This question previously came up when we were releasing CDK 3 Beta and Mike 
Guerette was confused by Darwin on the cdk download page just like you are now 
:)
https://projects.engineering.redhat.com/browse/RCM-12713?focusedCommentId=470919&page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel#comment-470919
 
<https://projects.engineering.redhat.com/browse/RCM-12713?focusedCommentId=470919&page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel#comment-470919>

We requested that we need more user friendly names for the cdk download, so 
that is fixed. 
https://developers.redhat.com/products/cdk/download/ 
<https://developers.redhat.com/products/cdk/download/>

But I wouldn't mind switching darwin to macos everywhere.


> On 16 Apr 2017, at 03:38, Burr Sutter <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Interesting...feels a little "inside baseball" but I guess our types of users 
> are the uber geeks who are into this kind of stuff.
> 
> Mac OSX

That's so pre-2016! :) Now it's macOS.

-Martin

> Windows 64-bit 
> 
> would be more obvious to the average folks :-)
> 
> 
> On Fri, Apr 14, 2017 at 11:24 AM, Robert Terzi <[email protected] 
> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
> Not sure if this helps, but on most *nix systems code/scripts, such as 
> installers, could  (mostly) figure out what type of system it was being run 
> on using 'uname -a'.   On OS X, uname reports "Darwin" for OS type.
> 
> Note: as far as processor architecture, it currently shows x86_64 on "modern" 
> systems, as opposed to i686 for 32 bit x86 systems.   IIRC, In the past it 
> used to report amd64 as opposed to i386 or i686.
> 
> On windows, the PROCESSOR_ARCHITECTURE env. variable contains 'amd64'
> 
> 
> 
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