Thus spake Andreas Karlsson on Wed, Jul 19, 2006 at 09:26:51AM CDT > On Wednesday 19 July 2006 11:27, Duncan wrote: > > Andreas Karlsson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> posted > > [EMAIL PROTECTED], excerpted below, on Tue, 18 Jul 2006 > > > > 00:08:35 +0200: > > I don't see it as... annoying; I see it as... challenging! =8^) > > The only thing that annoys me is when things go realy bad and almost screws > up > real bad, like the Bash upgrade not so long ago. Otherwise I share you point > of view. It is fun. As long as I don't have to boot of a live cd to fix > things.
The tradeoff here is that there has to be a time for play and a time for work (or I might say a time for "creative play" and a time for "productive play"). One of the problems I run into with Gentoo on my desktop, and to a lesser extend with Linux in general on a desktop, is that sometimes I lose control of this tradeoff. Some very important desktop utilities, such as evolution, are not very fault tolerant, and if things that are fragile break in an upgrade, the amount of time one has to allocate to repair is indeterminate.. I've learned to do my desktop upgrades (emerge -uD world; revdep-rebuild) on weekends, but the last one I did is still a work in progress today, Wednesday, and I started it last Saturday. I should be doing other things rather than having fun repairing my desktop OS :-) > On topic: What however DO annoy me, speaking of Nvidia, is the delay in > releaseing the new driver compatible with x.org 7.x. I'm tempted to go with > the open source module for a while as I really don't use any heavy OpenGL > applications (no games for me). Can anyone please give me some indication on > the speed difference in 2d acceleration between the open and the closed > drivers? > > > Of course, if I were running Gentoo on a mission critical server or > > something, as part of my livelihood, I'd probably run stable, but it's a > > Can't argue with you there. All my four servers are running Gentoo (stable) > x86 and there has almost never been any problems with the eboulds. Likewise. I don't run ~x86 on my servers unless it's necessary, and it is sometimes necessary. The only problem I've had which was really scary was the udev thing a few weeks ago that caused some systems to hang at boot time. -- Lindsay Haisley | "Fighting against human | PGP public key FMP Computer Services | creativity is like | available at 512-259-1190 | trying to eradicate | <http://pubkeys.fmp.com> http://www.fmp.com | dandelions" | | (Pamela Jones) | -- [email protected] mailing list
