On Tue, 13 Mar 2007 16:58:49 +0100 Joe Hart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > Celejar wrote: > > On Tue, 13 Mar 2007 11:23:27 +0100 > > Joe Hart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > [snip] > > > >> As for acroread goes, it has turned into a huge package. The version in > >> my apt-cache shows 7.0.9, which is not the newest version, and it's a > >> whopping 22911748 bytes. I imagine that 8.0 is even bigger. > >> > >> While KPDF may not be as feature rich, it does the job, and weighs in at > >> 742592 bytes, and can embed nicely into konqueror. > > > > Don't forget that kpdf is based on xpdf (which is what I use). > > Ah the hidden dependencies. xpdf is a dummy package, that pulls in > xpdf-reader and xpdf-utils and xpdf-common. Adding those up comes quite > close to what acroread uses, so I guess my comparison is pretty useless. Um, no. Compressed Size: Uncompressed Size xpdf-common 60.9 258 xpdf-reader 769 1937 xpdf-utils 1393 3543 total 2222.9 5738 acroread 22.9M 56M So acroread uses about 10 times as much space as xpdf (and I haven't even looked closely at acroread's dependencies vs. those of xpdf). > I guess it is almost like comparing different types of apples. The one > thing to remember though is that all of the above mentioned files are > open source except for acroread. For people that are dfsg purists, they > would balk at the idea of installing it. I'm not a hard-line purist, but enough of one to strongly prefer the dfsg option barring a compelling reason otherwise. > Personally, I have no problem with proprietary software, if there is no > viable alternative. For example, I use the nvidia (9755) drivers > because the open source version is pitifully slow on this system, and it > can't support beryl. Madwifi is one of the only non-free bits I use, and it is really in the spirit of freedom. Celejar -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]