[olug] Why it's okay to say "Linux" and not specifically "GNU/Linux"
cbird.omaha at gmail.com
cbird.omaha at gmail.com
Sun Jul 11 03:55:52 UTC 2010
stallman needs to let go.
On Jul 8, 2010 12:48am, Luke-Jr <luke at dashjr.org> wrote:
> On Wednesday, July 07, 2010 11:25:21 pm Anthony Base wrote:
> > To (mercifully) sum this writing up so that it isn't such a big read,
> > Linux (as a name) covers the scope of all distros using a technology,
> > GNU/Linux does not, but it's nice to do so. People really should know
> > that Linux is just a program, a kernel, and the operating system as a
> > general whole doesn't exactly have a name, so you should call it by the
> > distro name. The full text is below.
> Linux isn't always common either. But everyone has 'man'! Let's call the
> entire group of operating systems 'man'. (sarcastic meaning: a common
> program
> does not imply a good title for a collection)
> I tend to call each operating system by its own name (Debian, RHEL,
> Fedora,
> Ubuntu, etc), but if I am going to refer to the entire set (which also
> often
> includes operating systems such as FreeBSD and co), I'll probably use
> *nix or
> POSIX depending on the context. Or if I really do mean the subset that
> most
> people think when they say "Linux", I'll refet to "the GNU system"-- after
> all, it's the GNU system that is a common user interface to these
> operating
> systems, not Linux (which nobody *uses* directly at all and can be
> replaced on
> a whim if the hardware supports the replacement). In general, if I use the
> word Linux, I am speaking specifically of the kernel.
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