Actually, there is a reasoning for doing both. 

People who are interested in their OS as a working tool would be satisfied 
by less than 100% performance, if achieving more compatibility means they 
have to spend too much time installing and learning. (achieving low 
maintainance)

People would like  more users and developers to 
install the distribution they use, since 
it contributes to making it more stable and functional.

disclaimer: the fact that i gave the reasoning does not mean i support 
FUD.


On Wed, 21 Aug 2002, Meir Kriheli wrote:

> Moshe,
> 
> I'm trying to understand why some people resent trying new distributions/ 
> applications (note: at least trying). You don't have to act like some kid 
> finding out his favorite super hero is being insulted or some knight 
> defending his fort.
> 
> If you can't discuss things without throwing FUD or unbased assumptions 
> (hearsay doesn't count) and conduct a civil discussion please leave it to 
> someone who can.
> 
[snipped]
-- 
Orna.   |  http://tx.technion.ac.il/~agmon

one penguin, two penguin, three penguin...


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