Date: Tue, 02 Dec 2008 14:04:51 -0500 From: michael <michael.copeland@gmail.com> To: Bob McConnell <rvm@CBORD.com> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: FreeBSD and hardware?? Message-ID: <493586D3.6040703@gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <FF8482A96323694490C194BABEAC24A0039AF749@Email.cbord.com> References: <20081121211828.GA9493@kokopelli.hydra><FF8482A96323694490C194BABEAC24A0039AF219@Email.cbord.com> <20081202162808.GA5851@kokopelli.hydra> <FF8482A96323694490C194BABEAC24A0039AF749@Email.cbord.com>
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Bob McConnell wrote: > On Behalf Of Chad Perrin > >> On Mon, Dec 01, 2008 at 01:25:24PM -0500, Bob McConnell wrote: >> >>> On Behalf Of Chad Perrin >>> >>> On the other hand, both Unix and Linux have a long way to go before >>> > they > >>> can match Microsoft's ease of use on the GUI. I believe the best way >>> to attack that problem is to find a new paradigm to replace the >>> > desktop, > >>> which is not a great interface model to begin with. >>> >> I guess that depends on your definition of "ease of use". In my >> > little > >> world, "ease of use" involves the ease, efficiency, and speed of task >> completion via an interface with which I'm familiar. It seems from >> > what > >> you said that in your little world "ease of use" means "familiarity", >> since that's really the major win for MS Windows interfaces, to the >> majority of its users. >> > > Here are two simple tests for ease of use. > > 1. View a tree of files and directories, some local some remote mounts. > Highlight a random group of those objects. Move the entire group in one > motion by dragging and dropping the collection to a new location in the > tree. > > 2. Do an SMB mount of remote directories onto the desktop or your home > directory. Open any application and access files in that directory as > easily as when they are on the local drive. > > I have not been able to do either of these on Ubuntu 7.10 or > XFCE/Slackware 12. In the first case, I need to cut and paste the > individual files one at a time. I can't even move a directory. In the > second, I have been unable to get Amarok, vlc, xine or any other > multimedia application I have tried, to recognize the SMB mounted > directory. It is invisible to them. At the application level there > should be absolutely no difference between a local drive and a mounted > remote drive, no matter what protocol was used to mount it. The > application should not need to implement smb:// itself. > > I am not even going to talk about how difficult it is to find and modify > basic configuration files, particularly after the LSB crowd really > screwed everything up. > > Once you fix basic problems like these, then we can talk about how to > redefine ease of use. > > Bob McConnell > also, my vlc sees any mounted drive or directory, no matter the protocol. so does mplayer, etc. i don't know why your system doesn't operate correctly, but i don't have that issue at all. e,g: /mnt/Azureus Downloads this mount is mounted over samba from a computer on the other side of the house, and i see everything on it and play my files over the network. > _______________________________________________ > freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscribe@freebsd.org" >
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