@Jonathan Vasquez I must say that I totally support your point of view. I have seen some TU/devs/geeky users showed bad temper, mocking on newb at #archlinux who really came there to seek for help and wanted to switch to Arch. They just made them go away rudely. Their point is that Arch is not for newb. On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 10:27 AM, Jonathan Vasquez <jvasquez1011@gmail.com>wrote:
On Tue, Jan 3, 2012 at 10:25 PM, Jonathan Vasquez <jvasquez1011@gmail.com> wrote:
On Tue, Jan 3, 2012 at 10:21 PM, Oon-Ee Ng <ngoonee.talk@gmail.com> wrote:
On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 10:58 AM, Jonathan Vasquez <jvasquez1011@gmail.com> wrote:
I've been doing things to attract users to Arch. Whether they are newbs or not, because I want people to learn. As long as you have willingness and determination to learn, that is the important thing. The resources are out there, people just need to look, and I'm willing to add to those resources.
You aren't adding anything beneficial by telling others that their comments are equal to troll statements, when this is clearly not true.
Attracting users to Arch is not a stated goal, this has been repeated many times in various fora. Arch is only for a certain type of users, those who are willing and able to learn.
I'm not knocking your effort, but a quick glance at those resources you've provided indicate that you're trying to make it very easy to get to using Arch, and I don't think that's beneficial for Arch or its community. There are other distributions for 'easy-to-use', Arch should not be that. Not because of any type of elitism, but because Arch's niche is about control and simplicity, and making it 'newbie-friendly' (whatever that means) would compromise that.
Splitting the thread (sorry I use gmail, so it won't split for you guys on mutt or whatever) to reduce the 'corruption' of original thread, not that I think it'll make a difference though.
You are misunderstanding my goals and what I've said.
I said that I'm trying to help people find and use Arch. Whether they are expert users from other distros, or they are Noobies who are "willing to read documentation". If a person is a noob, that doesn't mean that they can't use Arch, they just have to be motivated individuals who are willing to seek and learn for themselves. I am facilitating resources, documentations, etc, to lower the barrier to entry, while at the same time giving information that is in the documentation, in a video form.
So we completely agree, the point of Arch, and us, isn't to just go around and find noobies that don't want to learn for themselves but want others to do the work for them, but to find people that are willing to learn, seek for themselves, and contribute back to the community. This does not segregate "Noobs who want others to do things for them", "Noobs who are willing to be independent and learn for themselves", and "Expert users from other Distros who want to learn how to use Arch".
-- Jonathan Vasquez
BTW, If you watch the series I made today to help people who are willing to learn come and try Arch, I've explicitly explained the Arch goals, and who it is and isn't for.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVx0xOO5tqg @ 1:30.
-- Jonathan Vasquez
-- God loved the birds and invented trees. Man loved the birds and invented cages. ~Jacques Deval Probability does not exist. ~Bruno de Finetti Brian: "Look, you've got it all wrong! You don't NEED to follow ME, You don't NEED to follow ANYBODY! You've got to think for your selves! You're ALL individuals!" ~Monty Python, "The Life of Brian"