Quoting Alan Mackenzie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

> Hi, Matthew!
>
> On Tue, Jul 17, 2007 at 12:52:24PM -0400, Matthew Harrison wrote:
> > Then my question is now "why in the world are you using Linux?"
> > You're describing things that aren't an issue at all if you know some
> > basics about Linux, and if you use a package manager, all of this
> > virtually disappears.  Perhaps you would be happier with an OS that
> > barely changes for years at a time such as Win2k?
>
> I love using Linux!  It's a wonderful system to use!  So versatile, so
> flexible, free (in both senses).  I actually know somewhat more than the
> basics of the system.  I'm a bash and AWK script enthusiast, and I hack
> Emacs.  I've set up a qmail server running to connect me with my ISP.
>
Good to see that you have enthusiasm.

> It's _installing_ and _configuring_ the system which I detest.  Finding
> the necessary info seems a black art.  It took me a whole day and a half
> to get my printer working, for example.  I don't think there's a coherent
> description of how to configure the network stuff anywhere.  Of course,
> it doesn't help that the main IDE controller on my motherboard is hd[gh],
> and its hardware address shifts each time I add another card in.  Maybe
> things would be less bad if I next installed something like Ubuntu.
>

Config files can be difficult, but the info you need is almost always on a wiki
or mailing list somewhere.  Some things are more difficult than others, but I
don't find myself editing config files too often unless I need to.
You may very well like to consider Ubuntu.  The fact that the package manager
uninstalls dependencies sounds a little icky, but from my understanding it's the
"OS X" of Linux in that everything "just works" and is stable, but you have the
low-level Linux stuff there at your disposal.

> By contrast, installing Win2k is about as difficult as inserting the DVD
> into a virgin machine, but it's really not the sort of system I want.
>
> As for package managers, they're like magic spells.  When they work,
> they're wonderful, when they don't, they're a nightmare.  At least when
> you build and install from a tarball, you can see what's going on, and
> you can be reasonably sure that the Makefile won't be doing anything
> "helpful" behind your back.  It was a package manager which failed to
> install the OO help file(s) on my system, for example, and it was another
> package manager which dismantled Jonathon's X-Windows when he
> de-installed Firefox.  Unfortunately, building things from source is only
> practical for isolated programs.
>

I'm quite pleased with Gentoo's portage.  Compiling and installing yourself can
be rather annoying when there are a lot of dependencies to handle.

> > I'm a full-time Linux user that runs a bleeding-edge Gentoo system on
> > the unstable branch (meaning, I use the latest of everything on my
> > system whether or not the Gentoo gods have deemed the software stable)
> > and this isn't the experience I have with it at all.  Updating
> > openoffice is as easy as typing "emerge openoffice (or openoffice-bin
> > if I don't want to wait for a compile)" when a new version is
> > available, and my package manager handles the rest - config files
> > intact.  I really suggest using a different operating system or
> > learning some Linux basics and using a package manager.  There's just
> > no good reason to be using 1.1.3, really.
>
> There would be no reason to install 1.1.3 from scratch.  However, given
> that it works on my system, and I can work it on my system (more or
> less), the right time to install the new version is when I've got several
> days of calm in which I can learn its idosyncrasies in peace, not when
> I'm hopelessly stressed out like I am at the moment.
>
> It would be nice to have the help working, though.

I really really advocate installing 2.2.1.  It's easy and everything will work
and should be compatible with your current system.
http://download.openoffice.org/2.2.1/contribute.html?product=OpenOffice.org&os=linuxintel&lang=en-US&version=2.2.1
I'm sure others have linked you to this, but online help can be found at
http://support.openoffice.org/index.html

>
> I put it to you that the way you continually update your system isn't an
> easy natural thing to do at all; rather, it's a highly refined skill that
> you've developed over an extended period.

Actually, it's as easy as typing "emerge packagename" or "emerge world" when I
want to update everything at once =)
>
> --
> Alan Mackenzie (Ittersbach, Germany).
>


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