Archive for June, 2005

Fallout from the Red Hat Summit

Thursday, June 16th, 2005

I got this in my email today:

Your comments during the conference led me to believe that you would be an
excellent person to provide some guidance to those who are getting started
with RHEL. Hence, my invitation. Would you be interested in writing a
book? If so, let me know and we can chat about it.

I laughed, a lot.

Depricated Commands…

Thursday, June 9th, 2005

I was asked today at least 4 times today why the gv command no longer works in RHEL 3. My responce is that it has been replaced by ggv and the users seem to go about their merry way until they complain that ggv sucks, which, well, it does.

This highlights a very frustrating problem. Its a problem that hurts the acceptance of Linux as a server and as a desktop. It seems that the distributions don’t even realize the problem and are blind to it.

There are lots of what people would think of as standard commands. Like vi and cp. However, these commands keep changing. How are users supposed to follow which postscript viewer is the current new and shinny? They aren’t. Users should not have to worry and complain about the gv -> ggv -> evince saga. What about your browser? What command do you run to launch a browser? In RHEL 2.1 it was netscape. RHEL 3: mozilla. RHEL 4: firefox.

A lot of folks miss the Pine suite. It has licensing problems which puts this situation in a different light. However, I symlink pico to nano so to keep the users sane.

I actually had sysadmins ask me what the ps command is being replaced with. “gps?” they asked.

This is becoming a problem. Folks need to think a little bit about what can the distributions do so that the complete command line environment doesn’t entirely up and change between Core 3 and Core 4. I’d suggest that certain commands should always work. It doesn’t matter so much as to what application they end up running. I’d start with mozilla and gv.

Red Hat Summit Goes Cajun on Your Ass

Saturday, June 4th, 2005

The Summary: Friends. Knowledge. Communication. Networking.

Lessons Learned: Fedora is the most important thing to Red Hat. RHEL is utterly dependant on its success. To work with RHEL or other rebuilds requires work in Fedora. To not follow Fedora is to be out of control of RHEL. To be out of control of RHEL means a product not suited for your needs and bugs everywhere.

New Orleans Historical Tour: Drank in oldest bar in the USA on Bourbon Street.

Strutted down Bourbon Street with Matt Szulik: Check.

Believer in the Gospel: Check. Do you have good Gospel pictures? Please post them.

Live Jazz: Check.

As always, a pleasure to see my good friends.