Hi all,
after nealry seven years using kubuntu I'm serioulsy considering to finally give up. When I decided for a clean install of 11.10, I'd never expected that'd be such a big trouble, that I'd encounter so many problems. After two days I still don't have a working system. I tried the normal installation and the text installation, I read the forums and tried to address the various problems that kept popping up as suggested. I even tried to install 11.04 and then to upgrade to 11.10. What keeps me thinking, though, is not that I have problems making kubuntu work. I do expect that, and that is part of the problem, even if I have to say I find sincerely disappointing that in these seven years the process has become more difficult, and not easier as I would have expected. What keeps me thinking is that for every try I made I got a different error. Even when I tried the same thing for the second time. This is new for me. No good.
"Making your pc friendly", "friendly computing", everything is said to be "friendly" on the kubuntu website, on the presentation pages that you can read during the installation (I have had a lot of time read through them in the last couple of days). But that is plainly false, and everyone who has some experience with kubuntu knows that very well. That is more than marketing, it's something near to the circumvention of an incapable. You really can't propose this system to a newb, expecially with regards of what could happen if, say, the installation fails when installing grub and, say, the newb had just decided to give kubuntu a try, making it a dual boot with his windos partition. It should be clearly stated everywhere that kubuntu is not friendly at all (yet).
I'm not a linux guru, that's for sure. But after seven years, and with an information science degree, you think you should've learned something. And you're wrong. You're forever newb.
I want to make it clear I'm not pointing my finger against the developers or the community. Great people. I love them, the work they keep doing and the help they're ready to give. But the communication should'be honest, once and for all.
Bye
Giovanni
after nealry seven years using kubuntu I'm serioulsy considering to finally give up. When I decided for a clean install of 11.10, I'd never expected that'd be such a big trouble, that I'd encounter so many problems. After two days I still don't have a working system. I tried the normal installation and the text installation, I read the forums and tried to address the various problems that kept popping up as suggested. I even tried to install 11.04 and then to upgrade to 11.10. What keeps me thinking, though, is not that I have problems making kubuntu work. I do expect that, and that is part of the problem, even if I have to say I find sincerely disappointing that in these seven years the process has become more difficult, and not easier as I would have expected. What keeps me thinking is that for every try I made I got a different error. Even when I tried the same thing for the second time. This is new for me. No good.
"Making your pc friendly", "friendly computing", everything is said to be "friendly" on the kubuntu website, on the presentation pages that you can read during the installation (I have had a lot of time read through them in the last couple of days). But that is plainly false, and everyone who has some experience with kubuntu knows that very well. That is more than marketing, it's something near to the circumvention of an incapable. You really can't propose this system to a newb, expecially with regards of what could happen if, say, the installation fails when installing grub and, say, the newb had just decided to give kubuntu a try, making it a dual boot with his windos partition. It should be clearly stated everywhere that kubuntu is not friendly at all (yet).
I'm not a linux guru, that's for sure. But after seven years, and with an information science degree, you think you should've learned something. And you're wrong. You're forever newb.
I want to make it clear I'm not pointing my finger against the developers or the community. Great people. I love them, the work they keep doing and the help they're ready to give. But the communication should'be honest, once and for all.
Bye
Giovanni
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