tito via Dng said on Tue, 13 Apr 2021 22:03:02 +0200
>2) should non-free and contrib repos be added to sources.list
> or should that be left to the user
I'm not sure whether my answer is responsive to your question or not,
but here goes...
I believe enough non-free and contrib stuff should be available at
install time (or boot time on a live CD/flash) that the user doesn't
need to put in additional media to get boot, network, video and sound
working. And I believe any non-free and contrib stuff should, by
default, be installed at install time, but before installation the user
should be given the option of opting out of this non-free/contrib
stuff, so if he/she only uses free software, he/she can maintain that
principle in the installation.
Stating it the inverse way, I HATE these installs that bomb because
there's no FSF-satisfying drivers, firmware or software to handle my new
laptop's weird hardware. And those distros that do that, their mailing
lists always say "well just put in a thumb drive with the
drivers/firmware!" How the KFDWOJMFOW do I know which drivers and
firmware? I think free software purist snobs drive more people back to
Windows than cleanse people of their non-free ways.
SteveT
Steve Litt
Spring 2021 featured book: Troubleshooting Techniques of the Successful
Technologist
http://www.troubleshooters.com/techniques