Brandon Invergo <[email protected]> wrote .. > This goes back to my point that the problem with calling something > "The GNU System" is that it implies that there is a single, > specific set of software that defines the system. The kernel issue > then comes crashing to the forefront: if the GNU project has two > kernels, and obviously only one can be in use at any time, which > kernel does "The GNU System" use?
The GNU Operating System can have more than one thing. It already does: Look at GNOME and GNUstep for example. GNOME is more popular but both are official GNU packages. GNU already has two official kernels: HURD, and Linux-libre was also made an official GNU package back in 2012. But, really, the GNU Operating System is whatever RMS says it is.
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