On May 18, 2015, at 4:11 PM, Craig Treleaven wrote:

> Right now, as I see it, MacPorts is pretty much geared to coders and 
> sophisticated users (system/network administrators, etc).  There exists a 
> wider group of folks who just want to run a specific application or two (say 
> Darktable and Gimp, just for instance).  If such users could just install 
> "Pallet-lite" and then be able to install any of a few dozen major 
> open-source applications, that might be pretty popular.

Most of the software in MacPorts is something you would use from the command 
line (e.g. ImageMagick), or something that is server software (e.g. Apache or 
PostgreSQL) or is a compiler or interpreter for a programming language (e.g. 
PHP or Node or GCC). Users of such software would hopefully be comfortable 
using MacPorts from the command line.

There's no reason why users who aren't comfortable with the command line (the 
"wider group of folks" you mention) can't also use MacPorts. It should not be 
beyond anyone's capabilities to read and follow the MacPorts installation 
instructions, and to type a few commands into a terminal window to install the 
software they want. And those who prefer to use a MacPorts GUI have a few 
choices for that. Hopefully Pallet will be a viable option again sometime in 
the future when it's fixed up. I think there was even a recent proposal from 
someone to do that.

Most GUI software designed for the Mac is already distributed in a 
ready-to-install way by those respective projects. Your two examples, Gimp and 
Darktable, already are, for example. For a lot of GUI software, e.g. VLC, it's 
simply a lot less bother to just use the binaries the developers provide rather 
than trying to use MacPorts to install it.


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