Nevertheless, I think I see your point. You would like to have something like a "SUSE Linux cookbook" added to the documentation, correct?
-- Regards Frank
Actually what I want is difficult to achieve. I want: 1) documentation available offline corresponding to the product. (eg SUSE Linux 10.2 - and generic Linux - and Generic UNIX - all what is relevant) 2) most parts of it installed by default. 3) documentation easy to find (currently much documentation is hard to find - and often requires internet connection) 4) documentation devision - for different skill levels of users - that is for total noobs to computers tutorials, for Windows power-users, for newbie admins, for newbie programmers and for advanced programmers. *Of course, the programmer's docs doesn't need to be installed by default. In addition to skill levels ducumentation should be searchable (like google) should be devided by topics - and - standards. - like ext3 specification - or POSIX specs or RPM specs - whatever. 5) I think it is a good idea to include third party docs to SUSE Linux - if they are useful for SUSE users of course. Like "Maximum RPM" open-sourced book by RedHat or TLDP docs. SUSE does this already. (few books included, but hard to find - next to impossible unless you know the RPM's name) 6) documentation must be fast. Here SUSE Linux lacks badly - the KDE docs indexing takes a lot of time. (minutes or hours) a possible solution is to provide preindexed database for most docs. 7) multilingual docs for basic topis only - as advanced users supposed to know English. ================================ I see the above as ideal that is hard to reach. But I would try.