Hi all,
Recently the french parliament chose kubuntu for their computers after strict criteria which eliminated even a local well-established and very good distribution as Mandriva. This shows that Kubuntu is a fiable and high quality distribution. Some other countries are switching to linux (china, norway, brasil etc) and others will follow. Computer sellers as Dell (after its famous ideastorm) think of responding to the need for linux. Great horizons are opening for linux and I think that Kubuntu will be a good candidate for choice.
While Kubuntu has a strong base and advantages (ubuntu technology and repositories, stable release cycle, customizable desktop, featureful apps etc) it is not well-ranked at distrowatch.com I personally think it has the possibility to be in the top 5 permanently. It has all the backround to do the linux revolution. And the revolution for me is the orientation to the simplicity, reality and modernity.
Here are some of my ideas about a modern linux:
-Limitation of use of the commandline. I know it is a powerful and addictive tool, but you dont progress in modernity with this. We must find solutions to respond to problems which will occur with its limitation (or even elimination). I am thinking of gui-only-applications, a gui-diagnostic tool with pre-registered commands etc
-An really friendly package manager. I am thinking of adept_installer (not adept_manager) with a bigger database.
-A protocol of communication and conduct. imagine this case: a newbie has just installed the distro and asks for a program. He's given this answer: "Add this repository, do apt-get update and then apt-get install program"
Where and how must he add the repository? Where must he do apt-get update? and why use a console while there is a gui-application? We must not forget that he is a newbie.
-A short documentation. I think that the handbooks must be presented shortened to the strictly essentials and to a really understandable language.
-I think that the swap partition is supeflous and sometimes annoying. Imagine this case: the average john dow wants a partition for windows, a second for the system /, a third for /home, a fourth for swap and a fifth for another reason (backup, encrypted etc) He has to create an extended partition and is not familiar with terms like extended, logical, container etc
The swap could be a file in the system. Windows and Freespire have already done it.
-A market-oriented mindset even if the distro doesnt make profits. If you do something without having in mind a customer whom you must satisfy, you will do something that you THINK it is good and not something that is good. The developers must test their apps to totally newbies so that they are sure the user understands the function of buttons and the sense of terms and the application is intuitive enough so that the user be able to work easily (and ideally without the use of a manual). Those who write documentation or give support must make sure that their explainations are clear, not boring and adapted to the level of the user. They must imagine themselfs in the user's place.
-Some more apps must be added. I am thinking of Firefox, thunderbird, a good notetaker, a personal finance program, a firewall etc. So a good cd-space strategy is needed.
Please, post your comments and your ideas about how to ameliorate our distribution.
Recently the french parliament chose kubuntu for their computers after strict criteria which eliminated even a local well-established and very good distribution as Mandriva. This shows that Kubuntu is a fiable and high quality distribution. Some other countries are switching to linux (china, norway, brasil etc) and others will follow. Computer sellers as Dell (after its famous ideastorm) think of responding to the need for linux. Great horizons are opening for linux and I think that Kubuntu will be a good candidate for choice.
While Kubuntu has a strong base and advantages (ubuntu technology and repositories, stable release cycle, customizable desktop, featureful apps etc) it is not well-ranked at distrowatch.com I personally think it has the possibility to be in the top 5 permanently. It has all the backround to do the linux revolution. And the revolution for me is the orientation to the simplicity, reality and modernity.
Here are some of my ideas about a modern linux:
-Limitation of use of the commandline. I know it is a powerful and addictive tool, but you dont progress in modernity with this. We must find solutions to respond to problems which will occur with its limitation (or even elimination). I am thinking of gui-only-applications, a gui-diagnostic tool with pre-registered commands etc
-An really friendly package manager. I am thinking of adept_installer (not adept_manager) with a bigger database.
-A protocol of communication and conduct. imagine this case: a newbie has just installed the distro and asks for a program. He's given this answer: "Add this repository, do apt-get update and then apt-get install program"
Where and how must he add the repository? Where must he do apt-get update? and why use a console while there is a gui-application? We must not forget that he is a newbie.
-A short documentation. I think that the handbooks must be presented shortened to the strictly essentials and to a really understandable language.
-I think that the swap partition is supeflous and sometimes annoying. Imagine this case: the average john dow wants a partition for windows, a second for the system /, a third for /home, a fourth for swap and a fifth for another reason (backup, encrypted etc) He has to create an extended partition and is not familiar with terms like extended, logical, container etc
The swap could be a file in the system. Windows and Freespire have already done it.
-A market-oriented mindset even if the distro doesnt make profits. If you do something without having in mind a customer whom you must satisfy, you will do something that you THINK it is good and not something that is good. The developers must test their apps to totally newbies so that they are sure the user understands the function of buttons and the sense of terms and the application is intuitive enough so that the user be able to work easily (and ideally without the use of a manual). Those who write documentation or give support must make sure that their explainations are clear, not boring and adapted to the level of the user. They must imagine themselfs in the user's place.
-Some more apps must be added. I am thinking of Firefox, thunderbird, a good notetaker, a personal finance program, a firewall etc. So a good cd-space strategy is needed.
Please, post your comments and your ideas about how to ameliorate our distribution.
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