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GNU is Not Unix

20th Anniversary of RMS's Original GNU Post 526

An anonymous reader writes "Sep 27, 2003 is the 20th anniversary of Stallman's original Usenet post describing his vision of GNU. Good time for reflecting over GNU's successes and failures, about how it has changed our world."
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20th Anniversary of RMS's Original GNU Post

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  • Thanks (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:03AM (#7070091)
    Thank you RMS
    • Re:Thanks (Score:3, Interesting)

      by bigjocker ( 113512 ) *
      Thank you RMS

      Really, I can't thank hime enough.

      Thanks for providing us with the tools that make our jobs easier, and our lives freer. I use GNNU/Linux in a day to day basis, it feeds me and my family, it gives us a roof, it has helped me pay for theschool of my sons and the car we just bought.

      Thanks GNU amd Linux ... thanks RMS and Linus for giving us a choice, and thanks to all of them who have helped these dreams endure.
      • Re:Thanks (Score:5, Insightful)

        by hendridm ( 302246 ) * on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:35AM (#7070234) Homepage

        > I use GNNU/Linux in a day to day basis, it feeds me and my family, it gives us a roof, it has helped me pay for theschool of my sons and the car we just bought.

        I love GNU/Linux as much as the next guy and it also provides me with income, but are you suggesting you couldn't have had these things without GNU/Linux? Or did I miss some hefty sarcasm? I suppose the Insightful mod could be taken either way, but I would have modded it Funny.

        It's a cold Wisconsin winter for those who live in a house made from likes of gcc and gawk!

        All joking aside, I too am greatful for open source and free software.

        • Re:Thanks (Score:4, Interesting)

          by bigjocker ( 113512 ) * on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:40AM (#7070261) Homepage
          I'm saying I'm making a living out of the GNU project, using and creating solutions based on the original philosophy. And I'm grateful.

          Could I possibly make a living without it? maybe, but the fact is, I make a living and my family makes a living. I must thank RMS for starting it all.
    • I wonder if his .arpa addres still works?
    • Re:Thanks (Score:2, Interesting)


      "I consider that the golden rule requires that if I like a program I must share it with other people who like it. I cannot in good conscience sign a nondisclosure agreement or a software license agreement."

      Thankyou RMS
    • Re:Thanks (Score:3, Insightful)

      by ComaVN ( 325750 )
      20 years?

      So, where's GNU/Hurd?
    • Re:Thanks (Score:3, Funny)

      by Thomachen ( 471490 )
      Let's propose RMS for the Nobel prize for peace!
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:03AM (#7070100)
    "Imagine in 20 years when this makes the front page of Slashdot on a Saturday morning at 1am. I bet no one will see it."
  • Usenet (Score:2, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward
    What is Usenet? What are newsgroups? Your opinions and thoughts please.
  • Dream come true. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by FocaJonathan ( 163913 ) * on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:07AM (#7070125)
    It is a lesson to think big. We take GNU and Linux for granted today. 20 years ago the did not exist.

    Think big and see what you can do with your life!
  • Arpa? (Score:5, Funny)

    by coene ( 554338 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:08AM (#7070127)
    For more information, contact me.
    Arpanet mail:
    RMS@MIT-MC.ARPA


    What's an "ARPA", and why wont Network Solutions let me register one!?!?!
  • by Gortbusters.org ( 637314 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:08AM (#7070131) Homepage Journal
    has been teaching us to love again. *sniff*
    • by Malcontent ( 40834 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:59AM (#7070337)
      I know you meant to be funny but...

      OSS is indeed a gift to the world in every sense of the word.

      Also have you ever read the credit list from a large project? It reads like a world phone book. People from all over the world, all religions, all races, all idiologies working together to make something. It would be remarkable in and of itself but the fact that they are doing it for free makes it nothing short of miraculous.

      If that is not love then what is?
  • GNU is God and RMS is His Prophet.

    GNU is God and RMS is His Prophet.

    GNU is God and RMS is His Prophet.

    There is no God but GNU.
  • weirdo (Score:5, Insightful)

    by h2odragon ( 6908 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:09AM (#7070133) Homepage
    RMS is such a freak. Not one person in a million has the vision to have thought up the GPL, not one in a billion has the integrity or balls to keep fighting for the crazy dream for so long, against such opposition.

    All HAIL RMS! Agree with him or not, his efforts have made your life better.

    • Re:weirdo (Score:5, Funny)

      by jon787 ( 512497 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:20AM (#7070172) Homepage Journal
      Not one person in a million has the vision to have thought up the GPL
      So there are 1,000 of him in China? We're screwed!
      • Re:weirdo (Score:5, Funny)

        by coene ( 554338 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:22AM (#7070184)
        No no no, every technically competant person in China has one job: keep their mail server operating as an open relay.
        • Re:weirdo (Score:3, Funny)

          by 2Bits ( 167227 )
          Yes, that's right.

          Everyone of us in China competent enough is trying to keep the mail servers as an open relay, so that you all western evil capitalists can scam the blood out of those poor Nigerian people to pay to enlarge your penis and breast, and still have enough money to get tons of viagra, in order to get into permanent decadence.

          That way, we Chinese will rise up, set up a Moon base and throw rocks at you decadent capitalists! Yup, that's right!

          End of conspiracy theory.
          • Re:weirdo (Score:3, Funny)

            by humming ( 24596 )
            That way, we Chinese will rise up, set up a Moon base and throw rocks at you decadent capitalists!

            If you promise to do webcasts from your gymnasiums, you've got a deal.

    • Re:weirdo (Score:5, Insightful)

      by kfg ( 145172 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @02:07AM (#7070362)
      Just about anything of note that has ever been done has been done by a freak.

      A freak is that which is unusual. The nail that sticks up and won't be whacked back down.

      If one only does that which is usual only the usual results will come of it.

      Take a good look around you right now. Electric lighting, indoor plumbing, central heating, television, your computer, the internet. Outside cars, planes and even the odd space ship or two.

      All made by freaks, all of whom were resisted, whacked and even reviled by some for trying to give us what they did.

      Whither thou goest Goddard and Tesla?

      Would that freaks were a bit more usual and that the usual would take a bit less care about trying to whack them down.

      KFG
      • Re:weirdo (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Fnkmaster ( 89084 )
        This is some sort of strange Slashdot nerd fantasy. Sure, all the people who brought us those world-changing innovations were odd, people who thought outside the box defined for them by society, who followed a dream even in the face of those who said it couldn't be done.

        But that doesn't mean they were social rejects lacking the ability to communicate concepts to their fellow man without bristling every person they met. It doesn't mean they espoused ideologies with technology and tried to use their innov

        • by dh003i ( 203189 )
          But that doesn't mean they were social rejects lacking the ability to communicate concepts to their fellow man without bristling every person they met. It doesn't mean they espoused ideologies with technology and tried to use their innovations as a way to force normative concepts and judgements down people's throats as payment for their work. They didn't loudly shout people down who didn't adhere to their preferred terminology for certain concepts and tried to engage them in discussion

          RMS is neither a soc
  • by aardvarkjoe ( 156801 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:10AM (#7070134)
    Although he talks about his ideology, the focus of his post is on the software. When I read about anything he's said in the last few years, it's always ideology, with a little bit about the software thrown in. Might the GNU project be better served if their leaders would stop worrying about whether it should be called GNU/Linux and get back to the technical side of things?
    • by bigjocker ( 113512 ) * on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:16AM (#7070154) Homepage
      GNU is not about software. GNU is about choice.

      The GNU project is 100% political, it's not about creating a clone of the 'ls' command, is about setting the foundations to a Free Software world.

      Hail RMS, for he has done what few of us could have, he has dedicated his life to provide us qith a choice, be it a choice from IBM, UNIX or Microsoft. it's a choice for freedom, and a lot of us, who have made the choice, live and subsist now thanks to it.
    • Might the GNU project be better served if their leaders would stop worrying about whether it should be called GNU/Linux and get back to the technical side of things?

      As far as I have understood, the development of technical GNU components critical to GNU/Linux, such as GNU libc and the GNU C Compiler, is doing fine. The objective of the GNU project has been and still is making a technically superior GNU operating system that is free for everyone. The fact that many people know GNU only from their ideol

    • "Might the GNU project be better served if their leaders would stop worrying about whether it should be called GNU/Linux and get back to the technical side of things?"

      Absolutely not. Without ideology GNU is no different then MS or SCO. Besides all things are political today. Do you listen to music? do you go to the movies? Do you use software? Guess what you are engaging in political behavior.
      • by gaijin99 ( 143693 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @02:19AM (#7070398) Journal
        Absolutely not. Without ideology GNU is no different then MS or SCO. Besides all things are political today.

        Actually, MS and SCO have ideology. Its not so readily apparent because its the dominant ideology. "Business is good, propriatary code is good. Sale for profit is the only sensable way to live." Its odd to see it spelled out because it is usually simply part of the background...

        RMS' ideology stands out because its different. So different that people can't really place it easily. Some people who quite obviously haven't given the matter any thought at all call it "communist" because it is definately not in line with taditioal capitalist ideology. But there are more options than just communist and capitalist. The idea of Free Software is patently not communist. It is different though. And, as you say, it needs constant statement simply because without constant restatement it would fade away due to the background ideology.

  • by RichardtheSmith ( 157470 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:14AM (#7070151)

    For more information, contact me.
    Arpanet mail:
    RMS@MIT-MC.ARPA

    Usenet:
    ...!mit-eddie!RMS@OZ
    ...!mit-vax!RMS@OZ


    Raise your hand if you ever had a "bang-path" email address. For that matter, raise your hand if you know what a bang-path address is.

    • by KillerHamster ( 645942 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:20AM (#7070168) Homepage
      Definition here [ic.ac.uk].

    • Remember bang paths!? I have flip'n nightmares about them to this very day--or rather, the ten-plus years of dealing with every possible way of interpreting RFC-822 (IIRC) et al, when trying to route mail from a fido-net homed Bouroughs (SP?), with one weird character set to uucp'd boxes that spoke petscii (SP?) or some such and mysterious 300 baud black holes that wanted baudot. There was a sign on the wall that said "the wonderful thing about standards is there are so many to choose from" until someone
    • For that matter, raise your hand if you know what a bang-path address is.

      An address that never worked when I tried sending mail to it. :-| I had better luck sending mail to Fidonet nodes than to anybody with a bang-path address. (This would've been from 1989 onward...by that time, most people already had what we'd now consider normal email addresses.)

  • by deadgoon42 ( 309575 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:18AM (#7070159) Journal
    I think that the GNU project has brought software freedom to the masses and we have only seen the tip of the iceberg so far. For computers to truly be a great asset to society, the software must be free and unhindered by any one entity or small group of entities. Indeed, the software must be owned by no one and should be used freely by society so that information can be exchanged without the influence of some corporate monopoly or oppressive government. GNU isn't just about free software, it is about the free exchange of ideas.
  • From the post:
    To begin with, GNU will be a kernel plus all the utilities needed to write and run C programs: editor, shell, C compiler, linker, assembler, and a few other things. After this we will add a text formatter, a YACC, an Empire game, a spreadsheet, and hundreds of other things.

    Dreaming of world domination was obviously among the top priorities already at that point... ;)

    • My significant other's father was in charge of the Cray at General Electric's Nuclear Research Laboratory.

      So far as she was ever able to determine ( since he really couldn't talk about his work very much ) his main duty seemed to be porting Zork to it.

      So here we have Stallman ( who some would consider a Barbarian) dreaming of Empire, and the guys in charge of building the actual tools and infrastructure for World Domination dreaming of just being a Barbarian and going out for a bit of the hack and slash.
  • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:19AM (#7070164) Homepage
    ...try focusing on it being the "GNU GPL" instead of "GNU/Linux" and how GNU created the system of licencing that brought us Linux, which as more of a consequence also involved creating the first GPL'd programs. I think that would be more effective instead of focusing so much on the specific GNU utilities in a distribution.

    People know their distribution (Red Hat), and the kernel (Linux). The "middleware" GNU will never be famous. But the GPL is, though the people that talk about it is a lot higher than those that have read it. That is not ment to undermine what they have achieved, it's just that sometimes I feel they're barking up the wrong tree...

    Kjella
    • I have to agree with the parent, the focus should be on the GPL. A lot of programs are released under the GPL aside from Linux.

      GPL is what makes it all happen, without it Linux is just another unremarkable operating system.
    • by mabhatter654 ( 561290 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @02:12AM (#7070378)
      I suspect his fanatisism is because he was personally affected by the "locking away" of code by the Universities and Corporations. Just reading the "ad" for help if you will, I'd bet many of the projects he mentioned in the post were for public research that ended up bottled up where nobody could use them. For a pure researcher [which he was at the time] that's a very, very harsh thing. One goes into research for the persuit of knowlage, not the bucks... Note there is no mention of the GPL here. I'd be interesting to see what incidents happened between implementing the utilities and discovering the need for the GPL. I suspect there's a path of BSD style code swipes by corporations along the way. At the time he was writing this, Bill Gates and Paul Allen were still out dumpster diving for University code...Realize that only 5 years later, almost all code would be locked up tight under copyright and viceously protected.

      It's also interesting to note that he saw the need for Free software at the very early stages of the game. It's also interesting to note that the scenerio he was trying to avoid has almost word-for-word come true. MegaMedia corps, Microsoft Monopoly, DMCA. None of that would have been considered reasonable back then...most people thought him crazy. Unfortunately, many still do. But the change has been slow, like a frog set to boil, and many people still don't get it because it hasn't bit them....Yet! [see RIAA!]

      Where would he be now if he charged for EMACS all those years ago?...Think about it!

    • I never really gave much thought to his GNU/Linux argument until I read this part of the GNU Manifesto. I'm not sure when it was written, but it is included in my printed copy of the Emacs manual [gnu.org], which is dated June 1991 -- mere months before Linus' famous Usenet post [google.com]. Emphasis mine.

      GNU, which stands for Gnu's Not Unix, is the name for the complete Unix-compatible software system which I am writing so that I can give it away free to everyone who can use it. Several other volunteers are helping me. C

  • Until The Hurd finally reaches beta
  • by ccevans ( 669222 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:20AM (#7070173)

    It is interesting to look at how the ideas in the post agree and disagree with the state of GNU today.

    For example, Stallman states that a kernel is a top priority, yet we still don't have a really stable, working kernel out of GNU (I don't think Mach or Hurd count).

    Also interesting - filename completion is mentioned as a possibility. Now it is difficult for many people, including myself, to live without it. Yet Stallman implies that a Lisp-based window system is more important. What became of this idea?

    By far, my favorite quote from this is:

    For most projects, such part-time distributed work would be very hard to coordinate; the independently-written parts would not work together.

    Is this not what GNU started? Many projects with part-time distributed workers? This is a quote from RMS, stating that the development model most open source projects now use would be very difficult.

    • For example, Stallman states that a kernel is a top priority, yet we still don't have a really stable, working kernel out of GNU (I don't think Mach or Hurd count).

      He said that twenty years ago, but when another suitable kernel was released under the GPL, the impetus for a GNU kernel diminished. (RMS still wanted one, but it's harder to get people to work on it instead of on Linux when Linux is much more mature.)

      For most projects, such part-time distributed work would be very hard to coordinate; the inde

  • One computer manufacturer has already offered to provide a machine. But we could use more. One consequence you can expect if you donate machines is that GNU will run on them at an early date. The machine had better be able to operate in a residential area, and not require sophisticated cooling or power.

    Can someone give examples of donated computers that couldn't run in a residential area in 1983? Is he talking like building-sized supercomputers? Something like the WOPR?
    • by leighklotz ( 192300 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:39AM (#7070255) Homepage
      He was talking about not wanting a Vax 780 or probably even a 750, which was what ARPA had declared to be the standard ARPA grant platform.

      For years, the GNU project ran on a Vax 750 called "prep.ai.mit.edu", but it was at MIT on the 7th floor of Tech Square, not in RMS's house (which burned down, by the way). Quite a few times I crashed prep by using the vt100 on top of it and typing ^P in Unix EMACS (as opposed to ITS EMACS on the PDP-10). ^P takes you to the machine boot ROM on a Vax -- equivalent to taking you to the BIOS immediately on an Intel PC.

      It was a while before I figured out how to recover and continue running Unix. So I probably lost the GNU project a few files due to fsck lossage...
    • by Anonymous Coward

      In 1983, I remember the PDP-11 was on the way out and the VAX computer was on the way in. I was at Berkeley then; BSD was still nastily entangled with AT&T code.

      I worked at Lawrence Berkeley Labs part time during the school year and full time during summers. We ran our entire building off of a single VAX 11/780. It was about four feet high, three feet deep, and maybe 15 feet long, and it had the processing power of One MIP, and we were lucky to have it. The external disk drives were about the size of a

  • Whoa (Score:2, Funny)

    Two details stuck out to me from that posting:

    1) there was actual email "arpanet mail" back in '83

    2) they were calling it "snail" mail back in '83 (while I was still in pre-school)

    Jeez, I feel really behind the curve.
  • Who was "we"? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Klync ( 152475 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:31AM (#7070220)
    What an inspiration! I have a question, though, and maybe RMS or someone else on this site would be able to answer this. No, it's not about how the first thing he mentions is a kernel and the last thing to actually be done (if you can even say that) is the kernel.

    It's about RMS switching between "I" and "we". What's up with that? Obviously this post is a shout-out to anyone interested in helping. But on that date, when RMS first shouted-out this revolutionary idea [chokes back tears, pauses to regain composure], who else was already involved? Who was this "we" he speaks of? Or was it a theoretical "we"? The Royal "we"?

    While I'm writing, can I just say once more to Richard, Linus, Rusty, Alan, and all the other* millions who have contributed their code in the spirit of the GNU project: A MILLION THANK YOU'S!! You have already changed the world!

    *If you're a big-kahuna-GNU/developer, please don't be offended that I left your name out. I love you too.
  • Thank you, RMS.

    Many people find you very eccentric at times, myself included. But at the end of the day, you're right. And your vision has turned into freedom, which these days is quite a treasure.

  • Hey RMS, (Score:5, Funny)

    by dghcasp ( 459766 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @01:56AM (#7070329)
    So where's that Empire game you promised?
  • by Trolling4Dollars ( 627073 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @02:08AM (#7070364) Journal
    A lot of the time, people on Slashdot complain about the passion that someone like RMS exhibits. Some even go so far as to call the passion a grudge. If that is what you wish to think of people like this, then let's take a trip through a few people who did great things soley because of a "grudge":

    1. The Americans who fought the revolutionary war and establish the United States of America
    Grudge: They didn't like being bullied by the monarchy

    2. Martin Luther King and the Civil rights movement.
    Grudge: Many... Rosa Parks, the integration of public schools, etc...

    3. Steve Jobs and his vision of a computer without IBM and corporate suits.
    Grudge: He hated IBM.

    4. Thomas Edison and his many inventions
    Grudge: Life

    5. SUBJECT LINE TROLL
    Grudge: Slashdot posters

    6. Linus Torvalds and the Linux kernel
    Grudge: The high cost of Unix

    GNU will live on forever as classical music does. It may not be popular, but you can't argue that it is powerful, classic and has great beauty. Bravo RMS! ;)
    • And some bad (Score:2, Insightful)

      If that is what you wish to think of people like this, then let's take a trip through a few people who did great things soley because of a "grudge":

      umm, didn't these guys have grudge too?

      7. saddam hussein - invaded kuwait in 1991.
      grudge: who knows. because he could.

      8. george w. bush - invaded iraq 2003.
      grudge: who knows. because he could.

      etc.

  • ...HURD? 20 years in userland. The kernel awaits!

    Congrats! But I am still going to use vi!

  • by HopeOS ( 74340 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @02:16AM (#7070392)
    Twenty years ago I was 11. By then I already had 5 years of coding experience, mostly assembly, and a bit of Basic. Everything I knew about code came from reading books, reading other people's Basic code, and disassembling binaries. At no point was I actually aware that there were people out there fighting to make possible what I largely took for granted... the complete availabilty of source code as well as the unrestricted ability to read, modify, and distribute it.

    As an adult, I nearly gave up coding altogether. I felt like a farmer without my own land. I owned no share of the programming tools that I used daily. All the API's were immutable, opaque, and hostile (VFW comes to mind).

    Then I found Linux, and from there, the FSF and GNU. Beyond a doubt, without the work of Stallman and everyone fighting for Open Source, I'd be doing anything but writing code today. And aside from my family, few things are more integral to who I am than writing software. I was born to code.

    So thank you Richard! It took me awhile to find everyone, but now that I'm here, I'm glad you started when you did. That said, if we had to start from scratch today, I would be part of it.

    -Hope
  • by steveha ( 103154 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @02:25AM (#7070414) Homepage
    Looking back, I'd say RMS's two greatest contributions to the world are the GNU Public License and the GCC compiler.

    The GPL attracted a whole bunch of people who are willing to contribute code, but not if someone could rip the code off, change a few things, and sell it in a broken state. This is one of the reasons for the great vitality of Linux and of GNU software. Also, the GPL makes companies like IBM willing to donate patents (such as the Read-Copy-Update patent) for use in free software; thanks to the GPL they know they can still sell a patent license if anyone wants to use the patent for a proprietary purpose.

    GCC, on the other hand, made it possible for people to write free software without paying thousands of dollars for a compiler. It also served as a common language across all the *NIX platforms; if you were writing a utility, you could write to GCC instead of needing to work around the quirks of the various C compilers.

    Linus Torvalds got the ball rolling on the Linux kernel, but he used GCC and the GPL to do it.

    Thank you, RMS.

    steveha
  • RMS mentions in the "Who Am I?" section that he's already written one crashproof filesystem and two windowing systems for Lisp machines.

    Anyone have any documentation on this? I'd like to see a crashproof filesystem from 20 years ago, and I've always been fascinated by Lisp machines...
  • RMS Interview in Wired [wired.com]

    Here is a link [techtv.com] to RMS when he appeared on The ScreenSavers

  • To begin with, GNU will be a kernel plus all the utilities needed to
    write and run C programs: editor, shell, C compiler, linker,
    assembler, and a few other things. After this we will add a text
    formatter, a YACC, an Empire game, a spreadsheet, and hundreds of
    other things. We hope to supply, eventually, everything useful that
    normally comes with a Unix system, and anything else useful, including
    on-line and hardcopy documentation.


    And there it is! The reason for all of our Opensource Insanity over the last 2
  • by steveha ( 103154 ) on Saturday September 27, 2003 @03:23AM (#7070591) Homepage
    Why has it been 20 years, and HURD isn't ready for production use yet?

    The design of HURD, on paper, is arguably better than a monolithic kernel such as Linux. But getting HURD working has proven difficult. Linux, on the other hand, started out as a toy that didn't do very much... but it was a toy that worked.

    Thus Linux and not HURD benefitted from Mozilla's Law, which is: Projects that work get more attention than projects that don't work. It's a positive feedback loop: the more it works, the more people will get interested in it, and the more people are likely to contribute.

    If I am correct about this guess, HURD should advance more quickly now, because it does now work.

    It's possible that Linux has drawn developers away from HURD, simply because it was ready for production use long before HURD: for example, HURD isn't ready for IBM's customers to use it, so IBM isn't contributing developers to HURD, and they've already decided to support Linux anyway. I think to some extent this is true, but it can't be the whole story. There are multiple versions of BSD out there, and they seem to have active developer communities.

    So, what's the situation with HURD? It's supposed to be really easy to develop it (e.g. as I understand it, almost everything happens in user space, so you can single-step even low-level stuff in the debugger). Did that turn out to be true, or not? If not, is it a temporary problem, or did HURD just not work out as hoped? Also, how easy is it to join the HURD development? How easy is it to get patches accepted? What is the HURD community like?

    P.S. You will know HURD has "arrived" when SCO starts selling licenses to it... ;-)

    steveha
  • Anyone digging Douglas Adams just has to wonder how this filesize came about. Divine intervention? Or just an auspicious sign :)

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