Hmmm. Been there and did not like it. :) I am not always kind to Ubuntu BTW. I have been very critical of some of its missteps and make no bones about not liking Unity. However, I give them kudos for trying something new and different and pushing the envelope. I think that Mint has gotten a free ride for too long and that people give it more credit than it deserves. I have always said so. Things that are unique to Mint are not to my liking which comes down to personal preference. Some people like a dumbed down, lazy distro. I don't and say so. I use Kubuntu, but many people do not like a complex and highly configurable distro. I get that. Different strokes for different folks. Being critical of Mint or Debian is not to the same as not liking them. As I said I have Mint installed on one computer and LMDE on another.
Debian is another story. If it wasn't crippled and ideologically driven then I might use it. I hate being told what to think and how to use my computer. There are lots of people who do not mind being told what to think or how to live their lives so Debian has a following, although it is shrinking. Until Debian stop thinking so narrowly and its users continue to berate users for disagreeing with their world-view then I would not want to belong to that community. Being part of a community for me means that it must be open and free with room for a difference of opinion. In Debian you are only free if you agree. I call that despotism. They are the opposite of how they see themselves. I would love Debian to succeed, but not as they currently present themselves. I have a hierarchy of opinion. I reserve my best venom for those who deserve it the most. Mint is not even close. You should read what I write on politics. ;) Roy Using Kubuntu 11.04, 64-bit Location: Canada On 13 June 2011 17:45, Paul <[email protected]> wrote: > > > After a tirade like that I've got a copy of Debian waiting for you here Roy > :) As pure as the freshly fallen snow ... > > /me hides his binary Nvidia drivers behind a curtain > > > --- In [email protected], Roy <linuxcanuck@...> wrote: > > > > Detection of hardware is based on the kernel and Mint can take no credit > for > > that. It uses the same core as Ubuntu and is no better at detecting and > > installing than Ubuntu with the exception of some decisions to use > > proprietary rather than open source drivers. Ubuntu tries to support open > > source projects and use free as opposed to proprietary drivers where > > possible. However, you can easily install proprietary drivers in Ubuntu > with > > the additional drivers tool in the menu. Mint tries to simplify things by > > preferring proprietary drivers in the first place. That is both good and > > bad. It shuts the door on open source development and does not give users > > the option of using open source, but it does make it simpler for most > > people. I would not call it better, though. It is certainly not better > for > > the community in the long run. It is better for users to have open source > > drivers that we have control over, if they work as well, than proprietary > > drivers that are updated at the discretion of a big company when and if > they > > choose. > > > > Roy > > > > Using Kubuntu 11.04, 64-bit > > Location: Canada > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] ------------------------------------ To unsubscribe from this list, please email [email protected] & you will be removed.Yahoo! Groups Links <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/LINUX_Newbies/ <*> Your email settings: Individual Email | Traditional <*> To change settings online go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/LINUX_Newbies/join (Yahoo! ID required) <*> To change settings via email: [email protected] [email protected] <*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: [email protected] <*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to: http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
