In a stressful time like freeze, it is really aggravating to deal with the nonstop trickle of people who tell me that because *THEIR* system is broken, I need to add a DEPENDENCY on xfonts-base to all the X servers, or to xserver-common.
This is WRONG. Utterly, completely, and totally WRONG. There's more than one way the get font services to the X server. Installing fonts locally is only one of them. If anybody has any suggestions that would get this fact through cluebies' thick skulls that doesn't: 1) require me to dick with the package interrelationships 2) isn't documentation, since the people who report this "problem" can't be bothered to read any (the Debian X FAQ, the xserver-common package description) 3) will not inconvenience users who already know what's going on, or understand the concept of a font server I'd very much appreciate hearing these suggestions. Please DON'T send them directly to me; send them to debian-x@lists.debian.org instead so they can be considered and discussed by a number of people. People who don't have a handle on the issues involved need not reply to this message. I'm looking for suggestions from people who know what they're talking about, and who understand that Debian is a distribution that refuses to compromise its flexibity for the sake of less-knowledgeable users. We need intelligent solutions that hold the newbie's hand without hamstringing the wizard. Thanks in advance for any intelligent suggestions. I'm Cc'ing the xviddetect package maintainer because there may be a way to work a question about font services into anXious (this is the X-configuring component of the new install system for potato). If the user doesn't understand the question, then we should default to piling fonts on his machine. The penalty for ignorance is reduced free space on the drive. :) N.B.: I am no longer subscribed to debian-user, so I will not see messages posted only to this list. -- G. Branden Robinson | The only way to get rid of a temptation Debian GNU/Linux | is to yield to it. [EMAIL PROTECTED] | -- Oscar Wilde roger.ecn.purdue.edu/~branden/ |
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