--- On Sat, 6/14/08, Mike Bird <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> From: Mike Bird <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: [OT] Are security updates necessary?
> To: [email protected]
> Date: Saturday, June 14, 2008, 5:06 PM
> On Sat June 14 2008 16:37:11 Antonio Olivares wrote:
> > I have run old version of KDE 3.1 from Mandrake 9.1
> gotten on internet, no
> > single update whatsoever, and I have been safe.  So it
> can be done, do you
> > mean other updates, that can be critical, with apps
> and not the desktop
> > here.
> 
> Some people manage to walk through a minefield without
> being blown up.
> They were lucky, but not safe.
>
We are never guaranteed anything in life.  There are only two sure things, 
Death and Taxes :(

<quote from http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/b/benjamin_franklin.html>
Certainty? In this world nothing is certain but death and taxes.
Benjamin Franklin 
</quote>
> 
> Security bugs have been fixed in web browsing, email,
> firewalls,
> displaying pictures, viewing pdfs, and opening documents. 
> Without
> those fixes your system may not have been compromised (but
> how to
> be certain, eh?) but you certainly would not have been
> safe.
Yes, I found out later, so I trashed Mandrake and installed FreeBSD onto that 
machine :)  Fedora would not install, Fedora 8/Fedora 9 would I complain? not 
so (Machine is too old, so I cannot blame Fedora/Fedora Developers/other fellow 
Fedora users). I connect to the internet with Slax on that machine, since I do 
not want to waste time configuring ppp in FreeBSD.  I can connect with 
RoFreeSBIE to the internet if I want to, but I prefer Slax here.  It works for 
me like I want it.  It at least works, and is not taking up space at a 
dumpster.  
> 
> Meanwhile, back at the KDE ranch ...
>
This is a very hard issue, and I kind of understand your points and many other 
users might sympathize with you, if you have been on this list for sometime, I 
kind of hinted that many KDE users would be unhappy, but that is the price one 
has to pay for innovation.  Still KDE4 is functional, but if you want to use it 
in Fedora you will have to sacrifice some of your time and effort to get it 
working like you want.  There's no way back or out of KDE 4 in Fedora 9 or 
higher via Fedora Developers.  There are many good things :) and there are some 
things that need to be worked on :(, if you are loyal to KDE, you will use it, 
otherwise move to gnome/xfce/____,.  There is not much we can do here, I want 
the digital clock back, will I get to see it?  I do not know, I wish the 
developers consider bringing it back, but it is not a perfect world and one 
gets what we pay for. 

Regards,

Antonio 


      

-- 
fedora-list mailing list
[email protected]
To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list

Reply via email to