________________________________
 From: Ralf Mardorf <[email protected]>
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Friday, 23 August 2013, 13:41
Subject: Re: [Evolution] downloads page
 

Arch Linux does use a real rolling release model, not such a pseudo
thingy as Debian calls rolling release, so it's always the current
release, resp. too keep Arch stable, stuff first is in a testing
repository, so there might be a short delay. I don't know if apps like
Evolution are in testing too, or if it's just for important core stuff.

GNOME is a project available by quasi all distros, it isn't something
like e.g. MATE, so it's wise to use GNOME stuff from the distro's
official repositories, to avoid issue.

There's nothing bad with distros that ship with "outdated" software, as
long as it's ensured, that this software does work. 

<snip />

It would be in the interest of an user to chose a distro regarding to
needs and not regarding to fan base emotions. All major distros with a
huge community are good, when chosen regarding to the needs. No user
base, no community = crap.

2 Cents


Hi :)  
That was the problem with Ubuntu's version of Evo.  It didn't work.  

Ubuntu always had such an ancient version of Evo that ancient bugs still 
existed and crucial features were missing.  I've seen both fixed on this list 
by just helping people to upgrade to newer versions of Evo.  However we weren't 
proactive enough and the rest of the Ubuntu project seems to have built-up such 
a bad impression of Evo that Ubuntu 'had to' drop Evo from being  their default 
email-client.  

A better fix for them would have been to simply use a less ancient version of 
Evo but they didn't go the sensible way.  People generally don't.  


In LibreOffice they have had a similar problem with "Base", their equivalent of 
MS Access.  Despite being hugely more powerful than Access they have been 
hampered by an internal back-end that was so ancient and heavily tweaked that 
it failed to perform and even appears to have lost data on occasions.  To make 
Base really blossom they cold have done any of 3 things
1.  cut away the back-end completely (thus making it very  alien to people 
familiar with Access)
2.  get the newer version of the back-end and do less tweaking
3.  get a different back-end and do less tweaking
They finally seem to be going with option 3.  Their 'old' back-end is a very 
successful project in it's own right and when a newer version was used 
externally rather than internally then Base was brilliant.  The problem was 
that users baulked at the whole internal vs external and just went with the 
option that was easier to set-up.  


I used to use an excellent distro called "Wolvix".  Really quite awesome but 
suffered from 3 things
1.  not many devs so when 1 of them had to quit (Wolven's wife had their 1st 
child) the whole project died
2.  not very well known and couldn't understand how to "promote" itself
3.  tiny community with extremely limited conversions from user to dev (and 
most of the conversions were to theming or alternate DEs)

It did have some awesome features though, some of which are only just beginning 
to appear in other distros several years later.  Others are just lost to time.  
Hardware support was better than Knoppix.  Installer was noob-friendly (and 
fun) without being patronising and highly educational without being slow and 
without any "dumbing down".  


So i don't think a lack of community necessarily means a thing is crap.  I 
don't believe Ralf really believes that either, otherwise we would both think 
Evo was crap and that is clearly not true.  It's just that the few of us that 
were in the Wolvix community were all very aware the whole project could 
collapse without warning and that it couldn't do all the developing that it's 
devs wanted to do.  

Regards from 
Tom :)  
_______________________________________________
evolution-list mailing list
[email protected]
To change your list options or unsubscribe, visit ...
https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list

Reply via email to