Sean Miller wrote: > Why are Linux people so "territorial"?? > > Any attempts I make in Somerset to organise a release party for > something like Ubuntu gets folks saying "can't be doing with that - > Debian's the only decent distro" or "Sorry, that's one of those Debian > derivitives isn't it? apt-get reallys gets to me... give me Red Hat > and yum any day". Or "the secret to life, the universe and everything > is SuSE" (they think late that, honest!)
It seems some parts of the Ubuntu community aren't completely exempt from the territorial bit either. :( My advice would be to organise something that is going to happen anyway (ie don't give them a , publicise it, and mention that **everyone** is welcome. If at the end of the day, you have a measured discussion about the pros and cons of different distros, at least you have gathered something of value and found some common ground. > We should surely be celebrating every Linux release, rather than > forming into "camps" -- but it does seem that people get very tied to > their own particular favourite distro. Exactly. Ultimately we are all in the same boat, ultimately we share similar values. When people start supporting distros like people blindly support football teams, they lose sight of the fundamental basics behind the whole thing. In the context of football, this would be to stop caring about the football itself and simply focus on "one upping" supporters of the other team. In the context of GNU/Linux, this would be forgetting what has drawn us all together. Good luck with your event, I know several people who would probably be interested in Dorset, so make sure you forward it to the right place :) (I think it's Dorest LUG?!) Tim -- www.tdobson.net ---- If each of us have one object, and we exchange them, then each of us still has one object. If each of us have one idea, and we exchange them, then each of us now has two ideas. - George Bernard Shaw -- ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/