Very good points, but... I can usually make a snap judgement about whether I'd like to walk or take a car. The pros and cons are obvious, because I understand what's involved in each. The big difference to me is that there's no easy way to compare Linux distros, apart from installing each one, playing with it, noting what I like and don't like, then doing it all over again for dozens of distro. Okay, that takes *WAY* too much time. What I'd like is a some resource where I could see which distros specialize in what, what their philosophy is, which other distro they're derived from, etc., etc. Then if I were building a server box I could make a shortlist to try out. Same for a desktop surfing box. When I started with Linux (mid/late 90's) there were just a handful of distros and it wasn't hard to tell them apart. I blinked and now there are a gazillion. Alan Dayley wrote: >If I make take a tangent on this thread and focus on the "too many >choices" point... > >First off, I understand the "too many" point of view. I also recognize >that it is a view that will not go away anytime soon. I also accept that >it is not a view that is "wrong" or stupid, it just is. I do find it >facinating when compared to other things. For example: > >"There are sooooo many types of housing to choose from. Apartments, >condos, townhouses, big, small, downtown, suburban. And that is not even >touch on architecture, features, paint color and everything else! It's >hard to figure out!" > >Or > >"There are soooo many different modes of transportation to choose from. >Walking, bicycle, electric, gas, diesel, small, big, truck, sedan, Chevy, >Ford, etc.! How do I choose!" > >Or > >"There are soooo many different kinds of food to eat...." >"There are soooo many different kinds of shoes...." >"There are soooo many different kinds of shrubbery...." > >The above examples sound silly to me because few people sit around >complaining about the diversity of choices for those things. My point is >that, to me, choices that have to do with computers are among the few >(only?) areas of our life where more choice is bad. Or at least more >choice is more often categorized as bad. > >Maybe it's because computers are still fairly new with only about two >decades in the general public. Maybe it's because Microsoft has been so >successful dominating things that people equate their products with what a >computer is. Maybe it's just complex enough that it scares people. Maybe >it's because computers become so key in our lives, holding all that >personal information, etc. that the choice is more intimate to our psyche. > >Whatever it is, I look forward to the day when people accept choice in >their computer operating environment as a matter of course, just as >picking between a mediterranean style or early american style couch is >just a matter of personal taste. > >Alan > > > -- Darrin Chandler dwchandler@stilyagin.com http://www.stilyagin.com/ --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss