I've helped a lot of people install Kubuntu, most of them over the phone. It usually goes without a hitch, with one very frequent exception: many of them have problems burning the ISO to a CD. Maybe 10% have problems with other stuff during the installation (usually not really problems, they are just afraid to click and want to ask before they "next"), but 70-80% have problems burning the ISO. Several of them got annoyed, even angry, because "I don't have to do this with Windows!", to the point of not listening to reason.
For a technical user like me, who has been downloading ISO's since they first appeared, it's simple, but newbies mess up by burning a CD with the ISO file on it, by not having the apropriate software for burning images (relying on the OS CD burning software) or by simply getting lost in the handling.
Now, this is an unnecessary speed bump that lowers the impression of the entire product. Sometimes, people are turned off Linux before they even got started. Could this be simplified?
Well, what I'd propose would be to download the ISO coupled with a program to burn it (which, sadly, has to be different depending on OS, but I'd say that at least Linux, Windows and Mac are needed). They would then download the package, klick the exe, be asked to insert a blank CD, the ISO is checked and burned to CD and verified. Some instructions on how to continue the installation is then displayed. Presto, they have their live CD, without hassle, checked and ready.
I think it would be well worth the effort to cobble together such a program. Most of the parts should already exist in the GPL world, and newbies would no longer get stuck before they even get started.
Sure, a better instruction might help, but face it, most people don't read instructions, especially those who really need them...
Any thoughts on the subject?
For a technical user like me, who has been downloading ISO's since they first appeared, it's simple, but newbies mess up by burning a CD with the ISO file on it, by not having the apropriate software for burning images (relying on the OS CD burning software) or by simply getting lost in the handling.
Now, this is an unnecessary speed bump that lowers the impression of the entire product. Sometimes, people are turned off Linux before they even got started. Could this be simplified?
Well, what I'd propose would be to download the ISO coupled with a program to burn it (which, sadly, has to be different depending on OS, but I'd say that at least Linux, Windows and Mac are needed). They would then download the package, klick the exe, be asked to insert a blank CD, the ISO is checked and burned to CD and verified. Some instructions on how to continue the installation is then displayed. Presto, they have their live CD, without hassle, checked and ready.
I think it would be well worth the effort to cobble together such a program. Most of the parts should already exist in the GPL world, and newbies would no longer get stuck before they even get started.
Sure, a better instruction might help, but face it, most people don't read instructions, especially those who really need them...
Any thoughts on the subject?
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