Posted on 08/29/2011 9:16:27 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
Linux-powered software is growing quickly in emerging industries, as depicted in this CNN infographic from MBAOnline.com
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STORY HIGHLIGHTS
(Excerpt) Read more at cnn.com ...
I remember seeing a post from a guy years ago where he was building his own kernel. We exchanged emails and chatted several times. Seems his idea turned out pretty good. He called the thing LEEEEE-NUX...
Actually, he tried to call it Freax, but it didn’t take.
I have Linux as a back-up because Vista was so shady. It does a fine job, but there are just some things that Windows does better.
Mark
That was before I ran across him. I wish I would have kept some of the conversations I had with him. We were using SCO at the time, building systems with EISA boards and as many as four caching (crashing?-LOL) controllers with as many drives as we could cram in a machine. All SCSI stuff. The darn things got so hot that we would cut holes in the side panel of a tower cabinet (they were hard to find) and then push cold air from small spot coolers using flexible ducting.
We had a lot of fun doing stuff we were told you can't do "with those little machines".....
It serves a good and necessary purpose, and does so very well. I don't consider myself an "advocate", since I have many feet and one in each of many OS camps. But the Linux feature set is quite necessary to how I have operated for well over a decade.
Before that it was BSD or Sys5 Unix (plus MSDOS, DEC RT and RSX and VMS, early Windows, MacOS). And before that, custom proprietary OSes, or hand-assembled code on the small machines of the mid-70's. And before that, FORTRAN on Big Iron like Burroughs 5500... but I digress....
Linux is a wonderful thing. Happy Birthday!!
This is kind of like Seinfeld, an article about nothing.
But its FREE SOFTWARE FO RTHE MASSES~!!!
Why arent people running to it?
Maybe gramma needs green hat Ubuntu to grep her rkill -9 on the print service process for her web server she keeps in the sweing room.
yeah... that’s good UI
Any proper history of computing must mention the PDP-11 ... there.
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I’ve used Linux since the late 90’s, either as a secondary to NetBSD/Windows/MacOS/OSX, or (for about 3 years) as my primary operating system with the others as secondaries.
It serves a good and necessary purpose, and does so very well. I don’t consider myself an “advocate”, since I have many feet and one in each of many OS camps. But the Linux feature set is quite necessary to how I have operated for well over a decade.
Before that it was BSD or Sys5 Unix (plus MSDOS, DEC RT and RSX and VMS, early Windows, MacOS). And before that, custom proprietary OSes, or hand-assembled code on the small machines of the mid-70’s. And before that, FORTRAN on Big Iron like Burroughs 5500... but I digress....
Linux is a wonderful thing. Happy Birthday!!
Fortran on a Burroughs B5000 - hmm - me thinks someone is doing recursion in a language not designed for it. Seriously - none of the Burroughs architectures were very good at Fortran. Now if you want to run Cobol - you had some choices.
I do believe that DEC RT & RSX brings in PDP-11’s into the fold.
“Maybe gramma needs green hat Ubuntu to grep her rkill -9 on the print service process for her web server she keeps in the sweing room.”
I know zilch about Unix syntax, but that has not stopped me from trying out half a dozen Linux variants to see what it is all about. I never had to compile code, either, and still don’t know how. I have been using Linux at home and work for over two years and have never grep’d or rkill’d anything.
I'll digress a bit more. The B5500 was the first machine used in our curriculum. Got to try a hand in ALGOL, MIX, FORTRAN, COBOL, LISP, SIMULA, GPSS, and BPL. Those were the days. :)
I tinker with Linux a bit but have not transferred everything over.
That's probably because "rkill" is actually a real command. :)
That's probably because "rkill" is not actually a real command. :)
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