Stefan Held wrote:
Am Mittwoch, den 29.06.2005, 14:25 -0700 schrieb Richard Kelsch:Since Fedora is supposed to be "bleeding-edge," I have thought of a few things that may be cool for the future, not just for Fedora but Linux in general: * How about the ability to install via SRPMS for the specific CPU platform I'm using? In other words, as an advanced install option, allow me to have the installer use the SRPMS instead of the precompiled RPMS, and allow me to define the compiler optimizations for CPU etc. That would be cool. Ok, a slow install, but this isn't a production OS, so why not? I hate having an Athlon-XP running code optimized for a P4. Sure, an install could take days, but it would be an option I'd use. Why? Because I can and it's certainly bleeding-edge.Kewl open your editor and start to code. Start coding is not a good response to people that comes with suggestions. Everybody know that GNU/Linux is free software and that it is possible to contribute. However, the person who gives us the suggestion may not have the skill, or time to do it himself. That doesn't mean that his idea is bad. (I'm talking about ideas in general. I have no oppinion on the SRPM issue). By posting he may get somebody else interested, or he might expand our knowledge on how Linux is used, so why should they not post. By giving answers like "Start coding" we discourage newbies or non tech savy user from giving suggestions. It is very important to pick up oppinion from such users as you as a programmer often get blind to how ordinary users, as secretarys and such, use their computers and what problems they have. Just ansvering start codig, doesn't add anything useful. Regards Uno Engborg |