On 11/06/2010 01:53 AM, Ralf Corsepius wrote:
On 11/05/2010 09:46 PM, Michael Schwendt wrote:
On Fri, 05 Nov 2010 17:56:51 +0100, Ralf wrote:
ABRT It doesn't tell the user that core dumps without reproducer are worthless in most cases but blindly sends out reports
Parts of the Fedora user base "abuse" ABRT in that they refuse to fill in the empty fields. Blame the reporters not the tool.
A matter of point of view: To me this is an ABRT GUI issue. It currently doesn't suck as much as it did before, nevertheless its usability still leaves much to be desired.
Agreed
It has been improving but is far from novice usage perfection but whether that is good or bad all boils down to the so called "Target user base"<sigh>.
As yourself: What would you do if you were a "simple computer user" and are facing this "flash bulb icon" asking you to become "root" and to get a bugzilla account?
You'd call your sys-admin, who'll deinstall or deactivate ABRT pretty soon, when you call him for the "Nth time". As a user you'd also think "what kind of crap is this Fedora/Linux - the WinXP I have at home is better".
The same problem here applies to all regardless of OS or Application.
If the entry level is to high or OS or Application give novice end user to much "in you face time" they replace it or find a way to silence the nuance one way or another.
It's too easy for such people to open tickets via ABRT and then ignore a maintainer's NEEDINFO request.
Correct - But the same applies to maintainers.
My experience is, most of them ignore ABRT reports, probably because the ABRT reports are not helpful to them and/or don't contain sufficient infos.
Same applies to human directly submitted report....
It's disheartening in some cases, but it's a people-problem not a tool-problem.
I disagree - IMO; ABRT is not end-user ready. It presumes end-users to be familiar with redhat's infrastructure, which is a developer infrastructure and them to be interested to get involved into Fedora development. This simply does not apply.
Again it all boils down to the so called "Target user base"....
JBG