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Re: Restart after long silence
jfm2@club-internet.fr wrote:
>
> > Two additions to this point.
> >
> > #1. /usr should not be a separate partition. At least not on any
> > system operated by a novice. For such users the '/' partition
> > should include the whole OS. '/opt', '/var', and the rest can
> > be made into separate partitions after the user figures out why
> > he wants to do that. '/home' could be made a separate partition
> > from the start however. Maybe..
>
> It is more robust but problem is that for a nvice it can be easier to
> reinstall instead of fix problems. In that case it is good to have a
> separate /home. Also there can be other reasons for alrtenative
> editors not being reachable like editor not installed or destroyed
> libraries.
Agreed. This is why "/home" is the only one I considered making
separate by default.
> > #2. The easy editor new users need dose not exist yet. If it
> > looks and behaves like edit.com from DOS, then there is no need
> > to explain it's function. After all, every popular GUI word
> > processor or text editor has the same behavior.
> >
> > Joe, Pine, Pico, Jed and a few others are nice. On average it
> > takes an advanced novice ( good with computers but doesn't know
> > these editors ) working on his own 30 minutes to figure out how
> > to use them. That's with the Man page available.
> >
>
> What commands he needs for bsic fixing in short files like config
> files tend to be? Moving (arrows), deleting (the suppr key) and
> insrting (self inserting). These don't need man page reading. Only
> ones needing reading are opening a file, saving and exiting
Until you save the corrected file and exit the editor you have
not actually achieved anything :). I help people with Windows
all the time and Even those who I have to tell "Type dir. D-I-R..."
don't need to ask how edit works. I say "type edit space
config.sys and tell change the line that says ...". They have
never seen edit.com before and yet they don't ask me how it works.
> > Turning a novice user with a text editor he doesn't understand
> > yet loose in '/etc' with root privileges is enough to make tech
> > support start wetting the bed.
>
> He does not have another person for adminsitering the box (private
> user) so he is the system administrator and he has also has rm and cp
> for make support wet the bed, so editor is not biggest problem. But
> if once the support tells hilm what has to be done, he answers how I
> do it and support cannot give him aclear answer then either support
> suicides or user is told to reinstall from scratch and eturns to
> Windows
I know :). We tech support people develop a certain caring for the
mental health of computer users in general. Even those who don't
pay our extortion like fees.