On Sat, 02 Aug 1997 > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > On 15:18:49 "Robert D. Hilliard" wrote: > > > > I think this should be the main object of a smaller version of > >debian (Please not Debian Lite!). A normal debian installation loads > >up a single user machine with a lot of unneeded and unwanted server and > >network administration stuff. > > > >Bob > > > Man, do I like this idea! I really like Linux, and all it offers, and I > really > appreciate Debian, but just yesterday I was saying to myself, I wish that > someone with the skills would put together a Linux better suited to the > single user environment where many (most?) of us use our home systems. > Free from all the hassles of permissions, root privelege to do this or that, > etc! Right on! For a user like myself anyway, it sure makes a helluva lot > more sense than all the multi-user protections/permissions and such. I > for one, get really frustrated with such things, and it really ticks me off > that > if I ftp a file then I can't move it to some directory before I unzip it or > thin > gs > like that. Everyone says don't run as root and use 'su' but damnit, some > of this is nuts when the machine is really only an individual's workstation, > or at least I think it gets in the way, and probably frustrates the hell out > of > a lot of people that finally give it up! > > Paul I didn't mean to go that far. I've done too much damage running as root when it wasn't necessary - even when it is necessary to run as root, and I'm being "CAREFUL", I've screwed up more things than I like to admit.
I mean to omit news servers, web servers, NFS, NIS, bind and similar programs that are needed by ISP's and network administrators,a but not by an individual running a single user machine. Bob -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .