On Wed, Apr 11, 2007 at 02:47:57PM -0400, der Mouse wrote:
ClassicBSD would need to be about 'have to
have' functionality, not
'nice to have' functionality.
I couldn't have though of a better way
of saying it: 'have to have'
is exactly what I would love to see on an OS which I would use a lot.
The problem, of course, is, whose idea of "have to have" controls? For
example...
Of course me :-) Seriously, that's why I said on another email on this
tread that having an installer which would install a very minimal
system (NetBSD?) but packages and/or ports would be available could be
a good idea. We all might agree on things like the system should run
(w/o X on 2MB RAM), for example, but some might want to run X and some
not; or that the base system should not take more than (just to say
something) 40MB of HDD, but some might have 80MB HDD and some 2GB HDD
and might want to install an amount of software according to it; that
vi should be the editor and mwm (m for Mouse, not for Motif ;-) the
window manager per defauls, but some might want to use Vim ans Ion ;-)
instead. No one is allowed to install/run/use/talk about KDE, of
course. :-)
...this is clearly a "have to have" for one
of us - but definitely not
for another (me). I consider FORTRAN support and S/Key totally
junkable frills - but a C compiler is not optional. I'm sure there are
those that disagree with each of those, and quite possibly some who
disagree with all of them.
Couldn't both of them, FORTRAN and a C compiler be optional
packages/ports? many people (I for one, most probably) wouldn't need
to run either (or any other compiler) on such a system, anyway.
Cheers,
A.
--
Angel @ Granada, Spain
PGP Public key:
http://www.ugr.es/~ama/ama-pgp-key
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