I can see, what you pointed out. This is, what happened within the GMX client and I did not take care about. Sorry for that! But anyway, when we start to discuss about quoting like that or not, the way we communicate has reached a quality that not at all helps to solve the problem.
Two things where I wonder, how to improve the situation out of the persepctive (=role) of a user:
1. Debugging as described by your link is far too complicated to make that happen by a user.
2. How an where would I start? When would I start debugging? Which application to debug first. This is not cynism, I do think this to be a real problem for users.
/Off-Topic
Even though we are "only" users of KDE/Linux we do a real hard job. We stay on a platform (in case of KDE 4.x) that is shipped with Ubuntu but is really far away from being stable. If e.g. I try to write bug reports I even run into problems with that because I c a n n o t describe the bug itself appearing in a very complex system environment that is far to complecated. See 1. So by the time you wonder what you could do and find out: nothing!
/
Sven,
I can see, what you pointed out. This is, what happened within the GMX client and I did not take care about. Sorry for that! But anyway, when we start to discuss about quoting like that or not, the way we communicate has reached a quality that not at all helps to solve the problem.
Two things where I wonder, how to improve the situation out of the persepctive (=role) of a user:
1. Debugging as described by your link is far too complicated to make that happen by a user.
2. How an where would I start? When would I start debugging? Which application to debug first. This is not cynism, I do think this to be a real problem for users.
/Off-Topic
Even though we are "only" users of KDE/Linux we do a real hard job. We stay on a platform (in case of KDE 4.x) that is shipped with Ubuntu but is really far away from being stable. If e.g. I try to write bug reports I even run into problems with that because I c a n n o t describe the bug itself appearing in a very complex system environment that is far to complecated. See 1. So by the time you wonder what you could do and find out: nothing!
/
Regards, Martin