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Books Media Software Debian GUI KDE Book Reviews Linux

Point and Click Linux 192

Robin "Roblimo" Miller is well-known in the open-source world for advocating cheap, user-friendly Linux computing and demonstrating that it's not only possible but available, right now. (He's also a writer and editor at NewsForge, and the editor in chief of OSTG, of which Slashdot is a part, and therefore one of my bosses; take that for what it's worth.) Roblimo's new book Point and Click Linux really consists of three things: the book itself, an included copy on CD of the Debian-based SimplyMepis Linux distribution, and a DVD featuring Roblimo's multi-part narrated video guide for getting started with Linux, Mepis and KDE. "Getting started" is key; this book is for the interested beginner, not the power user. Read on for the rest of my review.
Point and Click Linux
author Robin "Roblimo" Miller
pages 270
publisher Prentice Hall
rating 9
reviewer timothy
ISBN 0131488724
summary Friendly, casual, hands-on approach to Linux; blasts users' fears that Linux is hard to use for everyday tasks.

The Linux with which to point and click

SimplyMepis is a KDE-centric Live CD Linux which is also well suited for hard-drive installation. Before talking about Point and Click's text, Mepis itself deserves some description, because it's the basis for the examples in this example-laden book.

Not many years ago, books that came with a Linux distribution usually had the user prepare an initial pair of floppies, cross his fingers, and sacrifice at least a hard drive partition just to try it out by installing either from a CD or over the network. If the user wanted to keep an existing Windows partition, things were even more complicated, because there were no newbie-friendly non-destructive partition editors. Having bored (suffered) through that process, and seemingly tried every possible combination of boot+root floppy images before hitting the one that actually worked all my hardware enough to let the installation begin, I'm a big fan of Live CD Linux distros: this is progress.

Until sometime last winter, I would have suggested that any Linux book come with a copy of Knoppix, which is so astoundingly useful it's nearly impossible to overpraise. (I'm glad to see that several books are now coming bundled with it. Marcel Gagne's Kiss the Blue Screen of Death Goodbye and Knoppix Hacks both come with pressed versions of Knoppix.) Mepis, though, deserves the acclaim that's been heaped on it in the last several months, and makes a perfect choice to include with a book for Linux newcomers. And while a Live CD has obvious advantages, a user can follow the bulk of this book with any computer running KDE under Linux (or one of the BSDs, for that matter).

Mepis is at present my most-used distribution; I've used it recently to:

  • Rescue data from a friends' grandmother's malware-hobbled Windows PC, on which the Windows goo was so thick that even booting up was at best a sometimes thing. (Switching her to Linux entirely is the next project.)
  • Install Mepis's version of Debian on several of my computers; in fact, Live CDs like Mepis and Knoppix are the only way I've installed Linux for the past year.
  • Show some kids TuxKart. (One of them beat my all-time high on his first attempt. Beginner's luck.)

Compared to Knoppix and most other live CDs, Mepis has what I consider a slightly friendlier feel; in particular, it gathers several of the more annoying and potentially intimidating sysadmin tasks into two groups, each with an icon on the desktop: the "System Center," for tweaking display, network and mouse parameters; and "User utilities," which for now contains only a "Clean User Space" program to clear one's browser history and cache, as well as purge the current bash history and recent documents. (Most people, at birth, don't even know what "sysadmin" means; having desktop icons to common admin tasks is considerate of new users.)

Though it will work on a wide range of x86 machines, like any Live CD (and any OS, really) Mepis benefits from running on a fast system with lots of RAM. 128MB of free RAM is what I'd call a realistic minimum; my system is perfectly run-of-the-mill by current new-PC standards (Sempron 2800+ processor, 512MB of RAM), and far more than necessary.

Get clicking

Point and Click Linux is aimed squarely at those new -- including perfectly new -- to using Linux at all, and it would make a fine non-intimidating manual for someone sitting down at his first computer.

To that end, Roblimo does not assume that the reader will be installing Mepis onto his hard drive; the whole point of the book is that all the point-and-click magic can be tried on a typical Windows PC with nothing more than a reboot. That said, current hard drives are much faster than current optical drives, and a system installed to a hard disk makes saving files a simpler process. I had brand-new system bought from a local megastore which was all set for a Free operating system, and decided to put this version of Mepis onto it. I used this book as my guide to the system, as I suspect a new user would -- as an actual step-by-step guide, not a random-access source of knowledge. So I installed the system and then tried the examples throughout.

The first four chapters make up a section called "Getting Started." Chapters here stray toward the short and snappy rather than comprehensive; all four of these might be condensed into a single chapter in a book meant for technophiles. Getting Started details some of Linux's advantages (lack of spyware, quick bug fixes, low price), booting Mepis from the CD-ROM drive (or installing it to hard disk) and working with KDE. The level is perfect for a literate but ignorant user: Roblimo explains in simple terms how to log in to the system (user "demo," password "demo" for the live CD), moving about on the KDE desktop, and using the KDE panel and K menu. He sneaks in one application in this section, too (KWrite), not so much as an application in itself, but because it demonstrates how other well-behaved KDE programs should act when it comes to opening and saving files, navigating the directory structure, etc.

An early snag: Chapter 4's instructions on reformatting a hard drive to let Windows and Linux both exist happily on the same PC didn't work for me. I was installing onto a brand new hard drive, and I thought I'd give dual-booting a shot to see what Windows was like nowadays, and so followed the instructions on setting up a machine to dual-boot. The disk-partitioning and formatting program QTParted (as user friendly as anything I've seen in that category on any platform) recognized the Windows partition that came with the machine, and let me shrink it to make room for installing Linux. But after divvying up the hard drive space and actually copying Mepis onto the drive, the machine would happily start Linux, but never actually booted Windows -- only generated an error message that it couldn't. I repeated the whole process, with the same result. It could be a quirk of my hardware (or more likely, pilot error, since I don't see similar complaints in the Mepis forums), but I never did get it to boot into Windows.

For many users, though, a functioning Windows install is probably a non-negotiable requirement. If any readers run into the same problem I did, and can't just shrug and toss Windows completely, my happy-overkill advice would be to invest in a second hard drive and skip all the hassles of dual- or multi-booting. (Storage is cheap, and it's hard to have too much of it.) If your drives are big enough, it also means you can back up the important data from each one onto the other, which is a nice bonus. Since Windows is to me only a curiosity, I decided not to pursue the partitioning problem -- I did the install one more time, this time choosing to use the entire hard disk.

That hitch aside, the book is straightforward, practical and accurate. It's also limited to a small subset of tasks and activities, which is perfectly reasonable given the intended audience.

Section II, "Linux Applications" is the book's largest, mostly because here too chapters are divided by application, rather than throwing several apps into a small number of longer chapters. It's also the most important, in my view, because the point of using Linux -- for most people, at least -- is not to simply appreciate its aesthetics, but to get things done. ("Getting things done" includes playing games!)

The applications covered start with Kppp (also given its own video segment on the DVD) -- a handy choice, because while Mepis will automatically detect and set up a DHCP broadband connection, readers who don't have broadband set up will benefit from many of the other apps (email, web-browsing, IM) only if they have a working Internet connection. Since I'm using a DSL connection, I didn't need to follow the advice here, but as a long-time Kppp user, I can vouch for the accuracy of its instructions. Yes, readers will need a Linux-friendly ISP and a phone line; the book as well as the video address this reality.

With Internet connection in place, the section proceeds apace, introducing Mozilla across not one but four separate chapters. (An introductory chapter to the Mozilla suite, followed by one apiece on Mozilla as a browser, email client, and web-page editor.) Firefox and Thunderbird are given a quick mention, but for the purposes of this book, Mozilla it is. I've recently moved almost completely to Firefox as a web browser, and I wish that Firefox had been emphasized instead, but the same principles apply at any rate. Windows users unused to browsers besides IE are likely to be pleased with the lucid instructions on blocking pop-up ads.

Chapters 10 through 15 also introduce a software suite in several easy chunks, this time the OpenOffice.org applications. While 5 chapters in 30-some pages is clearly not enough to make anyone an expert, it is plenty to establish the basic operations it takes to create and manipulate documents containing text, numbers and graphics in OO.o. The short (one-page!) Chapter 15 succinctly addresses working with Microsoft Word: "But don't expect 100% compatibility with MS Office. You won't get it. Instead, expect to get enough compatibility for everyday work, with some of the 'frills' left out."

The other chapters introduce some of the other Linux standbys included with Mepis: the multi-IM wonder Kopete (my current favorite AIM client), The GIMP, Frozen Bubble (fair warning is given about its addictive nature) and more. Especially worthy of note is the finance application called CheckBook Tracker, which is simpler than GNUcash but allows for low-key tracking and balancing of passbook accounts, and is a good start for putting money management on a computer. I'd never heard of it before reading this book, and I'm impressed.

A third section, "Beyond the Basics," is still pretty basic by Linux-world standards, but provides some appetite-whetting for new users, with instructions on the rudiments of installing new software using Kpackage, changing the look of one's desktop, cooperating with Windows (using Samba, Win4Lin and CrossOver Office), and customizing the included firewall application. Worms and the viruses aren't the problem under Linux that they are for Windows users, but they certainly could become more of a problem, and it's good to have some information on limiting outside access to one's PC.

While Kpackage is a perfectly competent package, I hope that the next version of Mepis will include by default the even-friendlier Synaptic as well as Kpackage. This section is one where I wish the short chapters had been at least a bit longer, because much of the coolest software for Linux is out there waiting to be grabbed. Maybe that's for the next set of readers up the totem pole, though.

However, a nice chapter (written by Joe Barr) at least gives some of the command-line rudiments that readers will need to get beyond pointing and clicking, which even in a book about getting along with the GUI is useful information.

A few appendices round out the book; one gives additional information on Mepis, and the other two list currently popular distributions and books, for readers who want to take the next steps toward Linux proficiency.

The small screen

The included video -- 13 short videos, actually -- are fun, and a nice touch. They illustrate in what will for experienced users be excruciating detail the same things the book talks about. When Roblimo says "put it in your computer's CD drive," you see his hand putting the disc into his computer's CD drive. When he says to move the mouse to a certain point, you see his pointer (helpfully highlighted with a translucent yellow circle) move to the appropriate spot.

For new users especially, I think it's much easier to follow something being done on screen than it is to interpret written instructions. The production on the DVD is what you might expect from the guy who for years ran a site called cheapcomputing.com; strictly functional and a bit rough around the edges, with adequate but lo-fi sound and picture, including Roblimo's web-cam captured face as he talks the user through each step. Having a human face on screen blunts the strangeness of watching someone else's disembodied pointer move around the screen pointing and clicking away, which is the case with some video-training material.

(One wrinkle: unless you have both a CD ROM drive and a DVD drive in your PC, you won't be watching the videos and running Mepis as a live CD at the same time. Mepis will be occupying at least one optical drive until you decide to exit it completely.)

You can probably tell already whether Point and Click Linux is suited for you, and the answer is likely No. Just the same, I discovered a few things about Linux and KDE that I'd never tried before reading the book, and know at least a dozen people I think would benefit from a copy.


You can purchase Point and Click Linux from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews. To see your own review here, carefully read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.

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Point and Click Linux

Comments Filter:
  • I can't wait to get my hands on kernel 'XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX'.
  • It is a good book (Score:3, Informative)

    by KingOfTheNerds ( 706852 ) on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @05:24PM (#10903215) Homepage
    Being a linux newbie myself, I purchased this book and it was a great read. Much easier to read than some other tech books. I'd recommned it anyone, cept the hardcore power users.
  • Version? (Score:5, Funny)

    by mopslik ( 688435 ) on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @05:24PM (#10903217)

    Point and Click Linuxcomes with version XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

    Gee, Linux is way ahead of Apple these days. They're only up to OS X.

  • by koreth ( 409849 ) on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @05:25PM (#10903231)
    Point and Click Linuxcomes with version XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX.
    Is that in Roman numerals, or has the version number been censored for our protection?
  • Interesting (Score:3, Interesting)

    by cuteseal ( 794590 ) on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @05:25PM (#10903233) Homepage
    Thanks for the informative review. Sounds like an interesting book/package. One of the reasons why I hardly use linux (although I've got it set up on a dual partition) is that basic tasks seem to have such a steep learning curve. Perhaps this book might help me overcome those.
    • Re:Interesting (Score:3, Informative)

      by LilMikey ( 615759 )
      There's always a community waiting to help you. If it's an everyday task then more than likely someone has figured out how to do it quickly and easily. I would be more than happy to personally help you out as much as I can with any questions you may have.
    • I have tried Mepis before and it really is a very easy to use distro. I am not sure what you have on your other partition right now but if you are not satisfied you might give it a whirl. Like any distro it has its pros and cons, ease of installation and a working setup is definitely its pro. Then you can get used to Linux, you'll be doing Linux From Scratch before you know it :)
  • by Comatose51 ( 687974 ) on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @05:25PM (#10903238) Homepage
    pooint and clickRobin "Roblimo" Miller is well-known in the open-source world for advocating cheap, user-friendly Linux computing and demonstrating that it's not only possible but available, right now. (He's also a writer and editor at NewsForge, and the editor in chief of OSTG, of which Slashdot is a part, and
    therefore one of my bosses; take that for what it's worth.) Roblimo's new book Point and Click Linuxreally consists of three things: the book itself, an included copy on CD of the Debian-based SimplyMepis Linux distribution, and a DVD featuring Roblimo's 6-part narrated video guide for getting started with Linux, Mepis and KDE. "Getting started" is key; this book is for the interested beginner, not the power user. Read on for the rest of my review.

    Was he looking over your shoulder and threatening you with unemployment when you typed that? Holy typos Batman!

    • by Anonymous Coward

      pooint and clickRobin "Roblimo" Miller

      I've been waiting for a point-and-click Roblimo. It's sure to be easier to use than the CLI CowboyNeal I've been using for the pasty few years now.

  • by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @05:26PM (#10903262)
    as long as my mom, who can be called a computer idiot but still manages to do her work with MS Office, tells me "what's that K icon where START should be", I call bullcrap on any point-and-click Linux.

    The reason I should say this is because my mom is extremely typical. Things "power users" take for granted (or, rather, don't even think about for one second) are very puzzling to many average computer users. Not to mention the scare factor of going away from something well known (Windows + Office).

    This said however, I commend this new effort to promote Linux, but sadly I doubt it'll change much from all the previous such attempts.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      http://www.xpde.com/
    • by saintp ( 595331 ) <stpierre@nospAM.nebrwesleyan.edu> on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @05:38PM (#10903395) Homepage
      Actually, my girlfriend, who uses her computer to check email, write papers, and read Harry Potter fanfic, thinks its kinda neat that she clicks on a chameleon instead of a boring "Start" for her menu, and a cute little fox instead of a big ugly "e" for the Internet. Not to the point of bragging to her friends, of course, but she adapted quite well to it. Also, SuSE puts OpenOffice under the "Office" menu with the simple name "Office Suite, and it's called just "Office" on the desktop, so the learning curve for that is pretty darn shallow. (Not trying to start SuSE vs. Ubuntu vs. Debian vs. your-fav-distro holy wars here, just mentioning what I'm familiar with.)

      Other than learning a few new icons, the Linux learning curve for basic tasks is very shallow. As a previous poster pointed out, not so much for more advanced tasks, but we aren't talking about power users here.

      • I must agree whole-heartedly. I mean, for the purposes of e-mail, paper-writing, and reading stories where random groupings of Hogwarts characters have sexual relations in 1337, any GNU/Linux distro is better than Windows, especially SuSE/FC/Mandrake/Ubuntu/distro de jure.

        It's more natural to click on a "programs" menu or some KDE-theme-related icon to get to a program than it is to click "Start". Yes, Microsoft got some good names, but that's all they have. That, and no Unix desktop uses a "start" menu
    • I highly commend this effort as well. But the fact that a 6-part video presentation exists to explain to the average user how Linux can be a point-and-click solution proves, more than anything, that it is not. No 6-part video presentations exist on the ease-of-use of the refrigerator.
      • Look... (Score:4, Insightful)

        by rewt66 ( 738525 ) on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @05:59PM (#10903582)
        If the video has a session on "here's what 'put the CD in the drive' looks like", then that's aimed below the Windows-knowing to the totally-computer-ignorant. If you already know Windows well enough to know how to put a CD in and click the mouse on stuff, you don't need the video. And if you don't know how to put a CD in, no OS in the world can help you with that step...
      • No 6-part video presentations exist on the ease-of-use of the refrigerator.

        There's plenty though about using Windows, or OS X. And after spending 10 minutes working out how to extract the shelves and drawers from my fridge to clean them, a video for that isn't really such a dumb idea. Doing anything for the first time is much harder than you remember it.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      It's unavoidable - there are idiosyncrasies that must be (un)learned. Having a "start" menu is a really dumb idea - it's not there to start things, it's to DO things. This is how I learned that, many many years ago in middle school:

      User: "How do I turn off the computer? I read that I can't just hit the power button."

      Me (irritated): "Yeah, well, first you open the Start menu and..."

      User: "What?! To stop the computer, I click on the start button?"

      Me: "Well, yes, of course that's how... Wait, yeah, that's
    • a DVD featuring Roblimo's 6-part narrated video guide for getting started with Linux, Mepis and KDE.

      A 6-part narrative is hardly Point-n-Click...

      I can usually make it through the first 2 minutes of an instructional video, before I want to kill whoever is boring the shit out of me.

      /*sound of DVD getting snapped in half
    • by wfberg ( 24378 ) on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @06:01PM (#10903608)
      as long as my mom, who can be called a computer idiot but still manages to do her work with MS Office, tells me "what's that K icon where START should be", I call bullcrap on any point-and-click Linux.

      While it IS extremely typical, it's not an issue that should be addressed by linux distributions changing. Even moms should learn to cope with stuff like that. It's not like fridges all have identical handles, people don't even complain as much about cars being different models (or even stick shift in stead of automatic gear), they cope and adapt, even though operating a car in the wrong way is a million times more likely to kill them. Guess what, the differenlty shaped and colored steering wheel does the same thing!
      • Are you afraid of your refrigerator? My mom's afraid of her computer...I'm sure she couldn't care less whether it runs Windows or Linux or OSX or Plan9 (well, maybe not Plan9). It's something that's hard enough to confront as-is and, if by rote memorization she can get to Word and an email program, she's doing fine in my book.

        Really, why bother for her to change? The videos do look interesting though and really, the car analogy probably works for anyone born much after 1950;)

    • Here's why:

      Rosco seems to think that point and click == Windows. It seems to me that your calling "bullcrap" to point-and-click linux because it doesn't have a 0 learning curve when your coming from windows.

      Your mum would take a week or so to become fully productive in an OS such as OSX which some configure to be the most usable operating system in existance. Is OSX bullcrap?

      Do yourself (or your mother) a favour. Buy a box of SUSE 9.2 (personal is nice, pro has more apps) or MEPIS, read the manuals, play
    • by yamla ( 136560 )
      In that case, don't ever consider installing Longhorn for your mother when it is finally released. If the K icon confuses her, she'll be completely lost with all the user interfaces in Microsoft's next operating system.

      For that matter, better keep her with her current version of office. Microsoft often adds new features and rearranges existing layouts when they release a new version of Office.

      Also, for the love of god, don't ever get her a new car. New cars often look and feel quite different from olde
    • by kfg ( 145172 ) on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @06:22PM (#10903836)
      . . .what's that K icon where START should be", I call bullcrap on any point-and-click Linux.

      Conversely, when I first started up Windows 95 as a "power user" with decades of computer experience on big iron, minis and micros and perfectly at home with Windows 3.11 I couldn't figure out how to do anything.

      There was not only no command line, but no menus and no icons of any interest to me (No, I didn't want to hook up to AOL), no nothin' that would even let me type a memo. Yeah, there was this really stupid button labeled "start," but I was already started. I didn't want to "start," I wanted to open the preinstalled copy of Office and type something.

      I basically stared at it for about five minutes and then said aloud, "Where the hell are my programs?"

      At that point my wife came over and showed me. She'd been using 95 at work for a few months already.

      At which point I said aloud, "Well, that's really stupid, and who the hell would look for their menus at the bottom of the screen anyway?"

      So . . .I guess Windows isn't "point and click" either, since, even as an experienced Windows user, I had to be shown what to point at and click on.

      At least the big "K" is a button right where a current Windows user would expect the menu button to be.

      Look, It's "Point-and-click" Linux, exactly as advertised, not "Exactly like your current version of Windows" Linux. Just like every version of MacOS is point and click, and just as Windows 3.11 was point and click.

      Even though they all differ markedly.

      And for what it's worth, my 70 year old mom, who has only been using micros for about a year, both Windows and Mac (Mac OS8 at home, Windows (in languages she doesn't read) in internet cafes when she's traveling), was able to get down and dirty with KDE set up for a "power user" in about 2 minutes flat.

      How do you know your mom is "extremely typical." You have a mom data point of one.

      KFG
      • by briber ( 809150 ) on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @09:04PM (#10905377)
        Interesting that you should say that you stared at the screen for 5 minutes the first time you used Win95. That behavior was exhibited by testers and is EXACTLY why Microsoft added the start menu late in Win95's development.

        You see, Microsoft had bought into the fad of "document centric" computing. Applications were out. File types were in.

        What you were supposed when you encountered your brand spankin' new Win95 desktop (a COMPLETELY BLANK desktop) was create a new document or create a shortcut to an application that did not produce documents.

        Here is a typical scenario:

        Right click on the desktop, select new->folder

        Name the folder Anderson Account info (or what ever you want).

        Now open the folder you just created.

        Right click and select new->Excel spreadsheet.

        Name the new spreadsheet Anderson_Q1.

        Double click on your new spreadsheet shortcut and voila... here comes MS Excel.

        Folders first->then shortcuts->then finally your application.

        The tester just stared at the screens too. Document centric computing was not to be and so MS cobbled together the start menu we have today.

        Best Regards -Briber

      • How do you know your mom is "extremely typical."

        Not to mention, wouldn't "extremely typical" be an oxymoron?

        Seriously though, after reading your post, I remember having the EXACT SAME thoughts about 95. A decade has dulled my memory though. I even remember clicking the Start button, only to see stuff I didn't want to use.. Documents, Settings, Shut Down, and, of course, Programs, with a bunch of sub-menus after it. I remember thinking what a ridiculous way that was to organize my programs. Although,
    • If your mother had never seen m$ windows then what would she expect?

      Just because your mom has used windows doesn't mean linux should look exactly like windows to be easy to use. If the computer came pre-installed with linux, they would learn it just like they did with windows.
      My wife who had no experience with either had no trouble figuring out where the games were or how to send email.

      My mother is completely baffled by windows.
      She calls me with the MOST retarded questions on earth, and it takes me a few
    • by ajs ( 35943 ) <ajs.ajs@com> on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @07:13PM (#10904380) Homepage Journal
      as long as my mom, who can be called a computer idiot but still manages to do her work with MS Office, tells me "what's that K icon where START should be"

      Welcome to "culture shock" associated with leaving a software monoculture. Someday, I hope to see someone stare in incredulity when told that all desktops used to have the same icon for the desktop main menu.

      This has nothing to do with ease of use, and if such first impressions were a guideline, the PARC/Apple/Windows/CDE desktop UI gestalt would have died in its infancy. Typewriter users were railing against it for ages because it emphasized removing your hands from the keyboard (a major taboo), using backspace (just plain anti-social), and many other modes of interaction that were foreign to the typewriter age.

      Your mother will eventually either have to learn to get along without the word "start" or be phased out, just as typewriter users were, sorry.

      The same goes for the "my document is in Office 97 format, can you re-save, export, decrypt and send yours again?" office of the past. People are learning to use new tools and adapting to the future. Some won't... oh well.

      What truly limits Linux desktop acceptance in a wider context is the lack of some key legacy application interoperability like Peachtree, but that's a much higher bar than Linux was attempting to measure up to 3 years ago, and the bar isn't moving down!

      "I doubt it'll change much from all the previous such attempts."

      You misunderstand. There are no previous attempts. This is it. What I'm running on my desktop at work and at home is what I've been running for years. Nothing new here, just incremental improvements that will go on for centuries to come, I'm sure (though at some point so many components may have been re-built or replaced that we would not recognize it).

      What do you say to the folks who grow up with Linux today and encounter Windows for the first time... what happens when they say, "what's that start thing where the Fedora should be?"
    • by jeif1k ( 809151 ) on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @07:40PM (#10904646)
      tells me "what's that K icon where START should be", I call bullcrap on any point-and-click Linux.

      You mean the "Start" button that is, among other things, used for shutting down Windows? Yes, that's one of the features that usability alone dictates Linux shouldn't emulate.

      The reason I should say this is because my mom is extremely typical. Things "power users" take for granted (or, rather, don't even think about for one second) are very puzzling to many average computer users.

      Yes, which is why Linux should copy Windows's usability problems. Linux has to do better, and that breaks compatibility. Linux has to appeal to the next generation of users, both here and abroad, not to the old Windows and Macintosh fogeys, who keep complaining and will never be really satisfied with anything other than the platform they grew up on anyway.

      If your mother refuses to use Linux because she can't deal that the "Start" menu has a "K" on it, that's her problem. Most people are smart enough to figure it out that a menu that looks the same and is in the same place roughly does the same thing even if it has a K on it (the menu down there is already a concession; I think the Gnome default is preferable and clearer anyway). And most people also find savings of thousands of dollars in software enough of a motivation to get off their lazy butts and bother engaging their brain for a few minutes. But, ultimately, what your mother considers a "good UI" after years of having her mind warped by Microsoft software simply doesn't matter because the choices she makes don't matter to the long term future of the Linux desktop.
    • Well, mother IS the necessity of invention.
    • as long as my mom, who can be called a computer idiot but still manages to do her work with MS Office, tells me "what's that K icon where START should be", I call bullcrap on any point-and-click Linux.

      Jesus crhist. if your mom isn't clever enough to guess that if the K and the Start are in similar places, they might do similar things, or at the very least click on it and see what happens, then I don't think the problem is with Linux. That's not computer idiocy, that's just plain idiocy.
      1. as long as my mom, who can be called a computer idiot but still manages to do her work with MS Office, tells me "what's that K icon where START should be", I call bullcrap on any point-and-click Linux.

      The problem is similarity. That's one of the reasons why the Gnome-based desktops tend to be different;

      SuSE 9 [osdir.com]

      Fedora Core 3 [osdir.com]

      Ubuntu [osdir.com]

      If it doesn't match what is expected, people will not click on the wrong thing or get confused when everything isn't exactly the same. By being different, people wil

      • This is one thing that really bugs me about Distros and Gnome. AFAIK, Debian is the only one that ships Gnome as it comes from the Gnome developers. Ubuntu is next closest.

        Gnome did a lot of User testing, and has a HIG (Human Interface Guideline) and yet distributions want to throw that all away to "make it look like Windows".

        Kinda sad if you ask me.

        (interesting, those screenshots show Suse 9 to be very much like standard Gnome.... and Fedora to have the standard gnome layout, but when I installed Fedor
          1. (interesting, those screenshots show Suse 9 to be very much like standard Gnome.... and Fedora to have the standard gnome layout, but when I installed Fedora last time, it had the old "RedHat" look...)

          Yep. I think Fedora Core 1 defaulted to the 'Gnome and KDE look alike' design. That's no longer the case. The tweaking of the Gnome default layout isn't happening as much as before for most distros that have both KDE and Gnome.

          So far, I've not deployed Gnome to a customer site though with all the work

    • When was the last time you had to deal somebody who's never used a computer and has no "aptitude" whatsoever?

      I've been in that situation relatively recently and can assure you that if you can't count linux as "point and click" then neither is Windows.

      It's a complete myth that Linux is harder than Windows for a "muppet" user (especially if they only use basic functions). It's just that most muppet users have learned Windows first and hate the idea of having to relearn anything.

      Linux doesn't need to be eas

    • as long as my mom, who can be called a computer idiot but still manages to do her work with MS Office, tells me "what's that K icon where START should be", I call bullcrap on any point-and-click Linux.

      I doubt your mother is really such an idiot. She coped with going from a typewriter to a PC, rotary to push button phones, she can cope with clicking on a K to pull up a menu.

    • ...and you will see why Linux will be held out of the mainstream for a few years more (if not longer) not by Microsoft, but by Linux supporters! For the love of god people, coddle the nubies! Give them all the help you can give! Every time you put on this holier-then-thou bravado it only hurts Linux.

      These responses should not be centered around the ideas that "fuck, you mom is stupid" and "well cars aren't all the same". These responses should be pointing to themes that are windows-esque or at least design

  • Okay... (Score:5, Funny)

    by Mysticalfruit ( 533341 ) on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @05:27PM (#10903272) Homepage Journal
    I'm generally not a nut about formatting, grammar, or spelling but my god. That review was like an unholy trifecta of the English language gone terribly wrong.

    I really wanted to read the review and get something out of it, I just kept fumbling over the writing.

    Dear Slashdot "Editors"... Please for christmas, can Santa bring you all an unabridged grammar book and a spell checker.

    • Re:Okay... (Score:4, Funny)

      by bkocik ( 17609 ) on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @05:39PM (#10903403) Homepage
      That review was like an unholy trifecta of the English language gone terribly wrong.

      Really? It was like an unholy "bet in which you pick the first three winners of a horse race" of the English language?

    • Re:Okay... (Score:4, Funny)

      by Realistic_Dragon ( 655151 ) on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @05:40PM (#10903413) Homepage
      Dear Slashdot "Editors"... Please for christmas, can Santa bring you all an unabridged grammar book and a spell checker.

      Our new processor wordy hqs a spiel chequer it in, but languag bad so is that we not print out even label understandingable to send it back! Until come refound we cant buy new since spreadsheet for finance from same plaice com.
    • If you take the misspelled letters and line them up as instructed in the Necrowombicon, the "errors" spell out the following message:
      My boss is making me review his book, and even I can't muster any enthusiasm for the fetid piece of crap. Send help: he has my family.
    • Re:Okay... (Score:2, Informative)

      by Delusional ( 574271 )
      Dear Slashdot "Editors"... Please for christmas, can Santa bring you all an unabridged grammar book and a spell checker.

      Excuse me Mr Pot, but the Kettle has asked me to point out that:

      1. Christmas should be capitalized. Regardless of your feelings on the subject, it is the proper name of a holiday.
      2. ... Santa bring you all... should be Santa bring you each (unless of course you meant that one would suffice for all of them, in which case the "all" is extraneous)
      3. You are using "can" where "may" belongs,
      • Thanks! Imagine that, an actual educational post on Slashdot.

        Keep this up and I fully expect the Sun to go super nova any moment now...
      • That being said, I rather suspect that the aforementioned editors are primarily responsible for article selection. To expect copy editing from a free and continuously updated website seems just a bit extravagant.

        Rubbish. The editors are paid staff. Each uploads 4 or 6 stories per day. Each story is average 1-2 paragraphs. It takes approximately 5 seconds to spellcheck and correct that much text (if the submitted text is particularly bad or long, up to 30 seconds -- I know this as despite having excellent

  • 1337 (Score:5, Funny)

    by Kethinov ( 636034 ) on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @05:33PM (#10903334) Homepage Journal
    ( Read More... | 13777 bytes in body | 10 comments | books.slashdot.org )
    (Emphasis mine)

    This Linux book is 1337!
  • inappropriate (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @05:36PM (#10903367)
    It's inappropriate for Slashdot to review its boss's book. Far better is to wait for someone else (not related) to review it then link to the review with a disclaimer.
    • Re:inappropriate (Score:2, Insightful)

      by stratjakt ( 596332 )
      More than half of all slashdot articles are thinly veiled advertisements.

      Either it's a link to one of Apple's press releases, or to Roland Piquepilles blog, etc..

      This is not really any different.
    • Right. God forbid a site promotes products that have been developed by its maintainers. If you're looking for objective reporting, you've come to the wrong place though. But if you hadn't figured that out already, nothing I say is likely to enlighten you.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @05:45PM (#10903465)
    The Mepis live CD (in my experience) is the most usable and /user land freindly Linux around. The fact that all the tools work out of the box is amazing. The sorting of dependancy issues has become the biggest hurdle in Linux acceptance. The fact that you do not have to ./configure --with to get a running install puts Mepis light years ahead of other distros. I predict that some will actually pay for this distro.

    There is one problem with the KDE alsa user permissions, when you create a new user after install. A easier to understand root user permission tool might help, so one would not have to understand unix group and user permissions. If the Gui had a more bonehead simple help file the issue would go away. Of course typing $man ls -l or $man chown before you su to create a new account does help. But how can someone who is a small buisiness who needs an alternative to the MS treadmill afford the time to learn these things? That said I firmly believe that prepackaged Mepis like Linux distros are the future.

  • If any readers run into the same problem I did, and can't just shrug and toss Windows completely, my happy-overkill advice would be to invest in a second hard drive and skip all the hassles of dual- or multi-booting.

    This is exactly how I have my primary box set up. Are you suggesting that newbies open their cases and swap drive plugs when they want to change OSes? (Been there. Done that.)

    If not, how on earth does it save one from dual booting?

    Methinks you had some other concept in mind, relating to part
  • by skids ( 119237 ) on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @05:47PM (#10903480) Homepage
    ...that guy with the late-night infomercials who calls himself "the Computer Doctor" or somesuch nonsense. You know: "...and the lesson plays like a regular video on top of the application, so you can work along."

    The last ad I saw from him, he was hawking a CD tutoring on "avoiding identity theft" of which he said "I decided to do this special CD because I was recently a victim myself."

    Now THERE's a guy you should be taking advice from.

    (Actually having stupid users write tech tutorials isn't that bad. Only they understand the problems of other stupid users firsthand.)
  • That should get him at least 2% more on the ol' annual review...

    Good review, but still funny that its his boss's book lol.

  • An early snag (Score:5, Informative)

    by proverbialcow ( 177020 ) on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @05:52PM (#10903515) Journal
    An early snag: Chapter 4's instructions on reformatting a hard drive to let Windows and Linux both exist happily on the same PC didn't work for me. I was installing onto a brand new hard drive, and I thought I'd give dual-booting a shot to see what Windows was like nowadays, and so followed the instructions on setting up a machine to dual-boot.

    That's because Linux doesn't play well with NTFS (mounts it read-only), and NTFS (or some variant thereof) lies under WinXP. If you were truly starting with a new hard drive, your best bet is to set up your partitions ahead of time, install XP where you want XP and Linux where you want Linux.

    Messing around with the partition-size probably hosed whatever checksum XP does on the partition, and it refused to boot from it.

    Not really newbie-friendly, is it? :)
    • Re:An early snag (Score:2, Informative)

      by Shawn Parr ( 712602 )
      I believe the parent meant this, but I want to make it obvious.

      From my experience, if you are going to make a new drive dual boot you *must* install Windows first. Then install any alternate OS's you want with it.

      Windows will not respect your boot loader, and stick its own (which will only recognize FAT and NTFS partitions typically) in the MBR.

      As a side note, some newer machines I received from Gateway had a interesting BIOS feature where if you had grub or lilo modify the MBR the machine would cras

    • Linux doesn't play well with NTFS (mounts it read-only)
      AFAIK Windows doesn't play well with any non-MS Filesystem (doesn't even recognize them as filesystems, not to mention mounting them) so Users might want to ask themselves who is behind the other. (I know you probably know this, I just thought I'd mention it)
    • Linux has been able to read/write NTFS fine for at least a year now, using Microsoft's own driver. Google for captive NTFS.
  • by SunPin ( 596554 ) <slashspam@cyberT ... com minus author> on Tuesday November 23, 2004 @06:13PM (#10903722) Homepage
    You can probably tell already whether Point and Click Linux is suited for you, and the answer is likely No.

    Timothy... you're fired. :)

  • Once a Linux system is properly configured [vle.org], there really is not much to keeping it up and going. I would much rather place a computer novice on a Linux system than deal with that user on a Windows machine with all its updates against spyware and viruses [totallygeek.com].

  • by Anonymous Coward
    That's it!
    I'm off to GNU/Hurd
  • Mepis (Score:2, Funny)

    Interesting. As I loaded /. I was burning a freshly downloaded .iso of Mepis. I need to bring it home to my parents on Thankgiving vacation to do a little rescue, and perhaps a little showing off.

  • Woo hoo! (Score:2, Funny)

    by AstroSurf ( 629842 )
    but I never did get it to boot into Windows.

    Alright! Feature #1! I'm sold. :)

  • Someone who knows the pain I've went through trying to get someone weened off of Windows and made something usefull.

The use of money is all the advantage there is to having money. -- B. Franklin

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