Frank Staals wrote:
> Freminlins wrote:
>
>
>> Err, yeah. Look through hundreds of packages to see which dependencies
>> they
>> have. Helpful. Not.
>>
>> This way of doing X11 is seriously unhelpful to end users. If having
>> individual packages for everything is so good, please tell me why
>> e
Freminlins wrote:
Err, yeah. Look through hundreds of packages to see which dependencies they
have. Helpful. Not.
This way of doing X11 is seriously unhelpful to end users. If having
individual packages for everything is so good, please tell me why everything
in /bin, /usr/bin and so on is not
On 29/11/2007, Dominic Fandrey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > So I do a pkg_add -r xorg. After about 70 packages I give up. I only
> used to
> > have about 65 packages in total on my old desktop, now I need more than
> 70
> > and I haven't even got x windows up yet. So I go off and have a look an
Freminlins wrote:
> I used to find FreeBSD easy. What has happened? I have a couple of machines
> I usually install new versions on, one is headless the other is a desktop
> machine (which was a 100% reliable 5.4 installation). I boot the headless
> machine using floppies, then install across the n
Freminlins wrote:
I used to find FreeBSD easy. What has happened? I have a couple of machines
I usually install new versions on, one is headless the other is a desktop
machine (which was a 100% reliable 5.4 installation). I boot the headless
machine using floppies, then install across the net. Bu
I used to find FreeBSD easy. What has happened? I have a couple of machines
I usually install new versions on, one is headless the other is a desktop
machine (which was a 100% reliable 5.4 installation). I boot the headless
machine using floppies, then install across the net. But something has
happ