On Thursday 25 October 2007 08:34, ~:'' ありがとうございました。 wrote:
> the most significant issue is that no open source project outside
> possibly wikipedia is truly popular.
I'd hardly say that the internet, email, web, DNS & etc are hardly not
mainstream and not popular. It's next to impossible to use
On 25/10/2007, "~:'' ありがとうございました。" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> David,
>
>
> the most significant issue is that no open source project outside
> possibly wikipedia is truly popular.
> NB wikipedia is not an application or tool.
That would explain the unpopularity of a LAMP development envionment
~:'' wrote:
where are the easy-to-use tools?
Ubuntu and Gnome are hardly mainstream...
the most significant issue is that no open source project outside
possibly wikipedia is truly popular.
NB wikipedia is not an application or tool.
First, there are thousands of open source pro
For a given value of "popular" of course. There are many open source projects
which are extremely popular in their own contexts.
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, October 25, 2007 8:34 AM
> To: backs
~:'' ありがとうございました。 wrote:
> where are the easy-to-use tools?
> Ubuntu and Gnome are hardly mainstream...
By 'mainstream', do you mean 'commonplace among computer users'
or 'commonplace among the general public'?
Also, are you conceding that Ubuntu and Gnome are easy to use?
> the most significant
~:'' wrote:
> David,
>
> my apologies as it seems that once again my comments lack some clarity.
>
> where are the easy-to-use tools?
> Ubuntu and Gnome are hardly mainstream...
>
> the most significant issue is that no open source project outside
> possibly wikipedia is truly popul
On Thu, Oct 25, 2007 at 08:34:05AM +0100,
"~:'' " wrote:
> David,
>
> my apologies as it seems that once again my comments lack some clarity.
>
> where are the easy-to-use tools?
> Ubuntu and Gnome are hardly mainstream...
You seem very confused. E
David,
my apologies as it seems that once again my comments lack some clarity.
where are the easy-to-use tools?
Ubuntu and Gnome are hardly mainstream...
the most significant issue is that no open source project outside
possibly wikipedia is truly popular.
NB wikipedia is not an application
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