I really disagree with these solution!  Every package I've ever
built/compiled myself I had to specify where I wanted it installed (ie
./configure --prefix=/usr).  Like it or not, the convention on all Unices is
that if a package is compiled and installed by the system admin it needs to
go in /usr/local (LOCAL in out case) and /usr (SYSTEM) is reserved for
packages that were installed by your distribution.

I understand that the people that have been using the GNUstep for a very
long time are used to automatically installing it on SYSTEM, however, should
"because I've always done it this way" really be a valid reason to go
through all this extra complexity on the -make package?  I've been running
into this at work for a while now "This was is better because we've been
doing it for 20 years", and I'm still not convinced it's right.

In my opinion, if a particular package wants to install itself in a
particular domain, it should configure itself that way, much like how
./configure --prefix=/usr does.  This should be a per-package configuration,
-make should not have to worry where you want to install your packages just
how to do it.

That's just my opinion on the issue.

Stefan
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