Friday, 1 June 2007 07:30 by
Myself
Yesterday I discovered, to my
disappointment, that Linux has not evolved as much as I'd hoped for
during the last couple of years. That's from my point of view, as a desktop user.
Let's start off with a brief history of my *nix experience, shall we?
It
started when I was around 12 years old - I had not begun 6th grade yet
that's for sure- as my father received two double CD folders by mail
which immediately caught my interest. He explained that this was a
distribution of Linux called "Slackware" and that it was an alternative
to Microsoft Windows. It had some sort of reptile printed on the cover
which also appealed to my senses. Long story short, I was gonna install
it as a second OS to Win98. I clearly remember other adults laughing
saying "they're gonna try on unix". Which made me ask myself, why
should this be difficult?
It was a textbased install and I
proceeded by trial and error. I got stuck for several days at the
partitioning part just because the stupid script complained about some
"mount as root" constraint :-). Then after trying hundreds of mounting
paths and all of the supported file systems I made it to the next part.
And I finally completed the installation. I played around with the
boring prompt a few days and managed to get X and Mouse and Keyboard
working and I could retire to the familiar Windows with a feeling of
satisfaction.
Since then I've used Debian and Red Hat in school
but never appreciated it's user-hostile GUI and complex configuration,
at least compared to Windows and the fact I was raised by Windows makes
me want to have certain things in a certain way. Period.
I installed
Yellow Dog Linux on my PS3 yesterday. And it had been over three years
since my last encounter with linux and much ought have happened. But
Enlightment 17 offered the same dumb behaviour and I couldn't mount a
samba share and stream hd-content or even mp3. I tried installing xine,
vlc, totem, mplayer, xmms. But nothing could play directly from the
samba share. And they have not managed to encorporate drag and drop
neither. And there was no apparent GUI for associating files nor could
I set them up in vlc or xmms.
The bad signs kept blocking my way and
it mad me frustrated. I had to copy the media files to the local
harddrive, then some low-res files were playable but the hd-content
failed because of "video slacking more than 5 seconds (perhaps slow
cpu)". 6 x 3.xGhz, slow my ass!
I understand there are ways to
customize E17, associate file extensions and install codecs and that
drag and drop in fact is working. But to a fellow Windows user, this
should be 100 times more intuitive. Enlightment itself is moving in the
right direction but there's something fundementaly missing.
Thank god the ps3 offers good gaming.
Good night!