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Message #00118
Re: Lubuntu could end up like Xubuntu (Heavy & Slow)
i agree with c david rigby, in that maybe we can have a barebone system, and instead of having installers in the install process, maybe have some meta packages in the repo's where a user can download the 'full multimedia desktop' or the 'professional office tools'
Jon York
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 12:11:37 +0100
From: andrew.woodhead666@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
To: gbizeau@xxxxxxxxx
CC: lubuntu-desktop@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Lubuntu-desktop] Lubuntu could end up like Xubuntu (Heavy & Slow)
I have a small script the guts the system of all the fluff I do not need. These days I use the minimal ISO and install from the repos what I need. So much better. My root partitions is currently 2Gb with the desktop + web browse + vlc + transmission + pidgin + some plugins. Bliss
On Tue, Jun 30, 2009 at 12:05 PM, Glen Bizeau <gbizeau@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I agree,
Keep it small and lean, and apt-get anything you need.
The one question I think needs to be answered is " Are we making a
distro for newbies?"
If we are then you will need a bunch of standard default apps... If
not, which I think in my personal experience with Linux and LXDE, this
will probably only be attractive to the more experienced user, who
like myself ends up uninstalling all the crap that comes with Ubuntu
anyway....I think it should be mean and lean and if you want
something, go fetch it.
Synaptic should be front and center though, is a launcher so it's easy
ti find. And maybe a desktop document on the default install
explaining about the distro and why it is what it is, and how to get
software.
my two-cents
Glen
On Mon, Jun 29, 2009 at 10:15 PM, Andrew
Woodhead<andrew.woodhead666@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> This is kinda surplus, the system is still ubuntu based so the standard
> repos can be used to install apps if they are needed.
> If the OS is going to be as it says below, you may as well install a minimal
> install then have a gui to select apps which can then be installed off the
> repos. This however isn't the case, we are trying to make a smalland
> efficient distro with a decent amount of functionality without bloating the
> system with the likes of evolution, openoffice and firefox. These are fully
> installable once the installation has completed but the initial base system
> should be slick and quick
>
> On Tue, Jun 30, 2009 at 1:14 AM, C David Rigby <c.david.rigby@xxxxxxxxx>
> wrote:
>>
>> On Mon, 2009-06-29 at 18:40 +0100, Ed Hewitt and several others wrote:
>>
>> <discussion of "keep it light" or "feature complete" elided>
>>
>> Restating the obvious, but the engineering trade off is always between
>> "ease of use/fully featured" on the one hand and lightweight on the
>> other. The necessary criterion is to decide what we really want to
>> build, and make it unique and useful enough to attract interest.
>>
>> I've proposed it before, but I'll say it again as more people are on the
>> list now (sorry that I've missed the IRC meetings for the last two weeks
>> where the app mix has been the topic of discussion). How about the
>> possibility of a very slim base install with the installer offering
>> "bundles" to meet individual needs and desires? Something like the
>> FreeBSD or Debian text installers comes to mind.
>>
>> The base installation would be just a command-line, network-capable
>> system plus enough of X to get LXDE operational. We would be pushing the
>> real work to the installer. The installer, whether text-based or
>> grahpical, would need to provide a lot of choices of bundles to
>> install.
>>
>> More importantly, I think the installer should provide something I have
>> yet to see. That something is extensive documentation of the choices of
>> bundles of applications, and what they mean in terms of system
>> performance vs features. It should be organized so that a savvy user
>> could bypass the explanations (or load a jumpstart script), but a novice
>> would get a detailed explanation of what the choices are and what they
>> mean for the final installed system.
>>
>> My $0.02.
>>
>> Cheers
>> C David Rigby
>>
>>
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