"Noah Slater" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > On 05/12/2007, mike3 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> But you seemed to imply the more "technically correct" >> name should be used. > > Nope. If you want to call it Ubuntu, fine. If you want to describe the > operating system type or give it a full name you should use the > technically correct version. > >> "When we ask people to say "GNU/Linux", we are not dividing people. >> ***We are asking them to give the GNU Project credit for the GNU >> operating system.*** This does not criticize anyone or push anyone >> away. " >> (emphasis mine) > > I stand corrected. I actually think this is the wrong approach.
I used to think so at one time. It is hard to argue against success, though. Before Stallman started the agenda on the naming issue, people frequently considered the GNU project a failed endeavour without usable results, superseded by "Linux" written by Linus Torvalds et al. This lead to several problematic results: people "porting" applications from the "dead" GNU project to Linux without bothering about code compatibility or contributing back upstream. Forks were happening all the time, and requests for supporting upstream in its endeavor to provide portable applications were poo-pooed. The FSF at consideral cost organized the effort to end the Linux-specific fork of libc, and have glibc be the cross-platform GNU library. If the aim of this campaign would have been to make people like Richard Stallman better, sure, it would have been a complete disaster. The goal, however, was to make people aware of the role the GNU project plays in the context of Linux. And this goal has been met surprisingly well, and certainly to a quite higher degree than the actual _use_ of the name "GNU/Linux". So yes, it turns out that the approach was effective for the goal. Whether the associated costs were optimal is a different question. But other previous approaches had not worked out. -- David Kastrup, Kriemhildstr. 15, 44793 Bochum _______________________________________________ gnu-misc-discuss mailing list gnu-misc-discuss@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnu-misc-discuss