Hi Rick,

just in short. Maybe the way I wrote distorted the message I wanted to send.


On Sun, Jan 22, 2017 at 10:03 PM, Rick Moen via luv-main
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Quoting Peter Ross ([email protected]):

>> Just instruct a stereotypical office worker over the phone to open the
>> command line under Windows.
>
> I'm sorry, weren't we talking about "novice users" (which you put in
> scare quotes to indicate the ironic nature of your reference) needing to
> resort to apt-get rather than a DE-based graphical package-operations tool?
> Thus, you were speaking of a root-account-using system administrator.
> So, why are you suddenly changing the subject to 'a stereotypical office
> worker', Peter?

Because the desktop is aiming for the average user who is not an admin.

Certainly I can get my head around various distributions, tool
replacements etc. because I administrate servers. The desktop is more
of an exception. Occasionally I am curious to figure out what I can do
with it, the average user in mind.

You need a GUI tool "masking" the technicalities If you want average
users to have a Linux/Unix desktop at home, I believe.

Think of someone who is used to start Windows Update and gets a tool
where he clicks the Update button. You do not make a new friend with
telling him to use wuauclt.

apt-get and yum etc. are on the same level, and of no interest for
users who just want to update their desktop.

It really surprised me that the GUI was not sufficient to replace the
command line here. I suspected a more obscure problem when I wrote the
mail (and was a bit embarrassed when I realized that the
stock-standard use of apt-get is fixing my problem, btw)

Cheers
Peter
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