Dear fellow guixers.

First of all, congratulations with much gratitude for all the work poured on this new release. It shows and it shines. :)

I installed guix 1.5 on an 8 year old Dell Latitude starting with a small USB drive and booting from it, using Spanish as language and everything went very well. This machine has -sadly- some hardware that includes proprietary blobs, but this is the machine I have now and those issues are off-list.

I'd specially like to applaud the excellent language and keyboard support: I use Spanish Dvorak, a not so popular option. ;D

I would also like to share and discuss, with the most constructive attitude, some small details arising from this installation that may potentially impact new users and could be changed for good.

The installation was done on a shared SSD disk that included an old Debian and a couple small auxiliary, like a 16 Mb swap, partitions.


1. The manual partition installer that I had to use -because there was another working partition to be cared of in the disk- gave me no indication about a swap partition. I know it is manual and so it may assume complete knowledge, but now I don't know if the OS has no swap and it needs it, or if it uses the existing one. That is, there is a kind of medium level of knowledge that allows manual installation but could benefit with a good practices overview and a suggestion (even if it may be needed to be applied manually in a manual install).


2. During that installation, there is a question about the cypher tag (in Spanish "etiqueta de cifrado"). There is no explanation about what this is, and being part of an encrypted partition, could cause some confusion (at least it caused /me/ some confusion ;P). Maybe we could add a small text indicating that this is only a name for the partition, and what does this name mean in the system, so it is not confused with any passphrase or password?


3. Something similar happened with mount point ("punto de montaje"). Some minimal information about what is it, and how can impact the resulting OS could give a bit more tranquility to the person doing the installation.


4. When the installation ended and after rebooting I've found with real anguish that the other bootable partition was not present in the grub menu. Being used to the Debian installer including them, just didn't imagined that it could be any different. Of course this is perfectly possible, it is just that -as with anyone- my previous experience configured the expectation about what was supposed to happen. While it is not at all a hard requirement and it is easy for me to propose it since being no programmer I have no idea if it takes 2, 20 or 200 hours of work, I'd like to ask if we could evaluate the possibility to search for -and include- other bootable operating systems in the grub options. There are 2 main reasons for this request: the 1st one is expressing care and consideration for people's options (being a values related reason make it personal and so, it may or not be valid for everyone). However the 2nd one is much more concrete: *being able to keep their current working OSs andd partitions lowers a lot the barrier to try guix*. And more guix users are good for everyone in this community and the guix mission in general. :)


5. Contrasting with the previous, this last point is really a very small one. The desktop environments chosen to be installed were Mate (just a simple one to start if in trouble), i3 (the one I use) and exwm (with the hope to try it). Mate didn't include by default any web browser. I'd like to argue that since it is such a common and fundamental tool for most people these days (we can debate if this is good and/or desirable), if it is within our reach by default we should provide one. Anyone would do, no matter how simple.


All in all, I understand that guix is a highly developed and /in development/, new, and very complicated beast, used today by people with a lot of knowledge about linux, technology and computation. As such, our community it is very faithfully painted by the famous XKCD "Average Familiarity" (https://m.xkcd.com/2501/) comic.

While I am far from your level of expertise on guix and linuxes I am probably a bit above average and anyway suffered some confusion and 3 complicated days to recover my working partition and be able to work. I am not at all whining or asking changes for me; after all and with the help from this wonderful list, my computer is working again. b(^‿^)d

I simply expose here what happened from a hybrid, UX<>tech point of view with the hope to make the new guix user experience better for others. :)

And of course, while can't program, I can help with interaction design and kindly offer that help if it's understood as needed and useful.

Again, congratulations for the new version. :D

With much appreciation, warmest regards to you all...


--
eduardo mercovich

Donde se cruzan tus talentos con las necesidades del mundo, ahí está tu vocación. (Anónimo)

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