WDef
Group: Members
Posts: 798
Joined: Sep. 2005 |
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Posted: May 26 2006,09:40 |
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As I've watched dsl grow over the past few years I've been very pleased at the growth in the mydsl repository. There's a really interesting, diverse selection of apps in there now. I think there are benefits in browsing the repo and experimenting with this or that app - on a Big Fat distro, one tends to install something and then forget that it's there if you're not using it often, whereas with dsl you're always concious that you've loaded an extension, and so think about it a bit.
The current selection of base apps seems a wise compromise. The only former base app I miss a lot is Scite, which for me is far and away the best gui text editor for scripting. Beaver is a nice looking app and should stay in I suppose but Scite beats it hands down when working on large slabs of code. So I'm always loading scite.dsl.
Besides the obvious (gnu-utils.dsk and dsl-dpkg.dsl when needed), I also use the opera uci occasionally and enjoy it (lighter and faster than Firefox), the java uci, the tkdvd extension, and Xine and mplayer of course. Gnupg.dsl to import and check gpg signatures. More that I can't think right now of away from my dsl machine. The new gcc1 (also use that a lot at the moment) should cause a growth spurt in extensions because it's now possible to compile things that would not previously compile on dsl.
I'm offline a lot at the moment so have taken to loading man.uci all the time, though I immediately rebuilt it so that the shell which opens from the right click mydsl menu has a white background instead of transparent, which was illegible.
I also use my own humble contributions eg Prozgui.dsl for downloading, checkinstall.dsl when compiling, and wipe.dsl to clean off drives. There's a lot of apps in there that I haven't got round to trying or haven't had the need to, but it's good to see they are there.
I'm grateful for the large amount of early work that Kent and a few others did in getting the repo so fully stocked.
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