On 6/7/06, Tim <ignored_mailbox@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Wed, 2006-06-07 at 12:39 +0100, Tony Molloy wrote: > All very well for experienced users and for those with high speed > connections for the downloads. No different from the boat they're in now. Download Core ISO, and three others. Still a lot to download, whether KDE is on the first or last disc. Likewise for Gnome, OpenOffice.org, et al.
Of course it is different: 1) Buy a CD from a vendor: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Distribution/LocalVendors 2) A current FC user passes on the already burnt CDs to a newbie friend
> However I can see new users having major problems. That is unless it's > made "very very" easy to install other packages and groups of packages. > Remember a new user doesn't want to have to learn about core and extras > and the difference. Nor does she/he want to know all about yum. They just > want a system that works "out of the box". Done properly, it shouldn't be any worse than having to install from more than one disc, as we already do.
If so, then that would be great.
We already have a small "rescue" disc. People can get that, or leave it, as they want to. I think the first install disc should be just as small. Enough to make a working system, enough to be able to add extra stuff *from* as system installed by that disc, and enough to start an installation with that disc and insert others as needs be (as we do now). Just make the first disc small, so those wanting a real core-only system can have it. Then you can build up from other discs, downloaded files, or whatever...
Just out of curiousity, what do you consider to be a core-only system, or is there an objective definition so that I can better understand what you mean when you say that.
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