Le 07-06-01 à 05:59, Ian Eiloart a écrit :
--On 30 May 2007 10:37:37 -0700 "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@brierdr.com> wrote:
On May 30, 2007, at 9:40 AM, paul beard wrote:
I'm getting a sense that people who use double-clickable installers are somehow not "our sort of people." Goodness knows we can always use more snobbery ;-)
I wouldn't argue that at all. I would instead argue that MacPorts is simply not READY to serve people who use double-clickable installers. That has always been a design goal of MacPorts, but it's not there yet. It has a ways to go. It doesn't even know how many of its ports even build at a given time yet, much less have them all packaged up and ready to double click on. :-)
- Jordan
No, but MacPorts might be used to install such software on machines managed by system admins who do see the advantage. For example, they might be University or company Sys Admins who manage a lot of machines.
Or, I might prefer to use MacPorts to install such software for my Mum. SSH and MacPorts might be a better solution than ARD over a cheap broadband connection, for example.
The key, as pointed here, is the targetted audience. There is no good tool to rule them all. The real question is "for who and what should MacPorts be really good, and is it ?" I use MacPorts to install Gimp and would never use Gimp.app. I download Smultron and would never build it from source. And I'm not (too) schizoid. The other question is "what can be learned from that opensource mac site ?" I would answer that some editoral is always most welcome. How about a "feature app of the week" on the home page ? (but I won't do it) yves