On Thu, 2004-02-26 at 15:29, Dermot Daly wrote:
<snip>
>> The reason I am asking is that I have been buying LXF for a year or so -
> It varies from good to bad, and am interested in seeing if there's
> better options out there.
>I tend to get PC Plus, and Linux Format when I bother at all. I find PC
Plus more useful overall tbh.
> Here's why I say LXF varies from good to bad:
>> Good: Sometimes they've got pretty good articles giving you a complete
> description of a particular topic, covered completely and consicely
> (e..g "What on Earth is....rsync").
> Bad: I really couldn't care less how to use blender - Don't think it
> belongs in here at all
Why not? If the article on rsync belongs in there, why doesn't the
article on blender?
> Good: Reader's rescue, etc. gives a place for people to ask questions,
> and also a place to publish how they have fixed their own problems
> Bad: Supplying a Distro that trashed many CDROMs (was it a mandrake ?)
This wasn't their own fault, nor was it Mandrakesoft's. LG decided to
allow a standard ATAPI (flush?) command to overwrite the drives
firmware, breaking with the ATAPI standard. This was not documented
outside LG's own internal documents.
> Good: For keeping up to date with open source projects you may not have
> heard about, and seeing whats going on out there in general
> Bad: Supplying on 2/3rds of Fedora (what is the deal with that?).
Was this on CD? LXF rarely (if ever) supplies more than 2 CDs. Fitting
3 CDs worth of content on two CDs could be a mite tricky.
> Good: Offering both CD and DVD options of the cover disks. (In general
> the cover disks are good)
> Bad: Supplying a "free" Linux Pro with each edition - (Why don't they
> just call a spade a spade and include it as one big advertising
> feature). Linux Pro my arse.
Now THAT is just nitpicking. And last time I read it, some of the
"advertorials" had some interesting information in them anyway.
> Opinions?
>
You wanted opinions? You got 'em. ;)
R.
--
"An email worm is, is a computer virus and a computer virus is a program
that runs like Microsoft Word on your computer..."
-- William Campbell, BUA Training on RTE Radio
Maintained by the ILUG website team. The aim of Linux.ie is to
support and help commercial and private users of Linux in Ireland. You can
display ILUG news in your own webpages, read backend
information to find out how. Networking services kindly provided by HEAnet, server kindly donated by
Dell. Linux is a trademark of Linus Torvalds,
used with permission. No penguins were harmed in the production or maintenance
of this highly praised website. Looking for the
Indian Linux Users' Group? Try here. If you've read all this and aren't a lawyer: you should be!