Hi folks
Firstly I'd like to thank everyone who replied to my email.
I've decided to document my experience with trinity in case developers are
saying to themselves - we've created the best DE ever and few are
useing it - don't they know how good it is?
Hopefully this reply will help improve the interaction between the
developers and the end users because without some improvement this fork
will go
the same way as most of the others - into a back water.
<snip>
Thank you for your detailed input! I apologise for not pointing directly
to Slavek's packages (
https://quickbuild.pearsoncomputing.net/~slavek-banko/+archive/axis for
the record ); it was late at night and I didn't have the link handy at the
time.
As you probably found out, the last LiveCD was released a while ago on a
somewhat unstable Ubuntu version (non-LTS). This is being worked on; in
fact I am only waiting on LibreOffice 3.6 to be released before I should
be able to generate a new (less buggy) LiveCD with TDE installed.
The information on kgtk is helpful. This package will likely be removed
from the installation metapackages in the future (
http://bugs.pearsoncomputing.net/show_bug.cgi?id=1078 ).
One of the most frustrating things about our current 3.5.13 release is the
persistent sudo problem. This has been fixed for R14.0, but the fix
relies on new technology in Ubuntu that is not present in the oldest
supported Ubuntu releases for TDE 3.5.13. There are other problems with
3.5.13 that cannot really be fixed with an SRU, which is the primary
reason I (and many other developers here) have been concentrating on R14
and getting it out the door as quickly as possible without sacrificing
quality.
Tim
Hi Tim
The one thing I realise is that to progress I really do need to bypass ubuntu
and consider installing Debian directly and things should be more stable
thereafter - after the learning curve. Though, I'll also watch out for the next
live CD. I'll also try some of the other suggestions.
I look forward to using Trinity soon....ish !!
Thanks
Thanks to everyone else who gave advice.
Lou