Hello,

I'm performing some research [for a CELF presentation] into reducing
boot time on embedded systems and would like to see if the embedded
community agree with the following statement as to why Linux
[arguably] takes so long in the first place for an unoptimised system:

"Linux is general purpose, convenient and flexible. As it's general
purpose it's likely to contain un-required functionality which results
in more initialisation and a larger image size. As it's convenient and
flexible it will spent time discovering devices and verifying their
existence."

Do you largely agree or disagree?
Also do you believe that boot time isn't the highest priority when it
comes to improving the kernel?

Thanks,

Andrew Murray
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