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Date:      Tue, 31 Oct 2000 08:19:15 +0800
From:      John Summerfield <summer@OS2.ami.com.au>
To:        freebsd-newbies@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Newbie packages 
Message-ID:  <200010310017.e9V0GrW22807@emu.os2.ami.com.au>
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Mon, 30 Oct 2000 11:42:44 MST." <Pine.LNX.4.21.0010301137170.12908-100000@gus33.homeip.net> 

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> 
> 
> On Mon, 30 Oct 2000, David Johnson wrote:
> 
> > I've been thinking of ways to help out newbies that don't involve
> > publishing savvy, programming expertise or marketing skills. Helping out
> > with the documentation is always a good one. But I'm thinking of one
> > particular "hole" in the documentation...
> > 
> > What about a list of appropriate and/or recommended packages to install
> > for newbies? Many Linux distributions have recommended packages for
> > beginners, which are selected by default. Instead of making the brand
> > new user select from two dozen text editors, one is selected by default.
> > With consumer-oriented operating systems (windows/mac), the packages are
> > chosen for you far in advance. But in FreeBSD you have thousands of
> > unfamilar (to the newbie) packages to look over and choose from. All
> > this choice can be confusing at the novice level.
> 
> Personaly I think that the only packages a newbie should consern them
> selves with at first at the Man Pages.  Learn the system, then experiment
> with the ports.  However this is just IMHO  :)

They will frighten most newcomers off.


I think first we need to get it to install readily to a state that most 
newcomers can use.

I installed 4.1.1 a few days ago. Starts up in text mode, 80x25. That's the 
resolution I used on mainframes in 1976.

Took me quite a while to get to 80x60; I can't get wider, though i really 
think the hardware can do it.


I revisted the installer and selecte 'kde desktop' and it very nicely 
installed lots of kde (but didn't ask what parts I wanted; I don't think that 
games are essential)

However, I found no option to start KDE automatically. On editing /etc/ttys I 
found how I might make xdm start automatically, but xdm ain't kdm.

I started kdm manually; when I log in with it, I get twm, unless I'm root. 
That includes an account (j) known only on my FB system.

I share home directories with Linux (where I have KDE and GNOOME both 
working); I' am NOT going to put anything in home directories to make KDE 
start automatically - to do so would likely break KDE and GNOME on Linux (I 
got caught on that one with RHL 5.x and 6.x)


There is a heap of scope for decent configuration tools for printers, GUIs, X 
(I got lucky with that)

I'm thinking I will drop FreeBSD from that box (Linux is faster anyway, and 
I'm better at setting it up) and putting it on another box where it won't 
matter if I break something.





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