this post was submitted on 24 Mar 2025
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    Glad I could help.

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    [–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

    Back in the day, I learned how to network winxp machines together, without a router, and without being able access the internet to find instructions, all because everything I needed to know about any given setting was in the gui where I could manipulate that setting. I had lan parties featuring dozens of pcs, all manually configured. Was this the correct way to do things? Fuck no, but it worked. I was able to make it work because I could see everything I needed to as I was doing it.

    None of the above would have been possible if CLI was the only option.

    [–] [email protected] 2 points 6 days ago (1 children)

    I find it absolutely baffling how an equal amount of people voting on this comment seem to honestly believe that it would've been a realistic option for the majority of people (or even everyone) to get one of those Linux books and read hundreds of sites to fully understand everything necessary to manually setup a LAN party in a reasonable time. On 4 to 16 computers. Are all gamers expected to also be interested in IT enough to read such books? Are they supposed to magically know the existence of manpages? Of course not, 90% of private LANs in the early 2000's would've simply not happened without easily navigable GUIs. At least not with computers.

    The ignorance by so many in the Linux community regarding GUI is both baffling and infuriating.

    [–] [email protected] 1 points 6 days ago

    I imagine a perfect world in which full guis exist for every setting, and in the tooltips for those settings you can find an explanation of the terminal command to also do the thing. In this way, the gui is the manual for the command line.

    To quote Wonderbot: "I don't need tutorials, I need verbose tooltips."