On Sun, Oct 07, 2007 at 08:47:52PM +0200, Rene Herman wrote:
But well, there actually have been worse arguments given that VGA console is getting less and less important. I recently did a perusal of alternative distributions and didn't find a single one that didn't default to having a splash screen hide the kernel during boot (and if I'm not mistaken, only one of them provided me with the option during installation to not boot into X immediately afterwards).
I don't recall having seen any splash screen on Slackware.
There are two distinct populations :
- those who are afraid of boot messages and prefer "splash" screens.
Those people are most common users, grown in non-IT environments. They
are happy to see a big logo on their BIOS to hide important boot errors,
and they are the ones who would never have imagined that pressing Escape
during the boot of windows 3.1/95 provided them with the full text
messages. Basically, they want to ensure they will never have to worry
about things they don't understand.
- those who are troubleshooting their system in the early stages (kernel,
filesystems, network, services, ...). These ones *need* boot messages.
And there, depending on the hardware, sometimes the FB is better because
it shows larger lines, sometimes it's worse because the scrollback is
limited by too low memory.
I personally fit in the second category. And I'm sure most people on this
list do.
I would be miserably sad if I couldn't get my boot messages anymore. It
already irritates me a lot to loose the ones displayed before switching
to frame-buffer when a hang happens just afterwards...