Paul, thanks for the vote of support. One key point. Fedora is a community effort which Red Hat sponsors; (Fedora) is quite different from what Red Hat offers as it's commercial offering such as Red Hat Enterprise, etc. A better explanation is here:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/ One other difference is that Red Hat Enterprise produces no code for the PowerPC; they support only Intel and compatibles. Red Hat engineers cooperate with Fedora, but Fedora's volunteers currently support both Intel/compatibles and PowerPC. Fedora in that regard is similar to other Linux distributions where their effort and resources are split such that Intel comes first and after that is done then work proceeds on PowerPC based stuff. And while there is much to appreciate, surely, the source of these distributions are nearly all similarly split -- they cannot, in my opinion, design their source to take full advantage of the unique design of PowerPC systems. TSS is like Red Hat in that it is a commercial entity dedicated exclusively to PowerPC technology as Red Hat is dedicated exclusively to Intel. YDL differs from Fedora in that YDL is exclusively designed for running on PowerPC systems. The PowerPC is not just a computer designed a little differently, it is designed intentionally differently so that explorations of all kinds of efforts can be explored in ways that just cause Intel systems to choke. Intel technologies have a definite value, but the PowerPC's value is unique and for many projects where details and scales of order of precision matter -- superior. Not many people are interested in exploring at that level of intricacy curiously rare or different areas of basic or advanced science or math, but with YDL running on a PowerPC -- no one can stop them from achieving that kind of refined mastery or understanding should a person choose to do so in nearly any field. One example, not many are aware that the now so called outdated G4 can process specially prepared code at 128 bits. It isn't simple, true. But it is there, and YDL can take advantage of it and one can share with a string of buddies worldwide all growing towards and perhaps in, a shared interest -- mastering that interest or subject that much faster. What YDL does with the Cell, is even better. And YDL running on a cluster of PS3s better still. I've years of experience running superminis and mainframes utilizing Unix like systems. Even so, with that as a background given the Cell, I can only imagine what Kai and the TSS team has done. However, by keeping YDL what it is Kai and TSS has done what not even Red Hat has because Red Hat Enterprise is not Fedora, but YDL remains YDL. My dream is to have a PS3 cluster in a laptop. I know that the reality will be YDL running it. Best wishes... On Tue, 11 Sep 2007 03:19:59 +0000 Paul Higgins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > There is some good info in the book "Red Hat Linux 8 for Dummies", > which though somewhat dated (for newbies who don't know, Red Hat has > for years been called Fedora Core), has a fairly pain-free section on > the rpm command. There is also a good introduction to other basic > shell commands. I found it very helpful. Don't buy it--it's too > dated, but it should be available at most libraries. > > Derick is right, learning how to work in the shell is really > essential to working in Linux, or any *real* OS for that matter, > including Mac OS X. I've always found the library to be my best > friend for that, with the web as a close second (e.g. > linuxquestions.org). > > -PRH > > On Tuesday 11 September 2007 01:49, Derick Centeno wrote: > > > Explanation: After the whereis command is executed YDL responds by > > telling you where powermanga is located. The next step to remove it > > requires you to be in superuser mode. To do that change directories > > and go to where the program is located, then use the rpm command > > with the e flag (e for extract): > > > > #rpm -e powermanga > > > > YDL will proceed to remove it for you. > > > > Picking up a text on Unix shells and System Administration would > > also help with Linux while expanding anyone's understanding > > regarding what it is possible to do in executing various projects > > one might wish to experiment with or pursue. > > > > Good Luck... > _______________________________________________ > yellowdog-newbie mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.terrasoftsolutions.com/mailman/listinfo/yellowdog-newbie ======== "If I were not a physicist, I would probably be a musician. I often think in music. I live my daydreams in music. I see my life in terms of music. ... I get most joy in life out of music." "What Life Means to Einstein: An Interview by George Sylvester Viereck," for the October 26, 1929 issue of The Saturday Evening Post.
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