I just tried out scite and it was actually awful. I started making a list of thing I didn't like, but most of it boils down to having a ridiculous configuration. I can understand how the global/local/user config files division happened, but having to configure eight lines in a text file to achieve mono font is way over the top. It has strange window form properties as well like always having a horizontal scroll bar, and a hidden split window that can be found by opening the editor and resizing the window smaller from the right hand side before sizing any other direction. I actually didn't even get as far as testing to see if it could delete all lines with selected text.
viking60 wrote:I think I have found a perfect distro for you tooI am wrapping up a review on it as we "speak".....
I'm not so sure... there are a few things from the review that stand out at me.
I'm not so sure that I'd call myself a newbie, I have been screwing with Linux since the mid 90's... I just have some significant differences of opinion about practical implementation decisions. For example:
- sudo: I think that su and sudo are just UAC for Linux. If the concept is to log on with a non-administrative account to save yourself from screwing things up then what is to stop someone from typing sudo at the beginning of the same command and doing the damage? I can get behind not running remotely available services as root, but not limited accounts.
- GUI vs. CLI: There are some folks who insist that CLI is the best way to do everything, and they are wrong. Some things are easier or quicker to do by GUI simply because some tasks don't scale well to CLI use. Anyone who disagrees won't be persuaded to think about it anyways so I'll leave it at that.
- Hardware turnover: I very rarely buy brand new hardware, and strongly prefer to buy (or inherit) older hardware. Today (in 2014) I would like to consider a P4/3GHz with 1G of memory to be a perfectly reasonable desktop PC, but typical "desktop" distros of Linux will run like a sloth on that kind of hardware... and the distros that are supposed to be considered "small" are meant to run off CD or USB stick, or are a special "admin tool" distro, or are meant to be on embedded devices, or generally run on something other than my cheap piece of crap PC. Linux is praised by some people as being able to run on crappy older hardware but it truly is not designed to be slim any more.
I do like Xfce, but don't like FireFox or Thunderbird.
I tried a few "new to me" distros recently and found at least one that offered a "software center" of some kind that essentially offered a one-click install for software but I truly despise that. I REALLY don't like the idea that a software installer would be perfectly willing to install large amounts of dependency software without even asking or informing the user. It is almost as scummy as those cheesy Windows apps (like FireFox) that offer a "stub" installer that is quite small and downloads a pile of junk during the install to give the illusion that the application is tiny and the false premise that it should therefore run quickly.
viking60 wrote:So far SolydX lives up to it's slogan:
Linux desktop made easy
I'm looking for "Linux desktop made functional".
I'm downloading SolydX now on my terrible connection... hopefully it'll be done by morning so I can try it out.
S.
I am wrapping up a review on it as we "speak".....