On 21-Jul-03, 16:10 (CDT), Mathieu Roy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Don't you agree that game industry is not a minor industry related to > computers?
All I meant to ask was for a clarification of "card Foo is unsupported". My *personal* experience is that I've gotten a wide variety of cards to work acceptably in 2D mode, and that often people say "card Foo is unsupported" when what they mean is a "I can't run Quake (or whatever) on card Foo". These are related to the people who say "the stable release is hopelessly outdated and useless" when in fact quite a few people (myself included) have a variety of servers and desktops running the Debian stable release, and amazingly enough, continue to get work done with them. I didn't mean to slam games, but to point out that "lack of hardware 3d" is not the same as "useless". Thanks to the others for clarifying, and while I can be quite happy (well, accepting) with the performance of 2D VESA modes (admittedly with the eye-candy turned down), I'll happily conceed that it's not the best of all possible worlds. > Well, sit in front of your computer for about 15 minutes and you'll > see the big picture (if you have xscreensaver installed, indeed). Eyecandy. Nice eyecandy for sure, but hardly worth making *the* basis of hardware and software choice. > I have no problem with the packages included in woody but defending > them by telling that nobody cares about using its hardware at his > full capacity (in fact, at least at 50% of it's capacity) seems just > wrong. I didn't say that nobody cared, what I said (or at least meant to imply) was that a great many of us *don't* care about such things, and making absolute statements (either way) is not useful in determining how Debian does things. Steve -- Steve Greenland The irony is that Bill Gates claims to be making a stable operating system and Linus Torvalds claims to be trying to take over the world. -- seen on the net