I think David Hewson was spouting off about UNIX -- and about it's renewal in Linux. Until Linux came along, it is true that there was no AOL-style propagation of the unix variants -- and that's what worries him.
He's saying that marketing Linux along those lines -- tear it out of a popular magazine cover -- a fresh cdrom -- and destroy your world as you know it -- isn't a good idea. I concur. All insults he gave to Linux equally apply to SunOS, to NetBSD, FreeBSD -- but Linux' popularity shows though the piece; in a way, it's an honor to be singled out as *the* new unix-like devil. Thank you, Mr. Hewson, for this recognition. I've been running Debian GNU/Linux for almost a year; before that, a year and a half of Linux Slackware -- and if you wanted to pry it outta my hot little hands, you'd better bring along some sedatives, and have some snappy dialogue ready. The astronauts in the shuttle are in the same camp -- technophiles -- too. Long live such folk, and the systems they bring to market. But I agree -- keep Linux out of the magazine promotions -- don't present it as plug and pray; present it as what to do when you have completely mastered Ms-dos, Windows and wish a new challenge and new rewards. And new tools. -- Christopher W. Hafey (1:142/540) ------------------------------------------------------------- [EMAIL PROTECTED] | 1078 New Britain Ave Apt 217 WA1TNR since 1974 | W Hartford Ct USA 06110-2434 http://www.tingri.ml.org | tel. 860-236-5400 ------------------------------------------------------------- -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .