NetBSD-Users archive
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][Old Index]
Re: Re (2): NetBSD documentation-hackathon from August 10th to August 14th
On Dec 12, 3:32am, Scrap Happy wrote:
} On 7/22/2011 2:24 AM, Jean-Yves Migeon wrote:
} > On Thu, 21 Jul 2011 18:32:15 -0700, Scrap Happy wrote:
} >>>> One of the great strengths of *BSDs over other OSs is its good
} >>>> documentation
} >>>> and its clear design.
} >>>
} >>> Also there is the hardware universality claim, "Of course it runs
} >>> on NetBSD". Not many contemporary systems run on a Sparc 2.
} >>
} >> I think you'll find that Linux variants run on far more
} >> contemporary *iron*. I suspect this is more important to
} >> the vast majority of users than support for 4m/4c machines,
} >> etc.
} >
} > Indeed; but the key difference here is "variants." Linux (wherever you
} > got it from, e.g. tarballs, git:, ...), doesn't come with a tool chain
} > for cross compilation, image building, documentation (for porting) or
}
} Of course! "Linux" is little more than "/netbsd" (or whatever
} the Linux folks call their kernel).
/vmlinuz typically.
} > even regression tests. People tend to forget that their favorite distros
} > isn't just "Linux" but a bunch of other stuff made around, and that it
} > does not really match other operating systems also labelled as being Linux.
}
} Yes. When I try to have a discussion with a client/customer and
} "Linux" comes up (as in, "Why should we use NetBSD? Why can't we
} just use Linux?"), I rarely encounter anyone who understands how
} *little* "Linux" actually is -- yet how much it will influence the
} (e.g., licensing of their) product!
}
} Unfortunately, there is no simple, intuitive parallel to draw to
} the PC world that just rolls off your tongue. Instead, you have
} to try to draw on parallels that migrate into the application
} domain (e.g., "OK, Bob, everyone in your organization runs Windows,
} right? But, do they all use MSWord for their document preparation
} tool? Or, do some folks use WordPerfect, FrameMaker, etc.?").
} Most people are savvy enough to realize that these *are* applications
} so the analogy fails to take hold in their mind. There's nothing
} *big* enough (in that world) to put the issue into proper perspective.
I typically use an automobile analogy. I consider the kernel to
be the engine of an operating system. Linux by itself is useless. It
would be just like having a car engine sitting in the middle of your
garage floor (it doesn't even have a starter). The distributions are
the vehicles (every variety from mopeds to Mac trucks; econobox to
luxoboat; manual transmission, automatic transmission; left-hand drive,
right-hand drive; etc., but they all have the same engine).
}-- End of excerpt from Scrap Happy
Home |
Main Index |
Thread Index |
Old Index