for Banshee. QII runs better.
    • Then I tried to run the same system on linux (thank godness for Partition Magic :). Banshee drivers _do_ exist for Linux: they're alpha. I managed somehow to get it set up. Then I decide the resolution is too high to actually see. Run XConfigurator. It coredumps. Leave linux alone for a month. Delete partition because I wasn't using it...
    I tend to run a policy of periodically buying bleeding edge hardware. Neither Linux nor Windows particularly like this, but Linux does it better. It's way easier to find a web page that says "Linux doesn't support this" than "Ummm.... certain Win32 apps don't really like this card..."

    Because Linux geeks like new h/ware you can usually find information fast!

    --
    ... and today's pet project has ... been discarded for lack of time.
    1. Re:Linux hard? Try Windows! by Monty+Worm · · Score: 1
      I have heard bad comments regarding Win98Se.... from what I hear, I don't intend to touch it at all... worse than Win98 initial release.

      Mind you, for quite a while I was running Win98 RC-1 that Mickeysoft nicely sent to me. The again, the flatmate (Americanised: room-mate) the said this thinks I should run Windows 2000, but hey...

      --
      ... and today's pet project has ... been discarded for lack of time.
  205. he? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anybody notice that the article author's name is Robin? Thats a she not a he...

  206. Re:What about doing the same with Windows? by Carey · · Score: 1

    How many 486s have you installed Win98 on? I have tried it on two and neither method worked. It also doesn't work very well when you hard-drive is pre-paritioned for other operating systems.

  207. Re:What about doing the same with Windows? by Carey · · Score: 1

    I have installed every version of a Microsoft operating system since DOS 3 more times than I can count. On old hardware or on very large harddrives or with really new hardware Windows often does not install with the ease required for a non-technical person.

  208. Don't be mean to him, but... by SmileyBen · · Score: 1

    Sure we shouldn't be nasty about this guy just because he finds installing Linux - I'm sure everyone found it a nightmare the first time (I certainly did) - but come on, he does seem to have been a little stupid with various things. Does he seriously expect us to think 'This is a professional doing a serious investigation' when he manages to switch off his computer fiddling about with it while it's on. I'm surprised he didn't totally destroy his computer if he did that whilst installing an operating system...

    1. Re:Don't be mean to him, but... by Tarnar · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but as a technogeek, I loved it. It was a rush making it all work.. Eventually configuring X on my RH4.2 box then staring at it in wonder.. How do I START this thing?

      Oh, startx! How do I make it LOOK better? startx -- -bpp 16. These are the things that are fun to figure out.

      There's no one short, simple and stupid text file that tells you how to do everything I've learned. Because all I've learned is a LOT, from just installing (RH -> Slack -> Debian), to editors (pico -> vim) to email (pine -> fetch/procmail & mutt) and so on.

      I've learned tonnes. A reinstall of Debian takes me a matter of minutes, then the time to download all potato's debs, then getting X going, looking nice, configuring my desktop, my email settings..

      However! This is just the same as with Windows (back when I used it). You'd start out knowing next to nothing. You could read some manuals if you wanted, but you'd still learn more just using it, playing with it, building up a repository of practical knowlege.

      Anyone can learn something from a book, the true test is applied knowlege.

  209. Re:He has a point by Mock · · Score: 1


    - These are administrative functions and my experience with experienced administrators is that they prefer to rtf dox.

    I don't mind reading dox as long as they are good dox. Unfortunately there aren't very many good document writers out there, and all too often the documentation is out-of-date.
    I know there are some projects that specifically ask for doc writers, which is a very good thing IMHO.

  210. Use for 8.5 gig hard drive by HydroCarbon10 · · Score: 1

    If you can get the cylinders out of the drive undamaged you can string them together and use them as a wind chime. When my 1.3 gig drive died, I hung the cylinders on my wall and when i'm tired of working on a paper or program i stare at them as they spin around and reflect nifty patterns on my wall :-) (they're so much more interesting than writing papers on The Scarlet Letter).

    --
    The best way to accelerate a windows box is at 9.8 meters per second square.
  211. Linux is for Everyone! by Rahga · · Score: 4

    An eye-catching topic, but slightly sarcastic one too.
    With support from friends who know linux and can walk you through the installation, or if you just happen to be a natural-born computer person, linux can be for you. But, it's all in what you want to use linux for and where you want it to take you. Nobody is forcing you to use Linux. If you don't like it, then go back to Windows hell :)
    Yes, Linux is free, and that's great, but it's not something that you should even take as a factor at first in whether or not it's right for you. The fact that it's free makes it a great choice for those who already use it and want to develop for it. You have the power to improve and to contribute, and that, above all, is the main reason that Linux is free.
    If you want a great server, Linux is for you. If you want a reliable, mission-critical OS, Linux is for you. If you want to use one of Linux's many tools and applications, or just want to get away from Windows, or develop new software on an open operating system, Linux is for you. If you want to become more productive, put time into learning linux and how to put it's powerful tools to use.
    Linux is NOT for you if it's going to make you look cool. Linux is not for you if you can't accept the fact that it's not perfect either. Linux is not for you if you do not want to put forth any work into making it into a more perfect OS. And linux is not for you if your definition of a "contribution to humanity" is yet another bitchsession about how the world doesn't revolve around you.

  212. Re:Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by Rhys+Dyfrgi · · Score: 1

    Actually, the GUI setup has gone fine every time I installed Linux on my own boxes. No problems at all selecting a server, setting bpp and resolution, and getting a window manager/desktop manager up and running.

    After installing Mandrake, Linux booted into X w/KDE. After installing RH5.2, Linux booted into X w/Gnome. After installing Debian, Linux booted into X w/fvwm2 (quickly changed to windowmaker).

    So while X configuration still has major problems (on other people's boxes it's been icky... but with crap video cards that shouldn't exist [and sometimes don't]), it can go smoothly.
    ---

    --
    END OF LINE
  213. Funny you mention this by smoondog · · Score: 1

    I quite forgot about the NextStep. I've got an old Next Cube right next to me (use it as a print server). Those were good at configuring....
    -- Moondog

  214. Re:What about doing the same with Windows? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Win98 boots nicely from CD. If your BIOS doesn't support CD booting you could always use the supplied boot disk. No drivers required.

  215. "I was unable to do something new without effort!" by Imperator · · Score: 4
    He might have had more success if he read the documentation and installer help before screwing around.

    As to his inability to identify his video card...
    Let's say I'm installing a new widget for my Thingamajig. Knowing nothing about Thingamajigs beyond how to use them, I first read up on them, particularly on the new widget I'm installing. What if I want to know what widget is currently installed, but I don't know enough about my Thingamajig to find out? I could ask a friend who is knowledgeable about Thingamajigs. I could contact the manufacturer or distributor of my Thingamajig and ask. Or, I could throw my hands up in the air, give up, and despair that "Thingamajigs are so hard to use!".

    Linux is not drool-proof by any stretch of the imagination. Linus, Caldera, and the like may talk of the desktop market, but outside of IT-supported corporate networks, only users with at least some technical bent will install Linux. Microsoft isn't going to lose their market for a drool-proof OS any time soon. The fact that the users of said family of OSs don't know that with a little bit of effort they wouldn't be so Blue is irrelevant: if they aren't interested, they won't make the effort.

    I'll be surprised if Linux ever penetrates the drool-proof market. It's an OS built by its users, for its users. OSS will tend to be designed for the people by which it is designed.
    Forget it, non-technical journalist, you aren't going to run Linux well unless you're willing to make some effort; if you aren't, Windows may be better for you.

    --

    Gates' Law: Every 18 months, the speed of software halves.
  216. Re:You know, this is kind of interesting.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He gets out of the house and goes to a Borders or a CompUSA where he can see the references available or that people are selling version 2.2. Or he just goes to caldera.com and see's that version 2.3 is out.

    People aren't living on desert islands here.

  217. I knew I've read this before... by marsvin · · Score: 1

    Funny (or maybe not), but the tone of this article reminded me a lot of the diary of an AOL user.

  218. Caldera's install difficult? by mattwork · · Score: 1

    Ok, so I'm a linux newbie, but I have an extra system at home and a cable modem.

    Last week I downloaded iso's of Mandrake 6.1, Caldera's 1.3, and Debian's latest release. I burned them each to CD, and started installs of each on a fresh drive.

    I wanted to go with Mandrake and nothing else because I'd successfully installed Redhat 5.2 on a computer at work without any trouble. On my home system I knew everything that was on it, so I didn't think I'd have any trouble.

    I started Mandrake. When I got to the x server install, it probed for my graphics card (AGP Banshee card) and couldn't find it. The installer wouldn't progress after that. I couldn't find a banshee card in the listed cards so I quit the Mandrake install, as it was going no where after that step anyway.

    A longtime linux user at work told me Debian was the best distro and that if I had probs, he could telnet in and fix things. Well, I got through the install, but no networking because of a lack of DHCP and no x server either because of another failed autoprobing. So I got a command line with no networking so I couldn't search deja news for answers. I was stuck. Since he couldn't telnet to it, I said forget it.

    So finally, I plopped in the Caldera disk, rebooted. Fancy wizards walked through everything. The choices were much the same as Redhat/Mandrake's installers, but just looked nicer. DHCP worked fine, and it found my graphics card no prob. Time to go from formatted drive to running Netscape under KDE in Caldera's Linux? 30 minutes.

    It was easier than installing Win98 on the same machine (which takes about 45 minutes). No fumbling with a serial number either, that was nice too.

    1. Re:Caldera's install difficult? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I bought Caldera 2.3 and the installers autoprobe couldn't figure out that I wanted to install from the CD even though I booted from the CD! Furthermore it hung when trying to detect if I wanted to install from the network, even if I turned of the network cards!!
      The wizard may be fancy, but I never got that far, I had to do the old-fashioned install. I think that it still could use a lot of work.

  219. Re:Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by Rhys+Dyfrgi · · Score: 1

    I can have Windows 98 installed and running in about 45 minutes. If you're not used to UNIX, installing Linux will take at least twice as long.

    Let me think, how long did my first linux install take, with no help whatsoever? Hmm... I think it was around 45minutes to an hour. How long did your first MS Windows install take you?
    ---

    --
    END OF LINE
  220. You know, this is kind of interesting.... by smoondog · · Score: 2

    The fact that he installed Caldera 1.3 raises an issue, I hadn't really thought of before. As linux gets more mature there are lots and lots of old versions and distributions lying around that are going to make it difficult for newbies, such as this journalist, to figure out how to get started. Does fragmentation of distributions really improve the OS?

    -- Moondog

    1. Re:You know, this is kind of interesting.... by hunterotd · · Score: 1
      Does fragmentation of distributions really improve the OS?

      Of course! Seriously though, if you had always used Linux (Just go with it), and you saw some Windows 3.11 floppies sitting around, wouldn't you install it? Once you had, wouldn't you be complaining about how hard it was to use, how slow it was, and how ugly it looked? How would you know that there was a better and faster version out there? How would you know that the reason it was hard to use and didn't have drivers for your hardware was because the hardware hadn't been made?

      The same thing holds true here. How was he to know that there were better versions? How was he to know that the video card he was using would have been autoprobed by current distros? He just had bad luck, that's all.

      --
      . when in danger or in doubt, run in circles scream and shout --Robert Heinlein
    2. Re:You know, this is kind of interesting.... by -stax · · Score: 1
      Too true. How many Linux dist's do you have lying around the office?

      quick count finds: redhat 5.1 powertools (Sparc/alpha/i386 all in one)
      redhat 5.2 intel
      redhat 6.0 intel
      redhat 6.0 sparc
      and i know there is a set of slackware disks downstairs in my old office and that my neighbor has deb potatoe lying around somewhere... Perhaps, the dists' should start checking the date on the computer, or even have the user set the date, as a option, right off -- then, if it is increadibly old, (over a year or so?) pop up a warning, and tell the user that they are installing a rather old version of that distribution...
      -stax
      /. poster #104543567

  221. I won't flame him... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But let me relate my experience installing Windows:

    10:00 AM
    This is an appropriate time of day, right? I mean, that's when techno-savvy (cough) journalists (cough cough) are supposed to show up at work, isn't it?
    Anyway, I open up the shrink-wrapped box, and there's the CD. Jesus, $89.99 and I get this piddly-ass manual (what is it, 50 pages?) and a CD. Great.
    So I go to open up the jewel case, and there's this license agreement. Apparently, I agree to it just by opening the jewel case.
    Huh... it says that Microsoft takes no repsonsibility for what happens to my computer, and is not obligated to give me any tech support if they don't want to...
    Not a good omen.

    10:20 AM
    Well, I booted to the CD. It came up with a really ugly text-based interface. Jesus, why can't this all be GUI?

    10:30 AM
    You know that license on the CD? Well I had to read through the damn thing again! It came up on the screen and wnated me to agree to it wholeheartedly, or else no Windows for me!

    10:40 AM
    Autodetection began. The installation manual has some recommendations on how to make sure the system doesn't hang. I couldn't find any goats, so I had to sacrifice a squirrel that was outside my window instead. I hope that doesn't affect the autodetection *too* much.

    10:30 AM (next day)
    Autodetection finished. All right!! I'm... what the hell? GOD DAMN SON OF A BITCH! STUPID PIECE OF SHIT! Crash on me, will you?!
    Calm down... breathe deep... count to ten... I still wanna kill the stupid motherfucker... 1... 2... 3... 4... 5... ahh, that's better.
    I reboot to the CD again, and start the whole process over.

    10:50 AM
    Well, it's time to autodetect again. I've already called the local pet store-- maybe I should sacrifice a cat, instead...

    11:00 AM
    Get this. It finished autodetecting my hardware in two minutes. TWO MINUTES?!
    All right, it's installing the drivers... huh, I didn't know that I had a VooDoo 2 video card. I always thought that it was a Diamond Stealth... hey, that's what the video card is labelled as! What the hell is this?

    12:00 PM
    Copying program files. Expected time: 15 minutes. All right! 15 minutes and I'll be using Windows!

    1:00 PM
    50% completeion. Jesus Christ, where the hell did Microsoft learn the definition of a minute? Or is this some kind of new fucking standard!?

    2:00 PM
    Completed. Preparing to run Windows for the first time.

    2:30 PM
    Still preparing to run Windows for the first time...

    3:15 PM
    Could not load VGA.DLL What the fuck is *that* supposed to mean. I called up MS Tech Support, but all they did was poke fun at me and make me cry...

    4:00 PM
    I got it to run!! It's up, it's up!! YES!!! Now to click the start button for the first time!!
    What the hell? Fatal exception?

    AAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGHHHH HHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!

  222. Caldera should be most upset... by Hobbex · · Score: 5

    If I were Caldera this article would bother me greatly. After all, he bases the article on an old version of OpenLinux, and then recommends people to use Redhat or stick with Windows.

    Personally, what scares me is that this guy is a technology journalist... What sort of technology does he cover exactly? farming tools?

    -
    /. is like a steer's horns, a point here, a point there and a lot of bull in between.

    1. Re:Caldera should be most upset... by bmetzler · · Score: 5
      If I were Caldera this article would bother me greatly. After all, he bases the article on an old version of OpenLinux, and then recommends people to use Redhat or stick with Windows.

      Great point. I wish I would have thought about that. Doesn't that amount to basically something like libel and slander? I mean, seriously, what would Microsoft do if tommorrow /. posted an evaluation of NT 3.51 and said, "It really sux, I'm glad I have Linux to fall back on." Or a journalist in a Chevy magazine test driving an 89 Ford and saying that it was lacking many of the features that the Chevy's had as defaults. Perhaps Caldera is in a position to get a few lawyers involved?

      I don't mind people saying that computers isn't the easy field to get into. But at least if you are writing about it, you should have some understanding about what you are writing about. There should be some ethics in journalism. This was just too pitiful. Wow, I think I'm going to write an article for the local newspapers Music section this weekend. Never mind that I don't understand the first thing about good music...

      -Brent
      --
  223. COL 1.3?? by Lx · · Score: 1

    I'm not trying to flame, but the current version of OpenLinux is 2.3 - was this just a misprint, or was he seriously trying to install an obsolete version? If it was the older one, I wouldn't be surprised that he had trouble. The new COL is one of the simplest linux installs.

    -lx

    1. Re:COL 1.3?? by Roblimo · · Score: 1

      I wondered myself, then decided he/she must have meant 1.3, because OpenLinux 2.3 does a pretty decent job of detecting video cards. I almost called, but decided "Naahhh....." I'll save Andover's long distance money for more important stories.

      BTW, the conclusion of my own (I think it was the first ever) "journalist has a rough time installing Linux" story was: find a local LUG and get help. I took my own advice, and not only learned a lot about Linux, but also met a bunch of great people, many of whom now work for Andover in one capacity or another.

  224. Dont take it easy on anyone by Xafloc · · Score: 1

    I am tired of this attitude that because people are newbies we need to "forgive" them. The whole point of RTFM is that no one ever does. Im glad I was told RTFM when I was first getting into Linux, because if it weren't for that I would be like all these other saps that pop in linux help channel on IRC and ask "Can I ask a stupid question".

    The question is only stupid if you haven't tried to find the answer to it yourself.

    I think the reason that Linux has progressed so much, and so quickly is the fact that not many people are told how to do it...but are told rather where to look to figure it out yourself.

    --
    -= Xafloc =-
    alinuxbox.com
    N
    1. Re:Dont take it easy on anyone by Lx · · Score: 1

      I think the concept of RTFM is silly. Sure, manuals come in handy sometimes, but it's much easier to ask someone who knows what they're doing than to dig through pages of documentation. Plus, you'll probably learn quite a bit asking an experienced user a question than you will reading from a manual filled with information that is irrelevant to you at the time.

      -lx

  225. Installing is no longer the problem by rve · · Score: 2

    Installing a standard installation of Red Hat or debian (haven't tried any others) or FreeBSD is more or less exactly as difficult (or easy once you've seen it before, or even know what you're doing) as installing Windows NT4 from scratch, which in turn is easier and smoother (imo) than windows 95 (haven't tried '98). The only problem is, windows comes pre-installed and mostly preconfigured, the other OS-es don't. This guy would have had the same trouble and would have had to answer the same questions when installing Windows NT, or windows 95 from scratch.

    1. Re:Installing is no longer the problem by PhillC · · Score: 1

      I agree entirely. Over the last three years or so I have installed Slackware, FreeBSD, RedHat and Debian in that order. All the installations have gone relatively smoothly. The really hard bits come after the install.

      OK, now we have an OS installed. Now let's do something with it - buwmpbow (insert Wheel of Fortune Bankrupt sound)

      Basically I always ended up fdisking the hard drive and going back to Windows. Why you may ask ? Well it wasn't a lack of patience, more like a lack of prodctivity. I have never seriously owned more than one working machine, and always needed that to be available for productivity. Sure, sure partition the hard drive I hear you cry - then I run out of disk space.

      What I need is a pre-installed Linux box. Here's your word processor, spreadsheet, database, email client, web browser and net connection. Go hard or go home.

      --
      Brought to you by the author of such childrens' classics as "Some Kittens can Fly!" and "All Dogs go to Hell."
  226. other notes by Stonehand · · Score: 2

    (side note: my suspicion is, given the drawing, that many are using the wrong pronoun... but anyways...)

    * Anybody else notice that the "Related Sites", which include sites that mirror various HOWTO docs, and so forth? I wonder whether they were used.

    * It might be nice if the installation, in one of the very first screens, describes what information will be asked (like network foo, video stuff, etc).

    --
    Only the dead have seen the end of war.
  227. Complexity for the Sake of Complexity by Duncan+Kinder · · Score: 2

    It is not merely a question of whether Linux is easy or Linux is difficult in some ablsolute sense.

    As Einstein said: "Things should be made as simple as possible - but not more so."

    Bill Gates does very well selling Excel, and I would love to see my mother work that.

    The point is: to what extent are we burdening the user with Mickey Mouse issues that advance no real purpose. These are good, if you want to establish and maintain some sort of monopoly of Linux expertise and exclude outsiders. But then, you are no different from Gates, you just want to establish a different sort of monopoly.

    Take regular expressions, for example. By their nature, they are complex. Nobody's mother can do them. But do you need a different set of rules for each program that uses them? What purpose does that serve - other than to make life difficult and to create a subsidy for those who have mastered the arcane details?

    And why does every command have to be some arcane soundbite? What is wrong with plain English?

    It's stuff like this that needs to be gotten rid of.



  228. Re:Unix sucks! It's too powerful! by mpe · · Score: 1


    Try explaining calculus without using any mathematical symbols. You're only allowed to use diagrams. Your explanation will be extremely superficial at best.

    You can't use words either, especially "gradient" or "area"....
    Also something a little more sophisticated than changing a parabola to a sloping line (and vice versa)

  229. oops I meant Caldera's 2.3 linux by mattwork · · Score: 1

    I meant 2.3 instead of 1.3 in my second paragraph

  230. OT: /. needs comment pointers by Imperator · · Score: 1
    (Copy of my reply above)

    Slashdot needs a system of comment pointers. You should be able to reply to a message with a special pointer to a cid within the same story. Of course, you can always provide that cid link now, but that's at least 5 lines of text for what could be accomplished in 2.

    --

    Gates' Law: Every 18 months, the speed of software halves.
  231. Re:Uncoordinated driver having hard time learning by Roundeye · · Score: 1

    I really enjoyed that - hilarious!

    Something that this makes apparent, which few
    people want to address, is a sort of technological
    Darwinism. It happened with the automobile, it
    happened with electricity, it happened with
    telephones.

    There is a technological change which is going to
    fundamentally affect society and our everyday
    lives. It will create opportunities and
    eliminate opportunities (how many buggy-whip
    magnates are there today? how many kerosene lamp
    companies? how many Pony Express riders?).

    In the future the technically illiterate will
    be at great risk of being unemployable, not
    to mention non-functional. While I believe that
    we (on the bleeding end of the cutting edge)
    have a responsibility to mainstream technology
    as much as possible -- including making
    technology easy to use where it interfaces with
    the general populace -- those who are completely
    unwilling to understand the basics of technology
    are going to be bypassed by the multitudes who
    will.

    Fair? Hardly.
    Cruel? Maybe.
    Reality? Definitely.

    I spend a majority of my time staying abreast
    of new and mainstream technologies (as do a
    good portion of the readers of /.) and my kids
    will have a good technical education, regardless
    of what walk in life they pursue, because that
    is one of the most valuable socializing gifts
    that I can give them.

    Someone who calls himself a technical journalist
    and doesn't know what a video card is has ridden
    the wave of nepotism or mismanagement far too
    long and his job will be taken by someone more
    technically astute in the near future (I have
    already mentioned his job to a journalist
    acquaintance...). This is pure Darwinism.

    While I am glad to know how an idiot feels about
    Linux, who can't find that opinion from Aunt
    Betty sitting in front of one of your boxen
    for half an hour trying to send an email?

    This guy should go write about the Spice Girls(tm)
    or JFKJr(tm), and leave the Linux articles to
    someone with less FUD and more clue.

    If you really want to do this sort of thing right,
    the writer should be truly technically competent,
    and the installers should be technically
    illiterate -- in this way the actual difficulties
    can be assessed accurately.


    --
    "Cause there's 40 different shades of black, so many fortresses and ways to attack, so why you complainin'?"
  232. Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by fireproof · · Score: 4
    Today I decided to take the plunge. I'm going to try to install Windows 98. I don't know my video card from my mouse pad, and I have a hard time doing that "point and click" thing, but I'll do it anyway.

    1. I boot to "DOS" and I get this ugly prompt. What to do? I got get breakfast.

    2. After breakfast, I come back and call my friend, a MSCE. He tells me to change to the CD-ROM drive. It won't let me. He says I need something called a "driver." But, I don't know what that is. So, he comes over and makes it work.

    3. Now I've run this "setup.exe" file and it's doing some weird stuff. It's asking me for some number I don't know. I call Microsoft and sit on hold for 2 hours before I find out where it is--on the "Certificate of Authenticity." What's that?

    4. OK, the darn thing froze up while installing. Time to reboot. It takes me only 2 minutes to do what took hours before.

    5. I'm all installed up, but it didn't detect my sound card and I can't get my screen to display more than 16 colors! My MSCE friend says it's because I need to get a "video driver" because I've got an "AGP" graphics card, whatever that is. He says to get it off the internet, but I can't get Windows to dial out on my modem. It won't see it.

    6. Now it says I've performed an illegal operation! What did I do?

    I don't know what I've done and I can't get it to work, but now I feel like a real live major geek! I'm cool!

    --

    /* "A fool does not delight in understanding, but only in revealing his own mind." */

    1. Re:Can You Install Windows 98? I think I can! by mpe · · Score: 1


      you can literally install the full or OEM installation version of Windows 98 directly from a CD-ROM boot. Try THAT with Linux.

      Works fine with many distributions.
      Indeed IIRC Linux was "theer first"...

  233. I thought it was a great story... by Filter · · Score: 1

    I chuckled right through it...she sounds like she had a blast installing it...installing linux as an adventure.


    --

    "better ways of doing things eventually just replace the inferior things" - Linus Torvalds 09-08-07

  234. Embedded on MB? by FascDot+Killed+My+Pr · · Score: 1

    I've had plenty of PCs where I couldn't figure out what video card it had installed. These were mostly crap PCs with everything, video, sound, modem, etc is all "built right in".
    ---

    --
    Linux MAPI Server!
    http://www.openone.com/software/MailOne/
    (Exchange Migration HOWTO coming soon)
  235. Re:This IS a problem with Linux!!! by mpe · · Score: 1


    *sigh* I've been reading so many posts about how linux has a bad install.. and your post even goes as far to say Linus and Alan should be taking a deep breath instead of focusing on the kernel. OK. Linus and Alan work on the _kernel_ they don't work on installers.

    Continuing with the motoring analogy "should engine and transmission builders supply the upholstry?"

  236. Um really by aheitner · · Score: 4

    Have you ever tried to install Windows from scratch on a computer (Win95, win31 was a pleasant breeze as long as you had the disks on a network. We used to set up Win31 machines with scripts in like 2minutes each)?

    It's a royal pain in the ass.

    You sit there searching for drivers for your hardware that works (unless you get shafted and something happens like the protected mode drivers for the IDE controller are on a CD-ROM ... which doesn't work because you're using the realmode drivers).

    It's even worse if, like this guy, you don't even know what hardware you have.

    Win95 tries to plug-and-play. It invariably screws up complex machines.

    Several of my friends built high-end machines this summer. Dual-slocket Celerons, DVD drives, CD burners, sound cards, NICs. We were using a variety of standard video cards while waiting for G400s. The only piece of hardware that didn't give us any trouble was the one that doesn't work in Linux -- the DVDs. Everything would have been fine in Linux, where I could have configured it without the bloody PnP drivers magically making up rules, and the operating system idiotically failing to detect conflicts as it assigned IRQs. It took several days to get those systems working with Win98. (NT was unhappy with the large HDs and never quite worked right, though I don't remember if it was the 20gig IDEs or 18gig SCSIs it didn't like, or if it was just a partition size thing).

    Face it. You think windows is easy because you buy computers with it already installed. It's way more of a nightmare than Linux. At least someone who knows hardware and Linux can install Linux quite easily. I'm an extremely experienced windows user, and I can't necessarily make windows work right.

    1. Re:Um really by nevets · · Score: 2

      Actually I install Linux all the time. It's pretty easy (for me). Yes the first time I installed linux I had trouble (Slackware on floppies) but I learned how to do it. I also have (and still have) trouble installing Windows. But that is because I usually don't install Windows often.

      So I think this installing of Windows and Linux comparison is quite off. If you are use to installing Windows then yes it is easy. If you are use to installing Linux, that is easy to. As I have noted in an earlier post, I installed RedHat via ftp (try that with Windows) and the only problem I had was to find a mirror that didn't have the anonymous users maxed out.

      I recommend you install a more recent copy, which is more likely to include drivers for unusual hardware like yours.

      Funny, I usually say the same thing when I hear people installing old versions of Linux (say Caldera 1.3)

      Steven Rostedt

      --
      Steven Rostedt
      -- Nevermind
    2. Re:Um really by konstant · · Score: 1

      I install Windows all the time. Literally every week. It's part of my job. I don't feel it's difficult in the least. Unless my machine has hardware too recent to be included in the drivers library, I do not need to know a thing about the internals of my machines. If you're having trouble with Windows intallations, I recommend you install a more recent copy, which is more likely to include drivers for unusual hardware like yours.
      -konstant

      --
      -konstant
      Yes! We are all individuals! I'm not!
  237. How does it compare to Windows? by jtseng · · Score: 1
    I upgraded my notebook to W2kS-RC2 last night. It took so long I fell asleep. Meanwhile it took all of a total of... 25 minutes to install Mandrake RHL6. Go figure.

    "Microsoft is the epitome of innovation and product quality."

    --

    Sanity.html - Error 404 not found

  238. In the End, Linux is Damn Expensive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've read all the posts up to this point. And, for an operating system that is supposed to be free (or may cost you $25 to $70), in the end for someone with no experience, no knowledge of UNIX, or programming, it could well cost them $5000 just to learn. (Hardware costs not included.) This includes all the books they need to buy, driving back and forth to LUGs, time taken away from social/family activities just to learn this OS. I'm not saying this is right or wrong. But it's clear that Linux is not free or cheap. There is a price you have to pay if you decide to use it.

    Caveat Emptor

  239. does she know more than portrayed? by MoToMo · · Score: 1

    Is it just me, or does she sound like someone who knows what's going but pretending to be a clueless newbie? Something about the way a lot of it is worded sounds to me like she actually knows something (after all, she got an old version of caldera working on a presumably newer machine) Maybe she's just playing a dumb newbie for the article.....

  240. WIN IS BETTER...AT LEAT UNTIL IT IS INSTALLED by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    REGARDLESS OF WHAT ANY ONE THINKS (OR WOULD LIKE TO THINK) LINUX IS A HARDER INSTALL THEN WINDOWS. THE PROBLEM LIES WITHIN THE VIDEO CARD CONFIGURATION. WINDOWS IS VERY GOOD DETECTING VIDEO CARDS, ESPECIALLY NEW ONES, AND LINUX IS NOT. END OF STORY. I REMEMBER WHEN I FIRST INSTALLED SLACKWARE YEARS AGO IT WAS HELL... AND I NEVER HAD ANY PROBLEMS INSTALLING WINDOWS PREVIOUSLY, EVEN ON THE FIRST TIME. WHEN YOU ARE A LINUX NEWBIE THINGS LIKE PROBING THE VIDEO CARD AND MESSAGES SAYING DOING THIS OR THAT CAN POSSIBLY DAMAGE YOUR HARDWARE IS INTIMIDATING... WANT TO WIN THE LINUX VS WIN WAR.... PNP IS A GREAT START...

  241. How many NT machines are installed incorrectly? by yorkie · · Score: 1

    I started work at a major UK high-street company 3 months ago, working for a contractor. (I don't want to mention their name or even field of work).

    I quickly discovered that ever NT Workstation and Windows 95 machine was incorrectly installed, resulting in severe performance problems.

    Not one of the 100s of IDE machines based at either the HQ or the remote sites had had DMA enabled on the IDE channel. This is a fundamental with either operating system; in 95 it can be circumvented by installing the latest driver disk from the motherboard chipset manufacturer, and under NT a registry key needs setting - Microsoft even provide a utility to set the key automatically. This simple change produces dramtic results, freeing up many wasted CPU cycles.

    There were other problems as well with the network client taking a long time to resolve names, due to the incorrect protocol order.


    This got me thinking - how many machines worldwide are setup in such a way? Must be millions. In fact I've hardly ever come across a Windows95 machine that has had the correct IDE drivers installed.

  242. One good thing. . . by G · · Score: 1

    For all if it, they did spell out a few things that we could do to shore up the installations for idiots. Some really simple stuff too.

    G

  243. This IS a problem with Linux!!! by jonr · · Score: 2

    People here need an attidute change, reading the posts here make that obvious.
    "He should have used Red Hat"
    Not relevant, the poor sod was trying to install Linux, what the heck should he care about this or that distributions?
    "A novice computer user should not be trying to install an OS"
    Why not? Obviously, a novice user open-minded enough to try to install alternative OS should been encouraged.
    "The strangest thing is that for an accomplished websurfer, a 404 error should be no big deal."
    Excuse me sir? The documentation was plain wrong! Is it too much to ask for have it correct?
    Linux is difficult to install, (so is Windows, but let's not sink to their level, shall we?) :), but I think there intelligent and clever people out there that can (and will) fix it. Maybe Linus and Alan and others should take a deep breath and look at Linux from end user perspectvie, instead of figuring out what cool feature should be put in the next kernel release. I do want alternative to Windows, although a BeOS user myself, I think right now Linux has the momemtum to become a viable alternative to Windows, but this is one of the things that needs to be tackled.
    At least until we get Linux pre-loaded on 20% of new PC's :)

    Jón

  244. Old Version of Caldera by smooge · · Score: 0

    The main problem I see with the article is that
    he was using a very old version of Caldera. If Roblimo or someone else know how to contact him,
    he should be let known that he needs to have gotten Caldera 2.3 versus 1.3.

    This happened to us back in 1998 when we got a bad review for what we thought was 5.2 as that was what we were shipping. It turned out to be 4.0 that the person had found at a shop.

    --
    -- SJS smooge at smoogespace dot com
  245. What Nightmare??? by HydroCarbon10 · · Score: 1

    My first distro was Redhat 4.2, it was great, until I got to the point where it said localhost login: . I had never used UNIX before and the only reason I bought Linux was because it looked like it might be cool. After finally getting logged in, I was faced with another challenge: [root@localhost] #, after trying a bunch of stuff I finally figured out that you have to type ./ before the filename of things you want to run. Then I disoverd X, WOW graphics (this was right after I almost fried my monitor). My suggestion for Linux, always keep something nearby that you can smash without costing you much, even with KDE and GNOME things don't always go smoothly, but hey Linus said that Linux was supposed to be fun, not user friendly.

    --
    The best way to accelerate a windows box is at 9.8 meters per second square.
  246. What about installing WIN98 by FPhlyer · · Score: 1

    As a Micro$oft Certified Professional (WINNT), my advice to this guy would be to try installing WIN98 before complaining about problems installing Linux. When I do a linux install, the whole process is about 5-15 minutes (depending on what packages I install). WIN98 took me about an hour and a half (and still didn't work with my hardware). I guess I would give more thought to the article if I knew whether or not he has ever installed a fresh OS on a system before. The article gives us no indication that he has experience installing anything, so what is he comparing the Linux install to?

    --
    Brought to you by Frobozz Magic Penguin Fodder.
  247. Uncoordinated driver having hard time learning by LL · · Score: 5

    {Parody mode on of original}

    These god-fangled Model-Ts may be Ford's hotest piece of metal but are they the car of the people?

    Would you recognise a z-crank if you tripped over one?

    My month-long effort to be cool and try and move from point A to point B without crashing at point C,D,E,F gives me chilling flashbacks to learning how to ride a horse without having people laugh at me. For now, I'm glad to have ol' Silver back with me to rely on.

    The good ol' boys warned me beforehand. They had trying finding the pedals and their friends throw bits of metal around on that silly assembly line thingy. I'm car-literate since I've actually washed an early model before becoming a news flack. We're in the 90s but I'm a bit clueless about all the moving odd bobs inside.

    My advice is if you've barely mastered whip-cracking and never changed a tire, stick with the ol' feller or take the train. If you know an oil change from elbow grease, perhaps you'd even find this fun (gasp of shock and horror).

    In truth, stalling made the task of backing out the driveway wasted the whole day, wasting at least 3 hours figuring out those crazy levers. In the end, with no decent horse sense and as chummy with a wheel as I was with phys-ed torture sessions, you know, the one where the teach' nursemaided those skiiny geeks and prevented us jocks from having fun.

    I opened the engine and figured out the hole for that metal thingy you call the crank handle, right? I try to yank the gear as written on that flimsy bit of paper they call instructions manual but those gunshot backfires nearly gave me a heart attack. Not a good omen.

    I turn to the "Cleaning Engine" page in teh manual but couldn't figure out that picture with all the bits and pieces meant. The next page says something about changing oil but all I want to do is drive this silly hunk of junk, not build it. Opening up the engine didn't show any spots to hook the reins.

    I turn the handle but think something's wrong as it was making all these funny noises like my horse has colic or something. I press the pedal and nearly wiped out my favourite mail box. At least a horse is smart enough to avoid impaling itself.

    Well, it least it seems to move but don't know why I have to keep looking over my shoulder to see where I'm going all the time. I survive smashing into the barn door but the manual warns against driving without flags and horn blowing. I get outright dirty trying to count the cylinders and rpms as suggested, taking half an hour to motor 50 feet back to the house.It then dies for some strange unknown reason so I know it's time for lunch.

    After a nice big juicy steak, I give the od' editor a hollar but he mentions something about gas fill-up and to check the tank (as if I'd containminate my washing water!). After a while, a neighbour drives by so I swallow my pride (yes siree, gave me indigestion for resta the day) and asks what a gas tank looks like. He mocks me "And you're learning how to drive?". Next time he gives any mouth, I've gotta shotgun handy. He helps me fill it up a bit (at least I guess which is the right hole) but then some shit musta hit the fanbelt so I drop this project for a couple of hours.

    At this point, I'm burnt out. I start wildly guessing buttons to push. God must have been with me as it started again (must remember to buy a new can for that mailbox). I can make it to the barn (and even stop!) without hitting anything too important. That's good enough for me.

    Then I head home, bleary-eyed. My superficial knowledge of gasoline engines made this project frustrating. I would have helped if I were a mechanic. On the other hand, I'm surprised I got as far as I did, just like trying to connect with a baseball bat. It was mildly fulfilling in a mysterious way. I may have no idea how to use this car but I got my hands dirty.

    {Parody mode off}

    I sure would go a lot better when someone invents the automatic GUI transmission! No disrespect to the poor guy but unfortunately it is relatively early days and the only way to learn is to be willing and get those hands dirty. Congrats on making a start and a warning to the rest of the Linux mechanics that exotic details of kernel file spaces is as relevant as quantum physics to the average driver.

    LL



    1. Re:Uncoordinated driver having hard time learning by Pholostan · · Score: 1


      Bwahahahahaaaa!

      Very, very, VERY good!

      Amazingly funny story, and a seriously good point.

      --

      Everybody knows that we are the evil boys, making noise with deadly toys.
  248. why is this person a tech journalist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if this person does not know what a modem or a video card is, why is this person writing about computers? i do not know anything about medicine, so i do not write article for the New England Journal of Medicine on how my sinuses hurt (and they do). i also do not call myself a medical jouralist. if this person was news journalist and tried installing linux, then i would be impressed...but a tech journalist should be an expert at least with windows and pc hardware...or else why would you read any articles by that person?

  249. dumb shit. by PimpSmurf · · Score: 1

    not to be rude...
    but installing caldera when you know nothing about your computer??? silly! He should have gone with slackware/redhat/suse... anything except caldera or debian... they are great distros... but NOT... and I mean NOT for 1st time linux folk!
    This article is kind funny... but also misleading about linux.
    PimpSmurf

    www.KMFMF.org

    --
    Stupid people do stupid things... Smart people outsmart each other... --System of a Down
    1. Re:dumb shit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how was he to know this?

  250. Windows by infojack · · Score: 2

    I can install Linux just fine. I can install Solaris just fine. But installing Windows is another story. I'm not sure if it windows, or people creating crap for windows. I still can't get a driver for my sound card. (the manufacturer won't give it out), and the major vendor I bought the thing from doesn't give it out. So by following the logic of all the people who hate linux, if my sound card doesn't autodetect during windows install, then windows sucks right? Oh ya.. and windows did not detect the modem either.... so does that make windows suck even more? On a brighter note, installing redhat on my alpha, everything was detected. :)

  251. Re: Car engine installation is so hard! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, I think I'll install a new engine in my car tomorrow. Sure, I know next to nothing about cars, but how hard could it be? And if it doesn't work out, I'll write a big article about how difficult VW's are (since that's what I have) to work on, implying that it's their fault.

  252. Autodetection is not evil! by Tackhead · · Score: 5
    Fair warning, minor rant coming up.

    The one good thing about the Windoze install is autodetection of hardware from a huge variety of vendors.

    To us geeks, that's lame. I mean, fer chrissakes, how could anyone not know what their hardware is, and if we don't, we know what's close-enough-to-work-on-boot. Don't have an SBSuperMegaWowzersLive! driver on your Windoze CD? Tell Windoze to pretend it's an SB64 or whatever, which'll be close enough for now, and install the right drivers later, simple, right?

    Wrong.

    The fact that the guy didn't even know if he had a video card (i.e. that "having a video card" is exactly the same in terms of installation as "having a chipset-built-into-the-motherboard") should be telling us something. I'll bet you any money that if the Linux install had popped up a cute little window with a penguin and an animated magnifying glass (to show the user that the system hadn't hung) and said something like "now looking for video hardware... you have a FooBar video card... now installing FooBar video drivers... now looking for sound card...", the guy would have been happy. Since the home user still has to install Linux him/herself, it's incumbent on us to make that installation at least as easy as a Windoze install.

    Your installer can't fully identify the hardware? Make a guess based on the manufacturer. Can't even guess? Default to 640x480x16 VGA, just like Windoze, and pop up a note to the effect of "I couldn't figure out what you've got, but I know this'll work. Read this file or go to this URL for assistance." Heck, since we're not M$, we can even provide useful information - like "I dumped the information I could glean from your hardware into this other file. Show this file to someone who knows a lot about computers, and see if he can recognize something."

    NO, the Windoze way of "plug it in and watch the installer scribble on your hard drive as it makes educated guesses as to your hardware config" approach isn't the kind of flexibility we want for ourselves, but if Linux is ever gonna Dominate The World, we've gotta stop designing for ourselves and start designing for the guys who don't know whether they've got video cards or not.

    1. Re:Autodetection is not evil! by W3S · · Score: 1
      NO, the Windoze way of "plug it in and watch the installer scribble on your hard drive as it makes educated guesses as to your hardware config" approach isn't the kind of flexibility we want for ourselves, but if Linux is ever gonna Dominate The World, we've gotta stop designing for ourselves and start designing for the guys who don't know whether they've got video cards or not.
      There are always a couple of quotes like this every time one of the Robs posts one of these articles about Linux being hard to install. Are you sure that this is what you want? I am not sure I can see any reason for the Linux community to be so worked up about "World Domination" Why do we need everyone and their grandmother to be able to use Linux.

      Right now we have an operating system that a slightly above average user can install and use with a little bit of work. Want to play with the GIMP for FREE!! (and legally no less). Take the time or find someone to help you learn what a video card is. This acts as a reward system for those who have the desire to go the extra mile.

  253. What is up with these moderators. by thopkins · · Score: 1

    I know now you'll probably make this a -1, but moderators why did you make my previous post "O, Redundant". I looked at the article, read the few comments there at the time, and posted this. I didn't see anything that said exactly what I did at the time. If I had I wouldn't have posted anything. Moderators you guys need to lighten up. You're here to moderate good posts up, the only things you should moderate down are "first posts" and flamebait. I don't see what I did to deserve a 0.

    1. Re:What is up with these moderators. by thopkins · · Score: 1

      Off topic? Guys if you had been fair in the first place I never would have posted this thing.

    2. Re:What is up with these moderators. by Great_Jehovah · · Score: 1

      I do not think you should take it so personally. The point of moderation is to improve the signal-to-noise ratio. That your post and all but one of the others with the same basic content were moderated down as "redundant" seems to me to be useful and correct.

    3. Re:What is up with these moderators. by thopkins · · Score: 1

      Taking it personally? But this is SLASHDOT, what else is there to this world.

  254. Why not take it easy by mapletree · · Score: 2


    'I am tired of this attitude that because people are newbies we need to "forgive" them. The whole point of RTFM is that no one ever does. Im glad I was told RTFM when I was first getting into Linux, because if it weren't for that I would be like all these other saps that pop in linux help channel on IRC and ask "Can I ask a stupid question".'

    Why do newbies need your forgiveness? Have they committed a crime against you, specifically, or against the community in general? The answer, of course, is NO. Newbies who incur your annoyance are doing only that - annoying you. They are people sharing the same virtual space as yourself but without the skills to move as quickly or as adeptly. In that sense they're kind of like bikers or pedestrians or even new drivers - except luckily, newbies can't cause traffic accidents. You have a choice in your reaction to them. You can blast the horn, give them the finger, or yell at them to get out of the crosswalk. Or you can be a polite citizen and be patient or help the little old lady across the street.

    At the very least, I'm asking you to ignore them, because unless we WELCOME new members to our community, it will DIE. Not everyone was born knowing how to use computers and people who are making the effort to learn deserve patience. Even if they go to the help channel to ask their question instead of leafing through an intimidating manual (what a crime).

  255. Oh the good old days :) by nevets · · Score: 1

    I did my first install with old Slack on floppies as well.

    Now-a-days, I just got done installing RedHat via FTP. One floppy for the bootnet.img and the rest was to locate a RedHat mirror that was accepting anonymous users. Boy that was easy, and quite fun.

    I still have a dual boot of slackware because it will always have a place in my heart (boy am I a geek :)

    Steven Rostedt

    --
    Steven Rostedt
    -- Nevermind
  256. He has a point by Mock · · Score: 2

    Actually, he has a point there.

    Why can't the linux installer check the hardware automatically like windoze does?
    Why can't you ever back up in an installer menu system?
    Why aren't installers ever checked to see if they work properly in situations other than the "everything worked perfectly and the user didn't deviate from the script" situation?

    I've yet to see a linux installer that a) works properly and b) is low on headaches.

    I even tried the new Caldera installer (the one with all the flashy animations running around) but it has its own share of headaches.

    What really bothers me is how the braindead distribution creators choose what programs get installed on your machine.

    Ever try to install Redhat without X?
    Ever try to install it with ftp/http and no X? I'm not sure if it's possible.

    Caldera has an install that supposedly doesn't install X, but if you look under the hood afterwards, there it is.

    Have you ever looked at all the crap that gets installed?
    Why do I need to have giftrans and xfig installed on a non-X machine that will only run a web server? Why did it install TeX? Why did it install gimp? Why did it install xbill and a bunch of other stupid games?
    I could probably shave off a few hundred megs if I went and manually selected files (like I do in redhat) but Caldera doesn't offer that option, and I'd rather not spend an hour doing it anyway.
    What was redhat smoking when they decided how to categorize the programs in the installer?

    Why do I have to select and deselect, only to find dependancies on something I don't want to install (because it has dependancies on a few hundred megs of other stuff)? Why is there no option to deselect the packages causing the dependancy failures? Don't they realize how LONG it takes to go back through the million categories (chosen by random number generator, I'm sure) to try to find the packages causing the dependancy failures? (after writing them down on pad and paper because they forgot to include a dependancy window)

    Linux is fine if you don't have to change anything. If you do, get ready for a week of document reading and cryptic rc file configuring (and don't expect all the config files to be in the same place!).
    Want to add a user that has ftp access, but no web page and no mail, or has mail but nothing else?
    Want to change the permissions of one ftp user but don't want to create a bunch of groups?
    Want to make an ftp user that doesn't exist anywhere else on your system?
    Good luck, and good hunting (in the dox)!

    This is what NT has over Linux. If Linux can't address these (serious) issues, it won't get very far.

    I do hope that once Borland gets c++ builder out for linux, developers will start to realize the benefits of a gui-based configuration system (designed by gui designers, not engineers!!!).

  257. so much bellyaching, and yet.. by hatless · · Score: 2

    The writer only really went through the install process once! And it worked! Hell, the first time I installed Linux back in 1995, after a year of Solaris expeience and with some serious geek credentials, it took me two whole weekends to get it more or less running.

    And as nasty as the process is (take note here, geeks: there's too much jargon in even Caldera's installer!), it doesn't sound all that much worse than installing NT 4.0. There are good lessons here.

    For all the writer's sarcasm and suffering, I'd say Caldera deserves some quiet applause. And--oh-yeah--all distro maintainers should take note; say it along with me: there's too much jargon in installers.

    And fer chrissakes, the warning about XF86 autoprobe damaging hardware really isn't necessary, is it? Sure, it's correct, but friggin' DirectX autoprobes and you don't see it warning anyone of peril. We're such pedants, us Linux folk.

  258. Arghh by Xafloc · · Score: 1

    There is _nothing_ wrong with asking an experienced user. But how is it fair for them to spend the time to help you if you haven't tried to solve the problem yourself?

    Unless you are going to start paying the people who are helping you when your not contributing, I suggest you read the manual.

    --
    -= Xafloc =-
    alinuxbox.com
    N
  259. Maybe demo, but definitly reading by kalmite · · Score: 1

    I am a several month 'veteran' of Linux, but had *lots* of exp w/ windows and dos before as well as hardware, and one thing I have found, Linux is an OS where reading is required (unless your a senseless user who uses 2 or 3 programs). A demo will definitly help those new to the OS get comfortable with how Linux works, but nothing will replace the need for reading HOW-TOs, man pages, and books... there is just too much info to fit into a 'demo'.

  260. Out of the Box?!? by Tim · · Score: 1

    "the main reason I run Windows98 still is that I run bleeding-edge hardware which Linux/Windows NT both can take months or years to support fully, yet Win9x supports out of the box."

    Ummm...No.

    If you run bleeding-edge hardware, you almost never get support for it "out of the box," even with Windows. You have to install the drivers that come with the hardware, maybe, but that's a matter of manufacturer support of Windows, NOT Linux support of the hardware in question. Of course, if your idea of bleeding-edge hardware is a new floppy drive or a Zip drive, well...

    --
    Let's try not to let fact interfere with our speculation here, OK?
  261. It is too damned hard by Chorizo · · Score: 2
    I've been using linux for about 6 years... I'm no expert at it, certainly not in this circle, but it is what I develop on, and use for 10+ hours a day. I've built and installed linux on many boxes, and I've had trouble more times than not.

    The point is, the author is correct, to the average computer user, this is not the easiest task. The installation DOES requier that you know what hardware you have installed. But more than that... my generic ethernet card installs as ne2k-pci, my adaptec scsi card as aic-7000... what's that all about... my tnt2 is a riva 128..

    Point is, getting linux up and running is a headache to more than a few people. Installation programs bail out with cryptic error messages, package and program descriptions read like a foreign lanugage textbook. It's not about cramming features in anymore. The platform is well ahead of the next best thing, the software can do anything, and it's getting better every day. The problem is that the audience is expanding.

    My mother can't tell the difference between the TI typewriter and her PC, but I've seen her install windows, ms office, type up a report and print it out in under a few hours. I shudder to think what decisions she'd have to make configuring the printer port to use a postscript filter, or configuring the sound card.

    So the suggestion I humbly offer is that the error messages be decoded into normal speech, the installation programs given detailed descriptions to each of their options (not only what the choice is, but when to pick it, when not to pick it, and what happens after you do). Also, programs need to behave in a more intelligent manner when dealing with errors. Instead of bombing out to the console when my X server can't find one font server or font, it should move on, make a substitution, etc.

    And if all of this can be done already, that's great, but it should be done by default, or it should be made perfectly clear up front which button to push to get it.

    --Chorizo

    Now if someone can tell me how i can get ssh and ncftp3 to appear back as options in my debian package manager, i can continue work... one day they were there, the next day, gone...

  262. Too bad ignorance isn't painful. by Whatthehellever · · Score: 0

    How dare a senior staff writer of CNN blast something publically because he is ignorant on the subject and the look of something scares him away. Everyone wonders why Linux gets a bad rap-- It is not the responsibility of a representative of CNN to do this. How unprofessional!

    --

    ---
    IMHO, of course.
    May the SOURCE be with you.
    1. Re:Too bad ignorance isn't painful. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is interesting... all you guys are trying to scare people away from being critical of Linux.


      Fucking sad.

  263. Too Hard? I think not.. by MrPlab · · Score: 2
    Well, I have to admit - I havn't been using Linux for *that* long at the console, so I was totally lost when I first even thought of installing Linux. BUT, I took my time.. and planned my moves over about 2 weeks. I read lots and lots of documents written by various people. Sure they were way over my head, sure they had bad grammer, sure they didn't tell me step by step what to do but they certainley gave me a clue.

    I think that these journalists are looking for a high-end OS that has a high-end setup program. It doesn't matter if the guy knows what he's doing, it's if he thinks he knows what he's doing. It's basically a mind over matter situation here - and it's utterley pathetic.

    Ok, ok.. so your a bit bitter on anyone giving negative comments to linux. Uhm.. tell me this - why? Sure you like it, and maybe you like the Backstreet Boys too.. I don't give a flying frig about any of it - I have opinions on linux and the Backstreet Boys that I keep to myself because I know people would be offended to hear them - on either side of the spectrum. For example, one of these statements below will offend you:
    • - Backstreet Boys suck...

    • - Backstreet Boys rule...
      - Linux sucks because...
      - Linux rules because...

    It's a primary yelling match that belongs in the sandbox or on the playground, not in office buildings or tech-savvy places.

    So these journalists are just looking for things that please them.. whether it be a blue setup screen or a red setup screen, whatever appeals to them is what effects their point of view in their column. But at least try to give them credit.. somebody has to write crappy articles or else we'd never have anything to criticize :-)

    Peace,
    Matthew
    _____________________________________
    --
    sortakinda.ca | canadian paraphrasing.
  264. Startx by Yebyen · · Score: 1
    LOL it looks like he gave up when he had one step left: startx. haha i don't know how descriptive the caldera manual is, but in redhat it gives you an option to use X by default. This is the best idea for anyone who has no clue at linux and doesn't want to learn the hard way (reinstalling about 20 times before finally getting it rignt) like me and all those brave souls who came before me.

    Patrick Barrett
    Yebyen@adelphia.net

    --
    Restating the obvious since nineteen aught five.
  265. ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't mean to troll here, but has anybody anywhere heard anything remotely good about OpenLinux? This the second rant I've heard by tech journalists, who for some reason bought Caldera and were totally burned by it. Does anyone know if OpenLinux has any redeeming features?

  266. With this attitude, Linux will never succeed by SadisticFury · · Score: 1
    As I read the comments posted here, I get the general feeling that you all think the guy is a total moron. If this is the classification that all people who can't install Linux sucessfully(which this guy managed) get, then Linux will never succeed. Most people could care less if Linux is open source, or whether kernel modules can be loaded dynamically, or even about stability. They want the product to work out of the box, and once its installed, they want it to be easy to use. If all you can tell these people is RTFM, then Linux will simply remain an OS for the elite computer users of the world.


    Secondly, people can be intelligent, and yet be ignorant in computing at the same time. Installing Linux, and using it successfully, versus using Windows/MacOS, is the same as writing essays in college, versus writing a novel. It is a big step, and the vast majority of the population can't do it. Even though most of you, like me, know how to compile modules that allow for SCSI emulation, you have to be open to that fact that an entire world exists outside of computing, and that there are people that dominate those other parts, like we dominate the world of computing. It is our job to make it simpler for the rest of them. This is the only way Linux will become widespread among the general population.

  267. Exactly. by fireproof · · Score: 1
    Although the writer should be commended for wanting to try out Linux in the first place, a person who doesn't know what a video card looks like has no business installing an operating system.

    I know a good bit about automobiles, and I do minor repairs on my car from time to time, but I'm not going to go out and try to install a new transmission or rebuild the old one and expect it to go smoothly. In fact, if I wanted to learn how to do such a thing I would FIND SOMEONE WHO KNEW WHAT THEY WERE DOING and get them to help me with the process. Why? Because I wouldn't know a synchro from any other part in the darn thing!

    Can you imagine if I wrote an article about doing something like that for CNN? I would be laughed off the face of the earth.

    It frustrates me when people write articles like this. But, on the other hand, maybe the writer will take the time to learn the OS and will actually like it. Maybe some knowledge about computers will be the result of the experience.

    --

    /* "A fool does not delight in understanding, but only in revealing his own mind." */

  268. Re:Unix sucks! It's too powerful! by Signal+11 · · Score: 2
    If you want to work on your OS at the command line level, that's wonderful. But if there are no other choices, then the software is inherently poor.

    Uhhhh, no. grep is the fastest search program available, and can parse gigabytes as fast as the HDD can supply it. But grep is strictly command-line, so it sucks? What planet are you from? It may be the wrong choice for somebody who isn't aquainted to the command-line, but that doesn't mean it sucks.

    You're implying that because you don't own a ferrarri, you're entitled to say they suck. Sorry, but it doesn't work that way in the Real World(tm). If you don't own/know how to use something, that doesn't mean it's bad - it simply means you don't know how to use it . 'tis this, and nothing more. Claiming that the user should not require any training to be proficient is a Microsoftian-fallacy. To use power-tools, you need to know how to use them.

    Unix sucks - it's too powerful!

    --

  269. What about doing the same with Windows? by Carey · · Score: 1

    I would recommend that the author be given a new PC with only DOS (or maybe nothing) installed and then asked to install Windows 98 only with what comes in the retail box.

    Where's that CD-ROM driver now?

    Linux developers can learn something from this. After all, why should people have to know what a kernel is?

  270. I do install windows all the time by aheitner · · Score: 2

    But on different hardware every time, always late model hardware, and on full machines.

    I work at a video game company. We don't use standard computers, we use rather high-end gaming systems. We use the latest video cards, sent to us by the manufacturers.

    The last machines I installed had serious issues because they had so many peripherals, they used every one of their IRQs even after you disabled the parallel port, the serial ports, and anything else you could find. None of the hardware was unsupported by Windows -- it was all fairly standard stuff. Multiple IDE and SCSI HDs, Plextor SCSI burners/CD drives, vid cards, 3Com NICs, MS mice (USB I think, or maybe PS/2).

    Of course, if you set up the same machine every time, you can get it down pat and efficient. Setting up the second of these two identical machines was much easier than setting up the first. Similarly, installing windows on standard hardware is very easy (assuming you know enough and have good drivers ready etc etc), but I find this no different from Linux.

  271. Server by Yebyen · · Score: 1
    Has anyone else noticed the slowness of CNN's servers whenever they're on slashdot? And they've been on so frequently lately that they're almost constantly slashdotted. Maybe they should upgrade if they wanna keep writing tech stories :-) (Recommended rating: Slightly offtopic, funny. 2) haha not likely, eh? i just need karma

    Patrick Barrett
    Yebyen@adelphia.net

    --
    Restating the obvious since nineteen aught five.
  272. Not the point by YourFingerYouFool · · Score: 1

    I have watched (and listened to) seasoned computer veterans sweating and swearing over a simple microsoft (95/98/nt) install and whistle through a Linux install. The great unwashed buy their computers pre installed with ms along with a handy dandy crash CD to reinstall. Perhaps the working press who have had to reinstall their ms windows boxes think that it is a great technological triumph to do so (insert CD-ROM, press install). Preinstalled Linux boxes with a preburned crash CD might make them feel like they are True Geeks(TM) who can speak with real authority.
    Whatever, just my $7.83 worth(I have a higher hourly rate)

    --
    "pull my finger" - Uncle Chuckles
  273. Not that unrealistic by jflynn · · Score: 4

    Ok, this guy had an older version, and installation has improved a lot in the meantime, so that's a little unfair.

    But most of what this guy complains about has something like a kernel of truth to it. Win9x does do a very impressive job of probing for hardware. When it gets it wrong, you are in real trouble, and it will take hours to fix it, if possible at all. But nearly all the time, it gets it right, and you have to give them some credit for that. If for any reason, you don't know what kind of hardware you have, things get tough in Linux installation.

    Two examples personally, with RH5.2, both with video setup. Until recently I had been using a very ancient Mitsubishi monitor to which I had lost the little booklet. It happened to be one of those models with zillions of close relatives and it took me a flashlight and a magnifying glass to pull the actual monitor model number off a microprint label on the back of the monitor. The model wasn't on the compatible monitor list so I had to specify frequencies on my own. Eventually I found a web reference to the monitor that specified it's frequencies. Using those got my monitor setup, but it didn't quite work yet. Turned out the whole number horizontal frequency was *just* short of being sufficient for the resolution I desired, so I had to bump it up by .25 before it would play.

    The other problem was with my video card, a Spider Tarantula. Spider is now out of business with no web page. Card is not mentioned in compatibility list, though I remembered it was an S3 964. My manual does not mention what kind of dot clock setup is on the card. So guessing time again. Eventually I guess right, and finally X starts.

    In the process of getting X started I also had to learn Emacs (well, *learn* is a little strong ) to be able to edit the configuration file, after finding it in /etc. I also learned about "man" on the way. All in all a good experience because I wasn't expecting much different and I learned a lot. But to someone who has been protected from all knowledge of how computers work, and who could care less anyway, this is a nightmare. Sorry, but it is.

    This doesn't mean Linux can't be used by everyday computer users. It just means that it is highly recommended that they buy a pre-installed system, or be ready to buy Linux compatible hardware before installing. At the least, get a geek friend to help. Microsoft is no different in this respect except having less unsupported hardware, and that is changing.

  274. Hmmmm. by Chas · · Score: 1

    Okay, this is possibly redundant.

    Caldera 1.3? We have two options here. I'll address both.

    1. TYPO
      I don't see what could POSSIBLY have been all that tough as to take 8 hours of this man's time. Caldera 2.3 is even easier to set up than Redhat 6! Some leeway can be given because the guy admits he's a complete newbie. But all you really have to do in Caldera is make easy choices (desktop system, web server, everything, etc), and keep hitting NEXT.
    2. NOT A TYPO
      The man is completely hopeless. This is something akin to installing Windows 1.0 on your brand new Athlon 650 with a Winmodem, GeForce vidcard, MX300 sound card, ATA/66 hard drives, and wondering why the hell it doesn't recognize anything. I know newbies don't know a lot about what they're doing. But most of the neophytes I deal with at least look for the latest version!

    Also, the person never once thought of turning to the community itself to ask for help.


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  275. He has no business installing an OS! by fougasse · · Score: 3

    Most of the negative comments here fall in one of three categories:

    1) If you don't know what a (video card/modem/etc.) is, you have no business installing an OS.

    2) Linux isn't much harder to install than Windows NT, so what are you complaining about?

    3) If you don't know what a kernel is, what are you doing installing Linux?

    Numbers one and two are pure crap. Number one is untrue and elitist; the vast majority of people don't know about all the components in their computers, but quite a few people could install, say, Win98. (A few people have talked about how hard the Win98 install is. They have either talked about difficulties like not finding the CD key - hmm, maybe the sticker on the CD marked CD Key? - or talked about how long it takes, which is irrelevant as ease of use is not a function of length.)

    It is true that a Linux install (BTW, when I say Linux install, I mean "a recent version of RedHat". And no, I don't mean an ancient, pre-GUI-install version of OpenLinux.) is not much, if at all, harder than a WinNT one. This is because the WinNT install sucks. The first time I installed NT4, I encountered blue-screen STOPs at three different places. There are also some very stupid parts to its design... for instance, why does trying to install your hard drive and CD-ROM as separate devices cause problems during the install? And on that topic, since when is an IDE hard drive a SCSI device? This may be a reason why WinNT has had little success in non corporate/power-user areas. Another installer being bad is no excuse, though; I'm sure RedHat has HP/UX beat too.

    The next point makes sense, though. This is all because there is a huge Linux-for-grandmas push on. Power users should have no problem installing Linux. The problem is that it is now being targeted to home users, and you simply can't expect home users to know all about their hardware and know some commandline Unix.

    Anyway, the install front has been given too much attention lately. There are quite a few projects: Caldera's Lizard (already out, now open source), Mandrake's Panoramix (pretty bad interface and design, in my opinion), and whatever RedHat's is called (Lorax? Or is that the distribution?). This should soon be improved. And once it is, tech journalists will continue to use outdated version and talk about how hard they are - "Compared to Win98, Debian 0.9 is very difficult!".

  276. Re:Unix sucks! It's too powerful! by HeghmoH · · Score: 2

    Find something that's really complicated and not Linux-related. Now explain that something to someone, using only words. You can't draw diagrams, you can't wave your hands, etc. Now do it again, with diagrams, hand-waving, etc. Which way is easier?

    I'm in a calculus class right now with a superb teacher. If he was stuck without being able to walk around, make funny shapes out of his hands, and draw stuff on the board, it would be one of the suckiest classes I've ever had. This holds true with almost every conversation I have that goes above simple social interactions.

    What do I use in real life? I use words AND pantomime AND pictures.

    --
    Mod down posts with a "Free Mac Mini/iPod" sig, they're spam!
  277. We should all be grateful! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We should all be grateful for someone who finally has the guts to tell it like it is! I started to be particularly suspicious about Linux when I first heard about those all-day activities called "Installfests." I silently said to myself why would any modern-day operating system need an all-day get-together just to install an OS. Then lo-and-behold, I attended my first installfest. Nobody there was able to do a successful install on the first try--no matter the distro. And that took place this year!

    Hey, and let's not even mention getting the X Server running. That poor journalist never got to that point.

    I think it's time for the Linux community to be honest with itself. OK. You're on a roll and you don't want to see anything or anybody stand in your way for total domination. And, any one who has any opinion contrary to yours is flamed. Grow-up! This is not freedom! Start listening to people like this. Sure, it was an old distribution but many of the same problems still remain.

    'Nuf said!

  278. assumptions of slashdotters... by Karassa · · Score: 1

    I do believe that the writer of the article is female. The picture shows a girl running with the beloved penguin, and Robin *is* a girl's name. Why did you all assume it was a guy???

    --
    --------------- hear no evil see no evil date no evil
  279. well, of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is hard to install, depending on attitude and experience.

    I work in a s/w shop that write unix software, and I thought it would be cool to give our 6 programmers cheapbytes CDs, thinking they would enjoy having *nix at home.

    Only 2 could install it sucessfully, and only one was was really excited about it.

    Now that it's past, I still want to hang my jaw in amazement -- I know teenagers who have never programmed, and they can install and use Linux in a flash.

    But "software professionals" who write unix code and have bachelor's degrees can't install Linux? Give up and say "it sucks"?

    Given the number of kids I know that use and like Linux, I think I'm just working in a lame shop.

    In general, the quality of the code matches up pretty well with the programmer's ability to install Linux.

    Do I smell a new pre-employment test, here?

    Hmmmmmmmmmmmm...

  280. Does NO ONE get it. by Xafloc · · Score: 2

    Im NOT saying that they shouldn't ask for help. Im saying....Investigate First....then ask. How hard is that to understand.

    Has no one heard the saying "Give a man a fish, and he'll eat for a day. Teach him how to fish, and he'll eat forever"?

    I dont see what is so wrong with that attitude.....do you?

    --
    -= Xafloc =-
    alinuxbox.com
    N
  281. Re:Unix sucks! It's too powerful! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please explain how the grep program could be more useful if it had a GUI? Anybody that has used it could see that it would be completely useless if it was not command line.

  282. Tips for Installing an OS by pb · · Score: 1

    1) Install a recent version.
    (maybe they fixed something)

    2) Have some idea of what these terms mean: "fdisk", "Partition", "Video Card".
    (you'll need to know them for Linux and Windows)

    3) Don't be afraid of text boot-up messages. The BIOS does this too.

    4) If you can't figure it out, ask for help, or contact the vendor.

    5) If you can't do any of the above, *don't* publish a story!

    Seriously, is this journalism? How can the ignorant attempt to report factual information? Is today April 1st?

    Details:

    Caldera - Please install 2.3, not 1.3. I have copies of RedHat 4.0, 5.0, and 6.0. Guess which one I'd rather install? :)

    Video Card: not onboard, or not hard to find -- his friend showed it to him.

    3Com card: I hope that was a modem! I've got a card that says "3com" on it, and something that looks like a phone cable, and believe me, it doesn't call anyone! :)

    Quotes

    "I don't know what a " + [kernel, domain name, video card] + [is/looks like] + "."

    "And you're installing Linux?"

    I think you can replace that last one with "And you're installing an Operating System?" without loss of generality. Actually, there must be a lot of hype lately for this guy to know what an operating system is, considering the lack of knowledge he evinces previously. If you can't install or figure out DOS and Windows 3.1, you'll suck at installing an old version of Linux...

    --
    pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate.
  283. Version 1.3? yikes! by tsphere · · Score: 2

    I recently installed a copy of Caldera 2.2 and I must say that the installation routine seems to have progressed a long way from 1.3. It's graphical, did a pretty good job of finding my _ancient_ hardware, and even lets you play tetris while the software installs itself! Also, the new version gives you a graphical KDE login screen by default (which you can't CANCEL like a certain other OS's login dialog...)

    Tetris rules.

    --
    Tetris rules.