Mandrake 9.0 Review

From Slashdot, I was pleased to find this review of Mandrake 9.0. It wasn’t as positive as I thought it might be, though:

[…] Mandrake is using pretty much the default themes and colors of KDE 3.0.3, which looks dated and ugly at best. Even the default Gnome2 looks better than the default KDE. MandrakeSoft should realize that their two main competitors have made strides in making their desktops more delightful and nicer to the eye and the usability (while RH and SuSE are not even trying to compete to the desktop as straightful as MandrakeSoft is), while Mandrake is still the same old, same old. I had to change a lot of things to my desktop to make it look something that can moderately please me. The fact that you can change a lot of KDE’s aspects with some downloads is not the answer. Mandrake should have worked on the looks and the UI. I wonder if they do employ a UI designer, and if they do, if their developers actually listen to him/her.

MandrakeSoft replied to me that their customer research showed that businesses favor their default grey-ish UI, while home users customize everything on their own. Personally, I find hard to believe that businesses would not favor a better UI, while the home users won't have to tweak everything after installation. […]

That’s not to say that Mandrake 9.0 is a bad distiribution, but I really value Eugenia Loli-Queru’s opinion. She did a great review of KDE 3 (from a UI standpoint), and I consider her UI intuition to be on par with Anand’s hardware intuition ;).

She also recently reviewed Red Hat 8.0, which she seemed to like a bit better:

As always, the default environment for Red Hat is Gnome. I haven’t seen any Gnome version numbers anywhere, but I think that RH comes with a modified Gnome 2.0.2. It looks pretty slick, and the fonts (default font is “Sans”) are looking sharp, even being fully antialised, but personally I found them a bit too big for my taste (and I am currently running on 1920x1200 resolution). There is this new feature coming with RH8 that you create a directory called ~/.fonts and you throw in all your TTF fonts in there, and they get recognized automatically from the system! This is pretty neat, only problem is that not many people know about this feature. […]

For me, the killer feature of Red Hat 8.0 is its antialiased fonts (thanks to Xft2). As far as I know, Red Hat 8.0 is the only major distribution to come with XFt2 out-of-the-box. And, that makes it quite tempting to me.

On the other hand, Mandrake is very solid overall, and it’s sure to include Xft2 in its next point-release. So, maybe I’ll wait a bit for that. Really, it all depends on how soon I get my new PC built (which is going rather slowly with my current income).

The Transporter

I went to see The Transporter yesterday, and I really enjoyed it. Ebert was right in that the first 1/3 of the film is probably the best third (almost all the clips from trailers and commercials are from that third). However, I have to side with Roeper in that the movie is still good overall.

The last third features a cookie-cutter semi truck action scene, and I thought at the time that I had seen something just like it in one of the Bond films. And, then there’s a wacky oil-slick sequence that may have been better left out.

So, maybe the movie wasn’t perfect, but I thought it was definitely worth seeing. And, Jason Statham shows that he can easily take on an action role. Besides, I’m always a sucker for a good driving movie.

Extra ticket for The Transporter

Denise mentioned on the DFWBlogs mailing list that she had two spare movie passes that she wouldn’t be able to use.

I suggested that she give them to a couple, if they wanted them. But, no one else spoke up, so she offered them to me. So, I’ll be going to see The Transporter at the Cinemark Legacy in Plano this evening (the 8:10 showing, perhaps).

Of course, I’m only using one of the movie passes; so, if you’d like to join me, just give me a call.

Palm and Sony Ericsson Bluetooth Cooperation

From Palm InfoCenter, Palm and Sony Ericsson have annouced their plans for Bluetooth interoperability:

The two companies plan to work closely together to enable out-of-the-box compatibility between Bluetooth-enabled Sony Ericsson mobile phones and Palm Powered handhelds. Users of future Bluetooth-enabled products will be able to more easily access information, entertainment, and communicate across a wide variety of devices — without cumbersome cords and wires.

For example, a user could select a phone number from a Palm Powered handheld device and have it automatically dialed on the SonyEricsson mobile phone — via the Bluetooth wireless technology. […]

Now that’s cool. I suppose I may just be buying a Sony Ericsson for my next mobile phone ;).