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Date:      Wed, 22 Jun 2005 15:48:51 -0400
From:      "Steve Bertrand" <iaccounts@ibctech.ca>
To:        "'Ted Mittelstaedt'" <tedm@toybox.placo.com>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   RE: Explaining FreeBSD features
Message-ID:  <20050622194651.2A38643D49@mx1.FreeBSD.org>
In-Reply-To: <LOBBIFDAGNMAMLGJJCKNAEMDFBAA.tedm@toybox.placo.com>

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> 
> Fafa, I've seen these kinds of efforts before and they are 
> all generally doomed to failure.
> 
> You see, the problem is that FreeBSD is not a general 
> computer operating system product.  It is a very specific 
> product in fact.
> 
> Now, the USES that FreeBSD can be put to are VERY general.  
> BUT, do NOT make the mistake of confusing the fact that just 
> because FreeBSD can be put to general use, that somehow it is 
> a general product.  It is not.
> 
> FreeBSD is targeted at 2 main groups of people:
> 
> 1) Very knowledgeable people who are using it for personal, 
> or in-house corporate projects.
> 
> 2) Very knowledgeable people who are using it to construct 
> turnkey systems for customers who couldn't care less what is 
> under the hood.
> 
> By contrast, Windows and Linux are in fact, general computer 
> operating system products.  They are targeted at groups #1 
> and #2, but they are also targeted at group #3 which are:
> 
> 3) People who barely know how to push a button who have a 
> problem they need to fix with a computer operating system, 
> and they really don't care if they understand how the fix 
> works as long as it works.
> 
> 
> This gives rise to a rather serious Catch-22 with FreeBSD:
> 
> You need to really understand intimately how FreeBSD works 
> and how computer software that runs on it works in order to 
> get it to work well enough for you to learn intimately how it works.
> 
> Windows and Linux solved this Catch-22 by dumbing-down the 
> interface to their operating systems.  Thus, an ignoramus can 
> get up and running with both of these systems, and that 
> person can remain fat, dumb, and happy, completely ignorant 
> of what he is doing, and those systems will still work enough 
> to get the job done.  It may be a half-assed fix, but it is 
> better than nothing.
> 
> FreeBSD by contrast, long ago decided not to do this.  For 
> starters, if you dumbed-down the FreeBSD interface, then to 
> most people FreeBSD wouldn't be any different than Linux or 
> Windows, so why mess with it?  But, most importantly, a 
> dumbed-down interface gets in the way of a knowledgeable 
> person, and over time becomes a tremendous liability.
> 
> With FreeBSD, the only way that a newbie can break the 
> Catch-22 is old-fashioned mental elbow grease.  In short, by 
> learning a bit at a time, expanding on that, and repeating 
> the process.  It is a long slow way to get to know anything, 
> but once you get there, you really do know everything in 
> intimate detail.
> 
> This isn't a popular thing to tell newbies.

Just going through this list as I do every few days and came across this
thread.

I just want to say thank you Ted, your comments made for a very decent,
informative and realistic read ;)

Steve

> 
> Ted
> 
> >Thanks.
> >
> >--
> >
> >Fafa Hafiz Krantz
> >  Research Designer @ http://www.home.no/barbershop
> >  Enlightened @ http://www.home.no/barbershop/smart/sharon.pdf
> >
> >
> >
> >--
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