- cross-posted to:
- opensource@lemmy.ml
- linux@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- opensource@lemmy.ml
- linux@lemmy.ml
Quite a few posts about selecting a distro to use. Maybe it’s time to make that link a little more prominent?
Quite a few posts about selecting a distro to use. Maybe it’s time to make that link a little more prominent?
Thank you for your response. But our conversation seems so far somewhat inefficient. And I fear it might be due to reasons related to the XY problem. Therefore, before I reply to the points made in the above comment, I would like to ask you if you could state the following:
Thank you in advance!
There have been complaints in posts about people asking for advice on which disto to use, that there are too many such posts.
Provide users the tools to possibly answer the question themselves before creating a post.
DistroChooser is a self-help tool for that purpose.
CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
XY problem confirmed. Thank you OP!
This is a legit concern.Thank you for trying to tackle this!
Noble. And in its essence, it makes a lot of sense.
As a self-help tool it’s very bad. Sorry*. I actually hoped that you would mention how it might be used as a basic requirement for anyone that asks which distro to use. The enforcement could be done with a bot which simply scans if any link to distrochooser is present in a post that remotely resembles one that asks for advice on which distro to use. I would actually even argue against this, but I think we might be able to reach an agreement on which questions are actually worth keeping around for further use…
Honestly, this is better than to limit newbies to strictly stick to Distrochooser for asking which distro they should use 🤣.
I haven’t got any experience with building a bot, but I suppose it works by scanning for words in posts. In that case, simply ‘flagging’ everything that contains the words “which” or “what” in combination with “distro(s)” or “distribution(s)” and ask them to refer their questions to a dedicated Lemmy community in which they can ask would already solve a lot.
You don’t have to find an alternative website. Nor write one yourself. As it stands, as far as I’m aware, there’s simply nothing that satisfies the basic needs for this.
So what do I propose? Relegating these questions to their own dedicated Lemmy community is probably a great and easy solution. If something like a test/algorithm/flowchart/quiz/whatever has to be created, then that one might need substantial effort to get off the ground. However, perhaps comments like these might be helpful as a blueprint.