On 07/12/2016 08:45 PM, vmlinux wrote:
There was a time when this sort of nonsense was heavily frowned upon. i suspect 
what has happened is that the user base has changed. it's difficult to learn 
the ropes from the cli so GUI allows the novice to do things quickly because 
the only skill needed is point-and-grunt. many people using Linux now are not 
the same type of people in your local LUG 10 years ago and i think this is 
being reflected in the way we see disastrous being developed now.
devuan seems to be the one of the few distributions making any sense anymore.

don't need Kali. most network problems can be resolved with the basics anyway: 
arping,  arp, tcpdump, nslookup, traceroute, netcat, and iptraf. thankfully all 
standard tools.


Problems, yes sure. What about attacking your network AKA pen testing. Have you heard of the metasploit framework? I need to learn more about that and some of the other automation tools. It's nice to be able to throw a bunch of attacks at your network before others do. That seems to be the purpose of Kali and it's predecessors. I don't know if I would call it a troubleshooting tool. It's possible to troubleshoot network problems with Windows.

Though I agree that the point and "grunt" style is a bit useless. Which is why I wondered why Kali had a full blown GNOME. What about XFCE or openbox? Something minimal please.
_______________________________________________
Dng mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dng

Reply via email to