Re: Aunt Tillie builds a kernel (was Re: ISA hardware discovery -- the elegant solution)

From: Dave Jones (davej@suse.de)
Date: Mon Jan 14 2002 - 13:38:24 EST


On Mon, Jan 14, 2002 at 12:52:28PM -0500, Eric S. Raymond wrote:
> She complains of occasional lockups, and that she gets skips when
> playing her Guy Lombardo MP3s. Melvin says, over the phone: "Yup,
> that version had some VM problems. And you need the low-latency stuff
> that went in three releases ago.

 ... and the 200 patches that the vendor added that she's become
 so used to just being there...

> Just click on the 'kernel update' icon on your desktop."

 *sigh*, and the package updater to get a new kernel for $distro
 is insufficient because ?
 distro kernel update has the following advantages.
 - Comes complete with the 200 patches already applied.
 - Is _tested_ by $distrovendor.
 - If it screws up, and Aunt Tillie shelled out for support
   (which of course, she did being the 'needing support' type)
   $distrovendor will help. Ringing support and saying "Melvin
   told me to install a new kernel, and now my box doesn't boot"
   may not be a supportable scenario for all vendors.
 
> So why doesn't she use Red Hat or Mandrake's RPM update? Maybe she's
> running something else.

 Red Hat & Mandrake are not the only distros with online update,
 in fact, it's probably considered a must-have feature for most
 distros these days.

> (You ain't going to tell me Aunt Tillie is ready
> for Debian apt-get, either.)

 Wait a minute. Not ready for 'apt-get', but ready to build & run a
 kernel made up of a collection of random patches on Melvin's say-so ?
 
> Maybe she wants a kernel that's compiled
> for her AMD Athlon K6 rather than a 386.
 
 Various distro vendors update facilities give you this option.
 
> OK, so she doesn't know what processor she has
 
 Some even autodetect.
 
> We have the technology to do all of this now;
 
 Indeed. It's called YaST, Red Carpet, Mandrake Update, apt-get,
 apt-rpm, and a plethora of other such tools.
 
> It takes a different way of thinking than most hackers are used to.

 Yup. One where reinventing the wheel seems appropriate.

> We're proud of our mad programming skillz and our ability to wrestle
> with arcana. That pride isn't a bad thing -- except when it gets in
> the way of designing systems that Aunt Tillie can use.

 The systems are designed, and the punchline is, that they work,
 and they're being used out there today.

 Dave.

-- 
| Dave Jones.        http://www.codemonkey.org.uk
| SuSE Labs
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Tue Jan 15 2002 - 21:00:46 EST