Hi,
Fafa Hafiz Krantz wrote:
This sounds good. How much time is left for you to write it?
A couple of weeks :)
So I have a lot of time to do research.
You could subscribe to more technical lists to see how help is done and
what kind of problems people face with a none-technical background.
On Monday 20 June 2005 07:37 pm, Roger 'Rocky' Vetterberg wrote:
> Fafa Hafiz Krantz wrote:
> *snip*
>
> >>FreeBSD is a typical system driven by technical people.
> >
> > Clearly its weakest point.
>
> Once again, that depends on your audience. If you ask me, its one
> of FreeBSD's strongest points
Linux uptimes roll over at 400 days, so the comment was to off set the
whining.
IMHO, if they can roll out a patch to a major security flaw in a day,
they should have been able to fix the uptime clock at some point in the
last decade. Odd that MS can do something that Linux can't.
Bob Martin
Fafa Hafiz Krantz wrote:
*snip*
FreeBSD is a typical system driven by technical people.
Clearly its weakest point.
Once again, that depends on your audience. If you ask me, its one
of FreeBSD's strongest points.
Im one of those "technical people", and the main reason I like
BSD is that its
Fafa Hafiz Krantz wrote:
I know some people who were to afraid to move to FreeBSD as they
believed installing from source is equal to being a programmer.
Yeah I know a lot of people like that :)
For those people, the pcbsd project www.pcbsd.org might be an option. I
didn't try it myself (y
Hello Johnson,
Tuesday, June 21, 2005, 2:17:06 AM, you wrote:
>> That sentence is right.
JD> Technically, it is correct. But it may imply something that
JD> isn't correct. If you look at the discussion page, the editor who
JD> added that phrase used the analogy of FreeBSD running a children's
JD>
From: Vadim Goncharov [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> That sentence is right.
Technically, it is correct. But it may imply something that isn't correct.
If you look at the discussion page, the editor who added that phrase used
the analogy of FreeBSD running a children's footrace. Putting those
toget
Hello Johnson,
Tuesday, June 21, 2005, 12:48:23 AM, you wrote:
>> For those of you who haven't seen it, FreeBSD has an entry
>> in Wikipedia:
JD> The Netcraft sentence is quite strange. Instead of just saying FreeBSD has
JD> the longest uptime at Netcraft, it's prefixed with "of the operating sy
From: Andrew L. Gould [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> For those of you who haven't seen it, FreeBSD has an entry
> in Wikipedia:
The Netcraft sentence is quite strange. Instead of just saying FreeBSD has
the longest uptime at Netcraft, it's prefixed with "of the operating systems
that accurately re
> Message: 2
> Date: Mon, 20 Jun 2005 04:49:09 -0500
> From: "Fafa Hafiz Krantz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Explaining FreeBSD features
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Content-Type: text/plain
>
>
> Hello.
>
> I am curious why it's so difficult
> This sounds good. How much time is left for you to write it?
A couple of weeks :)
So I have a lot of time to do research.
> FreeBSD is a typical system driven by technical people.
Clearly its weakest point.
> Or, as I describe it for myself, if I would know marketing,
> I would not write so
Hi,
Fafa Hafiz Krantz wrote:
I am curious why it's so difficult to get a simple and straight
forward list of FreeBSD's features, that normal people can understand?
There is no real answer to this question.
I am trying to write one of the largest articles ever to be published
on www.PCWorld.
Hello.
I am curious why it's so difficult to get a simple and straight
forward list of FreeBSD's features, that normal people can understand?
I am trying to write one of the largest articles ever to be published
on www.PCWorld.no -- to only say good things about FreeBSD. But I want
it clear what
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