On 2006-10-17, Goswin von Brederlow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: [snip] > > Anyway, the usual way to detect a newbie and give help to them seems > to be to assume everyone a newbie and give little hints, startup tips, > ... till they learn enough to turn them off. For examples see gimp or > mc. > > PS: One of the hints better be how to turn the hints off. :)
Someone suggested to me off-list that perhaps all we need is to provide a pointer to more newbie help in /etc/issue. Perhaps that would be the easiest to implement, and the easiest for users to disable :-), no? The disadvantage would be that users who have X Window plus KDM already set up, or who SSH into a friend's machine, who need help with linux commands in an xterm wouldn't see the message, but I assume that is a rare case so just editing /etc/issue and /etc/issue.net is fine. Agree? If the issue file were changed, what could go in it? I suggest: * one link to a special webpage which points total newbies to newbie documentation and also gives newbie-level instructions on how to get technical support * also, instructions how to view one offline-viewable Linux *tutorial* which is already installed - preferably a good one, but even the bad old intro(1) manpage if there is no good one. Also, perhaps it'd be possible for the bash "help" command to display those same two things in addition to the terse reference it already displays. What do you think? -- The church is near but the road is icy; the bar is far away but I will walk carefully. -- Russian Proverb -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]