Post by Avi GreenburyAnd YAST2 is probably the best system tool ever done.
Hmm, Yast made me want to hurt small things the last (and first) time I
used it. I'm increasingly wondering that this might have been a
fault at my end, since a lot of people seem to like it now. Has it
improved drastically over the past six or so years?
Well, the first time I saw Yast2 was in SUSE Linux 8.1 Professional. It was
good but it did have a few things that didn't seem to be what it should have
been, and since I was buddies with Marcus Meissner, I told him. He's the head
of SUSE Security, and when 8.2 Professional came out, I bought it right away,
backed up everything, and did a fresh install. See the only machine I had at
the time was the one that is now my server, a little Pentium 3 733 MHz
processor with 384 MBs RAM, and I didn't have anything else. But it worked
REALLY well on it. All the things in Yast2 seemed fixed in 8.2 Professional,
and I really liked it. I had uptime of 205 days on that release, and this is
consodering that I did EVERYTHING on that machine. Imagine that old hardware
being used daily as a desktop, having SSH, FTP, and Web services running for
friends, and like 4 email clients loaded all at once, and firefox and
Netscape all being loaded with like literally 12 tabs in each open, and then
on top of that XMMS and Gaim and, well, let's just say I had KDE with 5
Virtual Desktops, and all of them were LOADED with stuff because I did a lot
with that machine. All the while a movie was playing, and no lag, and 205
days of uptime.
I still remember when a Kernel update had broken my Nvidia driver and Marcus
went back to the office to fix it and released a new one for me.
Yast2 was REALLY nice. Even now, the new versions are nicely made, and the
thing has that ability to show you what it's doing. Like Mandriva for
example, if you set up a Firewall, it doesn't show you what commands it ran
to do it, but Yast2 does. you can see exactly what IPTables it typed out for
you. And of course Novell GPLd it.
Post by Avi GreenburyPost by Tshepang LekhonkhobePost by Allenweb browser: Opera, Elinks, Links, Lynx, Netscape when it was
around.... Seamonkey
Opera and Netscape should have gone to non-free
Opera isn't listed on the Debian.org package list, and I think I
found a .deb package for it, but I don't even remember where. But it
wasn't on the install CDs, and wasn't on their servers. I love Opera
though, it's fast and nice. Can't stand Firefox.
Opera do have a repository of .deb packages for *buntu, and I'm pretty
sure they do a Debian one. You can certainly download .debs of it from
their site.
Every few months I decide Opera's amazing and switch back to it, then
remember how badly I get along with the search-from-the-address-bar
thing.
I know, Seamonkey isn't Firefox though. Seamonkey is it's own thing.
Firefox is a slow VERY laggy bloated browser. Seamonkey is what they
probably think of when they write the brochures for their firefox
crap since Seamonkey isn't slow and actually looks nice and works
well. Seamonkey works way better for me, but making it work on
anything isn't exactly a walk in the park since the only distro I
have that actually includes it is Slackware.
There was an announcement to the effect of a new Seamonkey release
a few weeks ago. Unfortunately, from what I gather (through very
limited research) it looks to be Thunderbird + Firefox rather than a
progression of the goodness that is Seamonkey.
Yea, I haven't actually used the new version yet, I'm still using the one that
shipped with Slackware 13.0, and I still love it. Firefox used to be an OK
browser until they started goin on and on about how good it was and everyone
started using it. Then they wanted all the features they could cram into it
on there, and bloated it like a PMSing feminazi, and that's basically a
description of what Firefox is now.... They really should concentrate more on
Seamonkey. ;)
Post by Avi Greenbury--
Avi Greenbury
http://aviswebsite.co.uk ;)
http://aviswebsite.co.uk/asking-questions
--
http://www.myspace.com/farmacyofhorror
Digital Horror Punk - Music I make! All done with LMMS
All done with Linux and FreeBSD