how do you feel using trisquel?
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i just installed Trisquel in my hard drive in my desktop, its very exciting, it was freaking easy and the default installation is very complete and polished... i started using linux when ubuntu was in its beginings, then i had to quit it. and know im here for the freedoom, which is waning... it gives me huge satisfaction being using a free software... tell me hows been your experience?...
that was amazing and motivational, when ever i try to talk about the freedoom in free distros people look at me with a face saying " stop wasting my time for gods sake " many times i feel very out of place, but i believe that i must have tolerance to people that dont understand the value of freedom...
I can't confirm the negative experiences Armworm has made.
My system runs very reliable und stable, offering to me almost everything I want to do 100% in freedom (at least concerning the OS).
If I compare the amount of discomfort when using Trisquel and using windows (former times with win7, long ago) I can clearly say, that the work with trisquel is much more fun.
No annoying java-updater and flash-updater and adobe updater crying one after another for updates; no "you can't shutdown your pc now, you have to wait half an hour while our crappy updates get installed and you have no option to choose different".
But now concerning the freedom:
There is this good feeling everytime I switch on the pc, saying:
Yes, computing should be like this! In freedom, valuing the user, flexibel and reliable.
This feeling gets even bigger when I listen to music on jamendo.com, sharing this music with friends by an encrypted mail;
it's the feeling like this is the right track.
Everytime I do my work with free software or enjoyed a good game experience, like battle for wesnoth, there is this feeling of joy and I think: well, it works! it's not just phantasy.
exactly !!! free software is the way ! another thing is that i would like to donate to the trisquel development but is very hard for me rigth now... but i think ill try to gift cdr with an trisquel iso installed. and give to everyone !
On Sun, 7 Jul 2013 06:03:12 +0200 (CEST)
name at domain wrote:
> i just installed Trisquel in my hard drive in my desktop, its very
> exciting, it was freaking easy and the default installation is very
> complete and polished... i started using linux when ubuntu was in its
> beginings, then i had to quit it. and know im here for the freedoom,
> which is waning... it gives me huge satisfaction being using a free
> software... tell me hows been your experience?...
After 2 years of using Trisquel GNU/Linux, I have not missed using any
other distro nor Operating System. Above all, I feel great that I
support and use a distro that respects me as a user.
I don't ever regret the time I spent in Wesnoth, even though it's not my gametype and I skip through all levels just to listen to the story with :debug and then give power ups to my units with unit moves=555 or unit hitpoints=1111. That way I listened to the story of IftU, AtS and more adventures. Also spent numerous hours on ANL. I have never regretted spending time with this good free software, Battle for Wesnoth.
Now concerning Trisquel, I had hoped it was a free alternative to Ubuntu, but I'm afraid it didn't live up to its dreams, at least not the way I imagined it or wanted it. The little I tried it, I was impressed by some things, so Trisquel sure has made its impressions on me, but I wouldn't go as far as call it "a free/libre software version of Ubuntu".
Hm? Why would you play a game you don't like just because it's free? It's not like Wesnoth is the only free game out there. There's hundreds of them, at least.
I find Trisquel gives me a very good user experience. But only after buying the right hardware. Too many manufacturers don't want to allow for their hardware to work with free drivers. Before the update I had lots of problems with my videocard, but otherwise it was very good already.
I also find the thought of using only free software pretty liberating and somehow calming. However the whole system is very stable, I rarely encounter errors or bugs and if I do, they are quite harmless.
I found Ubuntu to be much more unstable and it broke on me much more frequently. Once I updated to a newer release in Ubuntu and suddenly there was no sound and some other issues. Never seen that in Trisquel.
can you tell some examples of right hardware?
On Mon, 8 Jul 2013 04:58:22 +0200 (CEST)
name at domain wrote:
> can you tell some examples of right hardware?
Feel free to browse h-node.org. Filter out the hardwares that work on
FaiF GNU/Linux distros.
Or you can click on the ad on the right column that goes to
Thinkpenguin. They sell hardware that works with Trisquel.
If we talk about desktop computers, there is one very convenient choice. Motherboards with integrated graphics from Intel. You get full acceleration for desktop effects, almost all free software games work perfectly. It's the only graphics solution that has 100% free drivers.
In notebooks it is important to get the right WiFi chip together with the integrated Intel graphics. Atheros makes WiFi chips that run on 100% free drivers, refer to libre.thinkpenguin.com, they sell notebooks with such chipsets.
If you use the link I provided, or the one present on this site, 25% of the profits get donated to this project ;)
I feel comfortable using GNU+Linux Trisquel. It does everything I want to do for a daily use, or for a more complex use like audio and video editing, graphic design, and something even cooler than the last: graphic design with CMYK colors, using Scribus (also a free software).
For those without time, please jump to the last paragraph, before my manually inserted signature.
Using the latest GNU+Linux Trisquel (6.0, Toutatis), I just need simple configurations (which are done with user-friendly interfaces) and some hours of downloading (my Internet is very slow, but this process can be done at midnight) to have my useful desktop set (not considering the configuration of each application, which is very fast and user-friendly). :D
Apart from productivity I also have a big list of games but, despite its size, I just play these games casually because I try to be productive most of the time when I don't have home obligations and homeworks from the faculty which I attend.
In the beginning, I was a normal computer user (not that I'm not being one nowadays because I hate when people, including me, call others "normal users", but since I haven't found any replacements, I'll leave this phrase the way it is). I was also a fanatic for video games (gamer), these were also part of my childhood memories, which I kept at my side every time through the fantastic kind of software called emulator.
Anyway, I don't want to write everything that's already written in my Portuguese Brazilian Wikipedia user page, just to make things short.
After some time, I joined the free software community and noticed that I didn't need to keep my childhood video games anymore. Nowadays, I just download video games when I want to write critics about them, or when some of my friends or parents want to play them.
I see, from daily observations, that free software needs to also have an user-friendly documentation available within the software in question and for use mostly by users without an Internet connection, and if possible, in the user's native language. The apex of my observations was when I had to replace the operating system of one of my aunts' portable computer. She wasn't, and she's still not, an advanced user (I don't like this words either), and she haven't even heard anything about terms like "proprietary", "open source", and "free software". So, the situation was really delicate.
So I decided to write an user-friendly guide for her and place it in her portable computer. The guide was written very quickly because of the deadline for the completion of the task, and the homeworks from the faculty which I attend, but still, I liked, and I still like, the resulting documentation. Now she can use the portable computer normally, and when she feels the need, she can read the user guide, or ask me. I also try to ask her about how her portable computer is doing, just to make sure she doesn't forget to ask me anything if she wishes to.
One of my uncles, which joined the open source software community, read the user guide I wrote and he liked such approach used.
I already talked with some people from the GNU+Linux Trisquel community about such user guides, but I still need some time to talk about it more further.
In short, users just need to worry about one thing: hardware. It's best to look for opinions from the free software community and see some tests results published by users in the site h-node.org.
Best regards, ADFENO.
Have a nice day.
I started writing a guide for beginners recently. I'm a beginner in some ways, so I'm learning a lot as I go along. I wonder if there are others interested in doing this ... maybe we could work together.
Indeed, we can do so.
My user guide is pretty incomplete, mostly because I wanted something quick for operating system tasks. It does makes reference to other software such as Brasero, GIMP, Inkscape, and LibreOffice, but these references don't go far from explaining to the user what these softwares can do and how to just open these through the start menu.
My user guide must yet receive a license, a better cover, and various orthographic corrections. And also, it must be translated from Brazilian Portuguese (my primary language) to English (I'm sorry, but I don't know how to differ the English language variants), which I fear that I'm not literate enough.
I just need to wait for the end of this academic period, so that I can get a break from the faculty which I attend, it'll be in the following Thursday (2013/07/11, GMT -03:00).
Best regards, ADFENO.
Have a nice day.
What about writing new manuals (or improving the existing one) in the Wiki documentation of Trisquel?
Great idea!
I can take some parts of my user guide and place them in the manuals which already exist (I just said so, but haven't checked the absence or presence of content between the two). Afterwards, I can upload the user guide somewhere (I'm thinking about uploading it here, but I still have to talk about this with the community).
Later on, the user guide can be translated and everyone will be able to download and read it, or simply save it for another people to read it (just like I did in one of my aunts' portable computer).
Best regards, ADFENO.
Have a nice day.
I'm helping out with the guide too. Updating the documentation with it won't be a problem because I've got editing rights for it.
Well, maybe it could simply come with the distribution by default. That would make it easy for users to read it. An alternative would be to make it the default homepage.
well you could keep it in portuguese, and spread it in all brazil... dont you dream a day when all brazil use trisquel? :D
Indeed, I plan to keep it in Brazilian Portuguese (which will be noted to be the original work). There will also be an English translation. Both the original and the translated versions should be available for download, as well as the future translations.
I'm also thinking about making a script, which should help translators with questions like: "What does this word refers to? This or that object?". Specially because some languages, like Brazilian Portuguese, tend to differ elements easily.
Best regards, ADFENO.
Have a nice day.
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