Hi all,
I post a lot of requests for assistance on this list, but got few answers. A developer can tell if the observations at the origin of requests (possible bugs), ot the questions themself are followed by effects within the TDE team or other groups of developers?
In other words: is it useful if I waste my time sending smoke signals on this list???
<troll> How dreamer I am! In 199x, I dreamed that the beginning of the end of Windows would be in 2000, replaced by Linux. But maybe next year... :-)
My recent experiences show me that Linux is far from convincing the current Windows users to join. TDE is (for me) the best desktop alternative, but there are so many installation problems!
My recent experiences show me that Linux is far from convincing the current Windows users to join. </troll>
Thank you Patrick
On Wednesday 09 January 2013 11:49:40 am Patrick Serru wrote:
Hi all, I post a lot of requests for assistance on this list, but got few
answers. A developer can tell if the observations at the origin of requests (possible bugs), ot the questions themself are followed by effects within the TDE team or other groups of developers?
In other words: is it useful if I waste my time sending smoke signals on this list???
Patrick, the problem is that the really knowledgable people are very busy and the rest of us are, well, not very knowledgable. Until they dropped KDE 3 for KDE 4 I was a very happy user of PCLinuxOS where everything was very easy and we used to say that "everything just worked."
Ignorance really was bliss. :-)
Anyway, Fedora uses the "yum" utility according to Wikipedia. There is a short tutorial on yum available at http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/rhel-centos-fedora-linux-yum-command-howto/ in English. I'm sure you could also find one in French.
Wikipedia also says that "apt-rpm is an alternative to yum, and may be more familiar to people used to Debian or Debian-based distributions," and perhaps you might want to Google apt-rpm, though yum might be safer being the native utility.
<troll> How dreamer I am! In 199x, I dreamed that the beginning of the end of Windows would be in 2000, replaced by Linux. But maybe next year... :-)
Yeah, maybe next year, or the year after that... :-)
Andy