Linux Gazette 91: The Answer Gang
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...making Linux just a little more fun!
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The Answer Gang

By Jim Dennis, Ben Okopnik, Dan Wilder, Breen, Chris, and...
(meet the Gang) ...
the Editors of Linux Gazette...
and You!
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We have guidelines for asking and answering questions. Linux questions only, please.
We make no guarantees about answers, but you can be anonymous on request.
See also: The Answer Gang's
Knowledge Base
and the LG
Search Engine
Contents:
- ¶: Greetings From Heather Stern
Combining multiple PDFs into one
concurrent processes
A small AWKward problem --or--
- Hey MAC, sign in before you login
Allowing only known ethernet cards to use the NAT
Secure CVS - SSH tunnel problem
Greetings from Heather Stern
Summer's looking bright and beautiful, the world is alive with free software,
and we had oodles of good questions this month...
...many of which were in the LG knowledge base already. I think
we had a record number of pointers back to Ben's writeup in
Issue 63 about boot records.
...some of which were from students who've put their thinking caps on,
and are now asking the kind of considered questions their professors can
be proud of. Us too. These kind of students are the ones who will drive
computer science into new nooks and crannies that it hasn't spread into yet.
(Cue the english muffin with fresh butter. Yum.) May they graduate with
high honors and a number of cool project credits under their belt.
I spent Memorial Day weekend at a science fiction convention - readers who've
been keeping up know I mentioned this last month - so here's how we did. Linux
seems to have all the web browsers anyone could use, and then some. Good. We've
gotten much better at having sound support, and handling those whacky plug-ins
sites seem to like to use. Our little netlounge was about half Macs, and there
are a few people whose prejudices about what the GUI ought to work like drove them
into Linux' arms - and they were pretty okay with that. Good stuff, Maynard.
Except for the folks who had to deal with office software and an office-like
feature set. Floppy support under Linux desperately confused people - if it auto
mounted, they couldn't figure out how to make it let go of a floppy safely (and
of course, these are PCs, so they'll cheerfully let go of the floppy
unsafely). If they weren't, they couldn't figure out how to use a floppy
without technical assisitance. Mtools are great but only if you already know about
them. And they suck for letting someone save things straight onto the floppy.
Word processors still seem to be flighty and fragile creatures. I saw not one
but two of the beasties die and take a document with it just because the user wanted
to switch to landscape mode. The frustrated user stomped off in a huff; he won't
be using Linux again all that soon. Spreadsheets default to saving files in their
own whacky and hopelessly incompatible formats, with no particularly simple way to
change that behavior visible from the configs. I mean, this is Linux; I'm
sure it can sing sonatas if I tell it too. But I am the Editor Gal with
a world of notes at my fingertips. These hapless folk who just wanted to mess with
numbers and run a couple of printouts are not doing so well.
And don't get me started about setting up printing...
But hey, K desktop looks pretty. There are a decent number of users who will forgive
the OS that looks pretty, because they can see that some effort is being
put into it.
Me, I'd kind of like to see more programs defened themselves against imminent
disaster, and at least pop up with some sort of error message, note that they can't
safely use this feature yet, or the like. We've got too many good coders out there -
we shouldn't be having to look at raw segfaults. Compared to that.... why, the
Blue Screen of Death almost looks well documented and friendly.
Until next month, folks. And if your project does a little more sanity checking
and cleaner complaints because you saw this, let us know, okay? I like to know
when these little rants of mine make a difference. Trust me - it really will
make Linux just a little more fun for folks at the keyboard.
Copyright © 2003
Copying license http://www.linuxgazette.net/copying.html
Published in Issue 91 of Linux Gazette, June 2003
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