It seems that Debian is taking a rather different philosophy on pre-configured packages than other distributions, such as RedHat. What I mean is that after installation of RedHat you have a more or less pre-tailored system setup. You can start tweaking your heart out but the basics are already there. Debian comes up in a much "rawer" form after install - for instance, no prompt beyond the basic "#" for root and "$" for the user (RedHat gives you the now famous "username /home/username$" prompt). X is pretty bare in Debian after install, too - if you just "startx" you get a simple xterm with no default menus, no menued way of running another xterm, heck not even a FvwmModule running on screen with xload and xclock in it.
These are just a few examples. Of course, any competent person should be able to set all these up to suit his own tastes given enough time, but a default setup would be nice IMHO. It seems as if Debian is catering to the more techie crowd - the ones that want a bare-bones system they can play around with and not have someone else make decisions and choices for them. Sort of like after installing Solaris - the system is stripped to the bones by way of configuration - you have to set it all up by yourself. My proposition - let's go for the more casual, yet sophisticated user. A user that DOES want to read the Fvwm man page to learn how to set it up to his own tastes, BUT doesn't want to do it 2 hours after installing the system and in the meantime he would like a nice default to help him get along. Yoav -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]