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Old January 29, 2003, 04:17   #1
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Something for you Linux folks to read
There's an excellent column that attempts to shatter some of the misconceptions many Linux zealots have about Linux. Mainly about how it's more secure and less buggy than Windows. I mean, it's not really a big secret, it's just something so many people willingly blind themselves to in their ardent opposition to Microsoft.
We know that Linux and open source attacks are soaring while Windows attacks decline, but people love to ignore those facts and figures with the wave of their hand, and make up some weird excuse about why they shouldn't be trusted. I mean, organizations like SERN and CERT are not to be trusted, right?

Well, anyway, this guy's article is very well writtten, and I urge all of you to read it before using the trite Linux endorsement stuff you throw at me all the time: http://www.informationweek.com/story/IWK20030124S0013/1
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Old January 29, 2003, 04:48   #2
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For Red Hat Linux 7.2, you go to the Red Hat "errata" page https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/ and from there to the page specific to version 7.2 https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/rh72-errata.html . There, you'll see that, to date, Red Hat has issued 151 patches and updates (mostly for security issues; that's what the "broken lock" icon means) for that Linux version. For a very crude sense of scale, that works out to an average of around 2.3 patches per week.

Next, let's do the same thing for XP Professional, starting on Microsoft's errata page, the "HotFix & Security Bulletin Service"; use the pull-down menu to isolate just the XP-related items. You'll see that the page lists 21 XP-specific patches and updates to date. That's an average 0.35 patches per week.
This one cracked me up . It reads "Red Hat released more patches, so it must be more buggy." Hmmm, let's look again at this statement. A Red Hat distribution is not only an operating system, but a full fledged software suite. It has, among others, office software, databases, lots of networking stuff, games etc. in a tenfold greater amount than Windows has with its shabby Write and Minesweeper stuff. All these software packets can have bugs. For example, email programs. With WinXP pro comes only Outlook Express. This has numerous bugs and security flaws. With RH come numerous (lazy to count them, must be 20 or more) email clients. Even if only half of them have one bug, this makes 10 bugs in Mr Langa's book, while Outlook Expresses 5 bugs makes only 5 in total. Hence, Windows must be twice as secure as Linux. Is it just me, or sees anyone else flaws in his logic?

Also, to compare the number of bugs with a company, that considers most of its bugs to be features, is ridiculous.

Sorry, but this guy is an idiot.

Last edited by Harovan; January 29, 2003 at 04:54.
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Old January 29, 2003, 05:28   #3
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Glonkie, according to your link:

Quote:
Over the first half of this year, just 54 US government systems were successfully attacked compared to the 204 that took place during the same period last year.

A total of 38 UK government systems were hit during the first six months of last year, but only 12 have fallen victim so far this year.
Compare this to the Slammer Worm attack. Which system is more buggy? Which system has more security flaws? The answer is crystal clear - Microsoft. I realised that Slammer targets SQL Server, but even the article you linked is about attacks on third party software, so it seems that SQL Server is more than fair game.
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Old January 29, 2003, 05:34   #4
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I found this little thing this morning

The Linux

A Technological Re-Write of Theodore Giesel's "The Lorax"

At the far end of Redmond where the Grickle-grass grows
and the wind smells slow-and-sour when it blows
and no birds ever sing excepting old crows...
is the Street of the Lifted Linux

And deep in the Grickle-grass, some people say,
if you look deep enough you can still see, today,
where the Linux once stood, just as long as it could
before somebody lifted the Linux away.

What was the Linux?
And why was it there?
And why was it lifted and taken somewhere
from the far end of town where the Grickle-grass grows?

The old Gates-ler still lives here.
Ask him. He knows.
You won't see the Gates-ler.
Don't knock at his door.

He stays in his Lerkim on top of his store.
He lurks in his Lerkim, cold under the roof,
where he makes his own software
out of vaporware, poof.

And on special dank midnights in August, he peeks
out of the shutters
and sometimes he speaks
and tells how the Linux was lifted away.

He'll tell you, perhaps...
if you're willing to pay.
On the end of a rope
he lets down a tin pail.

And you have to toss in fifteen cents
and a nail
and the shell of the great-great-great-
grandfather snail.

Then he pulls up the pail,
makes a most careful count
to see if you've paid him
the proper amount.

The he hides what you paid him
away in a musty compartment,
to keep it away
from the Justice Department.

Then he grunts, "I will call you by Whisper-ma-Phone,
for the secrets I tell are for your ears alone."
SLUPP!
Down slupps the Whisper-ma-Phone to your ear
and the old Gates-ler's whispers are not very clear,

since they have to come down
throught a snergelly hose,
and he sounds
as if he had
smallish bees up his nose.

"Now I'll tell you," he says, with the charisma of grey,
"how the Linux got lifted and taken away...
It all started way back...
such a long, long time back...

Way back in the days when flying toasters were cool
and a floppy could hold
your entire system install,
and the Mir satellite was still up in space...
one morning, I came to this glorious place.

And I first saw the PCs!
The custom PCs!
The bright-colored cases of the custom PCs!
Mile after mile all lined up in THREEs.

And, sitting at keyboards, I saw the consumers
Growing in numbers with revenue rumours
The chances of riches all ripe like satsumas.

From the silicon valley
came the comfortable sound
of the dot com brigade,
there was money around.

But those PCs! Those PCs!
Those custom PCs!
All my life I'd been searching
for PCs such as these.

The glow of their screens
was much brighter than flames.
And Lara brought 3-D to all the new games.


I felt a great leaping
of joy in my heart.
I knew just what I'd do!
I unloaded my cart.

In no time at all, I had downed a machine.
Wiped off the old system, leaving it clean.
And with great speedy speed and with marketing jive.
I clicked on the mouse and installed 95!

The instant I'd finished, I heard a rustling thrash!
I looked, I saw something pop out of the trash
of the PC I'd installed on. He was sort of a sanguine.
Describe him?...That's hard. He looked like a penguin.

He was shortish and stylish.
not pixelly or lossy.
And he spoke with a voice
that was sharpish and bossy.

"Mister!" he said with a mouth full of soothers,
"I am the Linux. I speak for the users.
I speak for the users, for the awake and the snoozers.
And I'm asking you, sir, at the top of my lungs"--

he was very upset as he shouted and wheezed--
"Whats that THING that you've put on that there PC?"
"Look, Linux," I said. "There's no cause for alarm.
I installed just one system. I am doing no harm.

"I'm being quite useful. This thing is Windows.
There's no need for choice as it already knows!
It's a system, there's a helper. Choose the dog or the cat.
But it has other uses. Yes, far beyond that.

"For surfing. For typing! Undoing deletes!
Or adding up things in your Excel spreadsheets!"

The Linux said,
"Sir! You are crazy with greed.
There is no one on earth
who, this system would need!"

But the very next minute I proved he was wrong.
For, just at that minute, a chap came along,
and he thought that the system I'd installed was great.
He happily bought it for three ninety-eight.

I laughed at the Linux, "You poor stupid guy!
You never can tell what some people will buy."

"I repeat," cried the Linux,
"I speak for the users!"
"I'm busy," I told him,
"shut up, all you losers."

I rushed 'cross the room, and in no time at all,
had run through the MSN messenger install.

I texted all my brothers and uncles and aunts
and I said, "Listen here! Here's a wonderful chance
for the whole Gates-ler Family to get mighty rich!

Get over here fast! Take the road to North Nitch.
Turn left at Weehawken. Sharp right at South Stitch."

And, in no time at all,
in the campus I built,
the whole Gates-ler Family
was working full tilt.

We were all writing software
just as busy as bees,
to the sound of the whirring
of those lovely PCs.

Then...
Oh! Baby! Oh!
How my business did grow!

Now, installing one system
at a time
was too slow.

So I quickly invented my bloated downloader
(Though a few dual boot systems just fizzled like soda).

We were making PCs
four times as slow as before!
And that Linux?...
He didn't show up any more.

But the next week
he knocked
on my new office door.

He snapped, "I'm the Linux who speaks for the users
which you seem to be loading with software abuses.

"But I'm also a friend of the hip young designers
who drank lots of coffee all sat in recliners
and worked on their iBooks while out at the diners.

"NOW...thanks to your hacking they've nothing to do,
you've placed this great 'Office' right into their view.
It's blocking their vision, they can't see the scene
no room to maneuver with Word on machine!

"They loved living here, but I can't let them stay.
They'll have to find flare. And I hope that they may.
Good luck, boys," he cried. And he sent them away.

I, the Gates-ler, felt sad
as I watched them all go.
BUT...
business is business!
And business must grow
regardless of designers in recliners, you know.

I meant no harm. I most truly did not.
But I had to grow bigger. So bigger I got.
I biggered my output, and with a few hacks.
I biggered my downloads - huge great service packs

on the PCs that shipped out, I had a great channel deal
they'd all install Windows or my wrath's what they'd feel.
I went right on biggering...selling more CDs.
And I biggered my money, which does always please.

Then again he came back! .NET had me slogging
when that old-nuisance Linux came in and called me a noggin.
"I am the Linux," his laptop unfolded.
He yapped and he whined. He snarggled. He scolded.

"Gates-ler!" he cried, now sounding defiant.
You're making most websites just IE compliant!
My poor PC users...the ones who like Netscape!
For them, webpage loading is becoming a sweepstake.

"And so," said the Linux,
"--please pardon my homepage--
they caannot surf here.
With your monopolised outrage.

"Where will they want to go to today?...
I don't hopefully know, if they don't want to pay.
"They may have to surf for a month...or a year...
To escape from the honey-pot trap around here.

"What's more," snapped the Linux, his arms in the air,
"Let me say a few words on useless bloatware.
Your machinery chugs on, updating, installing.
the disk space it leaves is downright apalling.

"And how do you use this leftover space?
I'll show you. A paperclip? Oh What a waste!
You're stressing the workers, they're PCs are crash scenes!
They're systems have hung, all frozen on splash screens.

"So I'm sending them off. Oh, their future is dreary.
They'll leave their dot coms and get woefully weary
in search of some software, innovative, not stale.
I hear all the clicks as they log out of Hotmail."

And then I got mad.
I got terribly mad.
I yelled at the Linux, "Now listen here, Tux!
All you do is yap on about users, that's sucks!

I'll soon have them all on .NET and XP
I intend to go on basing things around me
And, for your information, oh Linux, I'm figgering

on biggering
and BIGGERING
and BIGGERING
and BIGGERING,

turning MORE PCs to running on Windows
Our support page will be where EVERYONE, EVERYONE goes!"
And at that very moment, we heard a deep breath!
From outside, a user, with blue screen of death.

Then a hand on a plug. Then we heard the plug pull.
The very last Windows PC of them all!
No more PCs. No more leads. No installs to be done.
So, in no time, my uncles and aunts, every one,

all waved me good-bye. they jumped into my cars
and drove away from the shimmering screensaver stars.
Now all that was left 'neath the dark Redmond sky
was my big empty factory

the Linux...

and I.


The Linux said nothing. Just gave me a glance...
just gave me a very sad, sad backward glance...
as he lifted himself by the seat of his pants.
And I'll never forget the grim look on his face

when he heisted himself and took leave of this place,
through a hole in the security, without leaving a trace.
And all that the Linux left here in my hall
was a small pile of disks, with the one word...

"UNINSTALL."
Whatever that meant, well, I couldn't fathom at all.
That was long, long ago.

But each day since that day
I've sat here and worried
and worried away.

Through the years, while my buildings
have fallen apart,
I've worried about it
with all of my heart.

"But now," says the Gates-ler,
"Now that you're here,
the word of the Linux seems perfectly clear.

Unless you uninstall
Windows, the whole awful lot,
nothing is going to get better.
It's not.

"SO...
Catch!" calls the Gates-ler.
He lets something fall.
"It's a Linux CD.
It's the last one of all!

"You're in charge of the last of the custom PCs.
And custom PCs are what everyone needs.
Install a new system. Treat it with care.
A nice funny mousemat and shiny hardware.

"Grow a small network, use Unix! Use Mac!
Then the Linux
and all of his friends
may come back."
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Old January 29, 2003, 05:44   #5
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asher, bill is happily married, stop trying to win his affection.
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Old January 29, 2003, 11:37   #6
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Quote:
Originally posted by Sir Ralph
This one cracked me up . It reads "Red Hat released more patches, so it must be more buggy." Hmmm, let's look again at this statement. A Red Hat distribution is not only an operating system, but a full fledged software suite. It has, among others, office software, databases, lots of networking stuff, games etc. in a tenfold greater amount than Windows has with its shabby Write and Minesweeper stuff. All these software packets can have bugs.
This is what I was talking about for excuses.
It's not Linux that's buggy, since Linux is only the kernel, it's everything else.

How many of those Windows bugs are in the Windows kernel, Ralph, rather than in other software included in the suite like IIS and SQL Server.

Quote:
Compare this to the Slammer Worm attack. Which system is more buggy? Which system has more security flaws? The answer is crystal clear - Microsoft.
Err...UR, the Slammer Worm exploits one bug, that doesn't magically make the software more buggy because MS is a much more fun target than some faceless open source programs...

I apply about 20 security updates from Mandrake Update every week, and still people tell me Linux (as a whole, not the kernel) is more secure. It only seems that way since Linux hacks are usually not anywhere near on the scale of Windows ones, since it's much more fun to hack MS software than open source ones. After all, MS is the enemy.
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Old January 29, 2003, 11:43   #7
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MS is the bigger target. The article got that part right, at least.
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Old January 29, 2003, 11:45   #8
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Quote:
Originally posted by Asher
This is what I was talking about for excuses.
It's not Linux that's buggy, since Linux is only the kernel, it's everything else.
Still I don't see the logic, how releasing more patches means to have a less secure system. If one company releases patches hours after a bug gets reported, while the other first denies their existence, then declares them to be a feature, then (weeks later, may be never) releases a service pack, which fixes the one bug and creates three new, guess which system of both I consider to be more secure.
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Old January 29, 2003, 11:49   #9
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Quote:
Originally posted by Sir Ralph
Still I don't see the logic, how releasing more patches means to have a less secure system. If one company releases patches hours after a bug gets reported, while the other first denies their existence, then declares them to be a feature, then (weeks later, may be never) releases a service pack, which fixes the one bug and creates three new, guess which system of both I consider to be more secure.


Look at this list of security vulns patched in Mandrake 9.0 (which is very recent): http://www.mandrakesecure.net/en/adv...es.php?dis=9.0

And they're hardly in obscure programs like you seemed to imply, they're in stuff like KDE, kerberos, MySQL, sendmail, apache, etc.
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Old January 29, 2003, 12:21   #10
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Quote:
Originally posted by Asher
Look at this list of security vulns patched in Mandrake 9.0 (which is very recent): http://www.mandrakesecure.net/en/adv...es.php?dis=9.0
That tells us what, that in a system with about 10000 packets (unsure about the number, but several thousands for sure) they found not even 50 flaws in 4 months? In numbers, 0.5% of the packets were buggy, while 99.5% were not. And you have the free choice to avoid buggy applications and replace them with 10 equivalent others, while under Windows you just have to live with IIS or SQL server, because every change is a pain in the butt. True, among them were very common packages, but also a lot of packages hardly anyone ever needs.
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Old January 29, 2003, 12:52   #11
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You know, that article looks like it was written to be posted to Slashdot... I don't mean sensationalism, but that every time he mentions anything negative (negative, as in "not positive" - neutrality is an unknown concept in Holy Wars) about F/OSS he immediately notes that he shouldn't be gotten wrong and that he's not attacking anyone. It's like he was expecting that if he didn't do so he would be drowned in flames again ...
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Old January 29, 2003, 13:05   #12
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apply about 20 security updates from Mandrake Update every week, and still people tell me Linux (as a whole, not the kernel) is more secure. It only seems that way since Linux hacks are usually not anywhere near on the scale of Windows ones, since it's much more fun to hack MS software than open source ones. After all, MS is the enemy.

I have only seen 5 security updates in the last week, and this was a heavy week. Usually I only see 1-2. Most of the updates I have seen are for packages I don't have installed. I haven't applied any since my initial install last last november, although with the update to msec I saw yesterday I will have to now.
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Old January 29, 2003, 16:11   #13
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Quote:
Originally posted by Garth Vader
I have only seen 5 security updates in the last week, and this was a heavy week. Usually I only see 1-2. Most of the updates I have seen are for packages I don't have installed. I haven't applied any since my initial install last last november, although with the update to msec I saw yesterday I will have to now.
I had a huge number since I only boot into Linux to do homework, and I hadn't had to do any homework since early December.

Quote:
That tells us what, that in a system with about 10000 packets (unsure about the number, but several thousands for sure) they found not even 50 flaws in 4 months? In numbers, 0.5% of the packets were buggy, while 99.5% were not.
What a fabulous way to look at things. Let's take it a step farther and look at it by lines of code.

WinXP has somewhere around 35M lines of code. How many of those do you think have security vulnerabilities, as a percent?

Quote:
And you have the free choice to avoid buggy applications and replace them with 10 equivalent others, while under Windows you just have to live with IIS or SQL server, because every change is a pain in the butt.
Huh? No, you certainly do not. I use WinXP and I use Apache and MySQL. IIS and SQL may ship with Windows, you certainly don't need to use them...
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Old January 29, 2003, 16:18   #14
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dp 'cause Poly was acting up (cursed Apache and MySQL )
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Old January 29, 2003, 17:25   #15
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I thought Linux was cool, but now I see Tom Ridge is using it.

Department of Homeland Security Switches to Linux
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Old January 29, 2003, 17:58   #16
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Does anyone know of a Linux distro that supports apt-get but has a competent installation system that doesn't require me to hold its hand to do everything like Debian?
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Old January 29, 2003, 18:37   #17
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Quote:
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Does anyone know of a Linux distro that supports apt-get but has a competent installation system that doesn't require me to hold its hand to do everything like Debian?
that was my problem with Debian.

note to the uber-novices (i like to think i've graduated to quasi-novice, thank you): do not go into an IRC chatroom and ask "what's your favorite distro", unless you want to see a flamewar
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Old January 29, 2003, 20:55   #18
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Off the top of my head... Xandros, Progeny, Libranet, Yoper, Lindows. I haven't read very many reviews, but for what I know I'd recommend Libranet - it seems to do things in a rather clean way. I'm a bit concerned about Yoper - it claims to support all major packaging systems available for Linux, but that might just mean the dependency hell is even worse than in a distro with no dependency tracking package management software... Still, I have only heard of one case of dependency problems with it, so it might work fine anyway.

Having way too much more choice than a mortal would ever need is a nice way to "organise" an operating system; you can always point to five different things that haven't even been tried yet .
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Old January 29, 2003, 21:40   #19
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Quote:
Originally posted by Asher
WinXP has somewhere around 35M lines of code. How many of those do you think have security vulnerabilities, as a percent?
Ummm, 99%? I'm not sure and have absolutely no prove for this number, but it's Windows, ya know, and buggy per definition...

EDIT: As for your Debian setup problems: We already spoke about this, and I still don't understand, what's your point. You can on nearly every PC install a vanilla Woody in, say, 10 or at most 15 minutes. It can do nothing, only connect to the internet. For all else, including GUI installation (well, if you consider Gnome or KDE to deserve this name, I don't), you can use apt-get.
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Old January 29, 2003, 21:59   #20
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Well I ask because I wasted five hours today ****ing around with Debian (3.0r1) since I desperately want apt-get.

I've reinstalled it three times with a net-install.

It creates the core installation, I select which tasks I want to do, it selects 600 some-odd packages and begins downloading and configuring via apt-get.

About 5 of the packages simply fail to configure properly without really telling me why ( ), and XWindows claims to be installed correctly, but when I go and run "startx", it tells me something like:

Quote:
Screens found, but none have a usable configuration.

Fatal Server Error: No screens found
and then doesn't let me load it.

So I went in and configured it manually, it still says the same thing.

THAT'S why I want a distro with apt-get with a competent installer, Debian's installer is such utter shite it's an embarassment...

I have no idea why it doesn't work, and I'm 99% certain I configured it properly (I know all the settings and even tried running xf86config myself several times, and it didn't help).

So now I have no working Linux distro, since I replaced Mandrake 9 with Debian 3.0r1 which doesn't have a graphical interface.

Linux is fantastic.
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Old January 29, 2003, 22:02   #21
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Mac OS is more secure and less buggy than Windows...
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Old January 29, 2003, 22:23   #22
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Yeah, like the iTunes installer that deletes your partitions.

I'm downloading Libranet, will give impressions soon.
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Old January 30, 2003, 02:18   #23
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Okay, I've toyed with Libranet now.

I downloaded 2.0.2 (the latest free version) and burned it, booted and installed.

The good: apt-get is beautiful. Configured XFree perfectly without any input from me.
The bad: Everything is outdated, apt-get dist-upgrade needs to download about 700MB to get me up to date. When installing, you can't choose individual packets -- only about a dozen categories.
The ugly: It doesn't know how to add Windows partitions automatically to the bootloader. It doesn't know what to do with an Audigy soundcard. It can't configure the network on its own.

Bottom line: Still pathetic compared to Mandrake in the install & configure department, lightyears ahead in the maintenance department thanks to apt-get.

Edit: Does anyone know how to get apt-get to install more recent stuff? Like it just "upgraded" to Mozilla 1.0.0, when 1.2.1 is the latest official release and 1.3a is out...

Or must I find those .deb and do them myself manually?
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Old January 30, 2003, 02:44   #24
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asher, your rabid fanboyism of windows et al is almost as bad the mac fanaticism...no wait its worse.
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Old January 30, 2003, 02:53   #25
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Yes yes, I've heard that all before, and I still don't care that people think that.

The fact of the matter is, Linux ain't all that-and-a-bag-of-potato-chips like some people want you to believe.

I pine for Windows whenever I use a *nix.

If you want to contribute to the thread, feel free to. That means you gotta put on the bigboy pants and tell us what you think. Otherwise you can go away...
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Old January 30, 2003, 03:41   #26
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apt has, at least if you're using the official Debian package repositories, three different levels of up-to-dateness (stable, testing, unstable). You should already know of this, and of sources.list, I think... If not, go to http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/ap.../index.en.html . What you want to do is to add

Quote:
APT::Default-Release "testing";
(testing is what I always used... I heard unstable wasn't that bad, either, compared to some commercial distros)

in your /etc/apt.conf and the lines for the unstable package repositories in your /etc/apt/sources.list. Remember to apt-get update to actually download the package lists. Now you can (should be able to...) use apt-get -t unstable install mozilla to get the version 1.2.1. This is all described in the apt HOWTO. If you want to get later versions, you need to install them manually.

BTW, this won't be of any use for you, but running /usr/bin/X11/XFree86 --configure did a pretty good job of autodetecting my graphics hardware on Gentoo. However, autodetecting hardware was all it did, so I still had to decomment and edit a couple of lines and add one to make it work like I wanted.
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Old January 30, 2003, 03:45   #27
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Thanks Ari.
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Old January 30, 2003, 03:58   #28
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What do I put in the sources.list file to get the testing stuff? Do I need to change anything?

Also, on KDE's website, it says to get 3.1 with Debian:
Quote:
deb http://download.kde.org/stable/3.1/Debian stable main
I assume I add this to the sources file, then do an update, then dist-upgrade?

Edit: I just copied and pasted the existing sources.list entries, replaced "stable" with "testing", and now I've got another 300MB to download to upgrade some more.

But I still can't get the KDE site to work, it returns an error for it about the file not existing, when I put exactly what they said to.
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Old January 30, 2003, 09:10   #29
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Oh for god's sake, GET REDHAT and install AUTORPM.
 
Old January 30, 2003, 11:33   #30
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I checked the autorpm manpage at autorpm.org , and it seems like that script doesn't do dependency tracking, which, I believe, Asher is after. Besides, if you have even the most basic knowledge about security and sysadmining, you do not use a script or a cron job to upgrade (replace!) software on your system. You do not want to try to login at morning and notice that some third party package has done a rm -rf /.

I'll look into that KDE download...
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