I'll take a couple of people with a clue over a hundred _looking_ for a
clue any day.
It will be just as I said earlier - the userland will consist of the devs
and a bunch of fanboys, no one will know the OS and will just view it as
another one. This whole conversation and all the emails in it
If you are worried about resources, step 1 would be to get rid of direct
downloads. Or you get the following: casual user downloads, casual user
runs, casual user finds problem, casual user doesn't have forums to get
help, casual user leave. 1 download worth of bandwidth wasted. And that's
the
That attitude is why OpenBSD will continue to exist on the periphery of
the technology space, in spite of all the great tools they are sitting on.
Precisely. And it looks like OI people want to go the same path.
--
Lyubomir Grigorov (bgalakazam)
Keep in mind that the current wiki is outdated and disorganized. I offered
to help with it, but got no reply and still have no wiki account.
--
Lyubomir Grigorov (bgalakazam)
___
OpenIndiana-discuss mailing list
OpenIndiana-discuss@openindiana.org
Indeed. It has always been my goal to make UNIX more end-user friendly.
Linux only got so popular because of all the newbie-friendly communities and
installers.
--
Lyubomir Grigorov (bgalakazam)
___
OpenIndiana-discuss mailing list
Since you are further moving away from Oracle, will it be possible to start
localizing OpenIndiana in more languages than those the default install
provides?
Gnome is already translated in most, so if you implement something like
Pootle to get the rest translated it shouldn't take much time.
--