ferraton marc a écrit 6 commentaires

  • [^] # Re: Une série ?

    Posté par  (site web personnel) . En réponse à la dépêche Comment j’en suis venu à découvrir Linux, par Ian Murdock. Évalué à 0.

    Sommaire

    Peut-être rajouter le manifeste publié par Murdock dans les CD de la version 2.1 en juin 1994

    Please note that this document is provided in order to document
    Debian's history. While the general ideas still apply some details
    changed.


    Appendix
    The Debian Manifesto


    The Debian Linux Manifesto
    Written by  Ian A. Murdock
                 Revised 01/06/94
    

    What is Debian Linux?

    Debian Linux is a brand-new kind of Linux distribution. Rather than
    being developed by one isolated individual or group, as other
    distributions of Linux have been developed in the past, Debian is being
    developed openly in the spirit of Linux and GNU. The primary purpose
    of the Debian project is to finally create a distribution that lives up
    to the Linux name. Debian is being carefully and conscientiously put
    together and will be maintained and supported with similar care.

    It is also an attempt to create a non-commercial distribution that will
    be able to effectively compete in the commercial market. It will
    eventually be distributed by The Free Software Foundation on CD-ROM,
    and The Debian Linux Association will offer the distribution on floppy
    disk and tape along with printed manuals, technical support and other
    end-user essentials. All of the above will be available at little more
    than cost, and the excess will be put toward further development of
    free software for all users. Such distribution is essential to the
    success of the Linux operating system in the commercial market, and it
    must be done by organizations in a position to successfully advance and
    advocate free software without the pressure of profits or returns.

    Why is Debian being constructed?

    Distributions are essential to the future of Linux. Essentially, they
    eliminate the need for the user to locate, download, compile, install
    and integrate a fairly large number of essential tools to assemble a
    working Linux system. Instead, the burden of system construction is
    placed on the distribution creator, whose work can be shared with
    thousands of other users. Almost all users of Linux will get their
    first taste of it through a distribution, and most users will continue
    to use a distribution for the sake of convenience even after they are
    familiar with the operating system. Thus, distributions play a very
    important role indeed.

    Despite their obvious importance, distributions have attracted little
    attention from developers. There is a simple reason for this: they are
    neither easy nor glamorous to construct and require a great deal of
    ongoing effort from the creator to keep the distribution bug-free and
    up-to-date. It is one thing to put together a system from scratch; it
    is quite another to ensure that the system is easy for others to
    install, is installable and usable under a wide variety of hardware
    configurations, contains software that others will find useful, and is
    updated when the components themselves are improved.

    Many distributions have started out as fairly good systems, but as time
    passes attention to maintaining the distribution becomes a secondary
    concern. A case-in-point is the Softlanding Linux System (better known
    as SLS). It is quite possibly the most bug-ridden and badly maintained
    Linux distribution available; unfortunately, it is also quite possibly
    the most popular. It is, without question, the distribution that
    attracts the most attention from the many commercial "distributors" of
    Linux that have surfaced to capitalize on the growing popularity of the
    operating system.

    This is a bad combination indeed, as most people who obtain Linux from
    these "distributors" receive a bug-ridden and badly maintained Linux
    distribution. As if this wasn't bad enough, these "distributors" have
    a disturbing tendency to misleadingly advertise non-functional or
    extremely unstable "features" of their product. Combine this with the
    fact that the buyers will, of course, expect the product to live up to
    its advertisement and the fact that many may believe it to be a
    commercial operating system (there is also a tendency not to mention
    that Linux is free nor that it is distributed under the GNU General
    Public License). To top it all off, these "distributors" are actually
    making enough money from their effort to justify buying larger
    advertisements in more magazines; it is the classic example of
    unacceptable behavior being rewarded by those who simply do not know
    any better. Clearly something needs to be done to remedy the
    situation.

    How will Debian attempt to put an end to these problems?

    The Debian design process is open to ensure that the system is of the
    highest quality and that it reflects the needs of the user community.
    By involving others with a wide range of abilities and backgrounds,
    Debian is able to be developed in a modular fashion. Its components
    are of high quality because those with expertise in a certain area are
    given the opportunity to construct or maintain the individual
    components of Debian involving that area. Involving others also
    ensures that valuable suggestions for improvement can be incorporated
    into the distribution during its development; thus, a distribution is
    created based on the needs and wants of the users rather than the needs
    and wants of the constructor. It is very difficult for one individual
    or small group to anticipate these needs and wants in advance without
    direct input from others.

    Debian Linux will also be distributed on physical media by the Free
    Software Foundation and the Debian Linux Association. This provides
    Debian to users without access to the Internet or FTP and additionally
    makes products and services such as printed manuals and technical
    support available to all users of the system. In this way, Debian may
    be used by many more individuals and organizations than is otherwise
    possible, the focus will be on providing a first-class product and not
    on profits or returns, and the margin from the products and services
    provided may be used to improve the software itself for all users
    whether they paid to obtain it or not.

    The Free Software Foundation plays an extremely important role in the
    future of Debian. By the simple fact that they will be distributing
    it, a message is sent to the world that Linux is not a commercial
    product and that it never should be, but that this does not mean that
    Linux will never be able to compete commercially. For those of you who
    disagree, I challenge you to rationalize the success of GNU Emacs and
    GCC, which are not commercial software but which have had quite an
    impact on the commercial market regardless of that fact.

    The time has come to concentrate on the future of Linux rather than on
    the destructive goal of enriching oneself at the expense of the entire
    Linux community and its future. The development and distribution of
    Debian may not be the answer to the problems that I have outlined in
    the Manifesto, but I hope that it will at least attract enough
    attention to these problems to allow them to be solved.

  • # miniPCI

    Posté par  (site web personnel) . En réponse au message Carte PCI(E) WIFI supportant le mode 'AP'. Évalué à 0.

    j'avais installé une AP sur une box soekris avec du miniPCI trouver chez mhzshop.com, mais c'est déjà ancien ...

  • [^] # Re: nostalgie

    Posté par  (site web personnel) . En réponse au journal LUG Cévennes. Évalué à 1.

    Dommage que ce soit si loin, j'aurais rencontré Ramses !!

    bonne fréquentation
  • # Et VITE stp !

    Posté par  (site web personnel) . En réponse au journal LiNuCe, reviens. Évalué à 1.

    Conseil d'ami ;)
  • # Il manque un bonne partie de la population ..

    Posté par  (site web personnel) . En réponse au sondage Mon emploi actuel. Évalué à 7.

    [ ] retraité, çà ne compte pas ?
  • [^] # Re: Comment le savoir ?

    Posté par  (site web personnel) . En réponse au sondage La commande de base que je tape le plus. Évalué à 1.

    root@moskito:~# cat ~/.bash_history | sort | uniq -c -w3 | sort -r | head
    9 make
    8 + /usr/sbin/iptables -A INPUT -p icmp --icmp-type destination-unreachable -s 0/0 -d 213.41.172.145 -j ACCEPT
    8 killall gnome-pdf-viewer
    8 chmod 666 bb.log
    6 tar tvzf /home/forum/OGM-cd/additifs/img/pcweb-sites/cvsroot-32.tgz
    6 df
    5 umount /mnt
    5 top
    5 mv bb.log /home/users/marc/
    5 /dev/hda1 * 63 39102209 19551073+ 7 HPFS/NTFS


    drole de surprises ??
    et oui je viens d'installer une souris optique à molette qui m'a donné un peu de fil à retordre ( je vous parle pas des copier/coller intempestifs )