On Sat, Feb 02, 2013 at 08:00:11PM -0600, Maximo Pech wrote:
> I'm more interested in the story of how the 5yo became openbsd obsessed.

Probably a multiple choise answer:

[ ] Because of OpenBSD's acclaimed user-friendliness?
[ ] Because of OpenBSD's large user base?
[ ] Like father, like son?

> 
> El s?bado, 2 de febrero de 2013, Chris Hettrick escribi?:
> 
> > Hi Misc,
> >
> > I made a list of the most classical UNIX commands / utilities from section
> > one where there is only one per letter of the english alphabet (it's for my
> > OpenBSD obsessed five year old son :) ). I know that this subject is very
> > personal and steeped in tradition and history, so I was looking for your
> > opinions and suggestions.
> > A quick note about the list: some hard choices were made concerning
> > letters such as c, p, m, etc. For instance, kill(1) is not included for two
> > reasons: it is included in the shell, and it needs ps(1) to be properly
> > used (which conflicts with pwd(1) which I think is _more_ useful for a UNIX
> > beginner). mv(1) was not included because a cp(1) and rm(1) can suffice.
> >
> > This is the list:
> >
> > awk
> > bc
> > cp
> > date
> > echo
> > find
> > grep
> > head
> > id
> > jot
> > ksh (as a superset of sh)
> > ls
> > more
> > nc
> > od
> > pwd
> > quota
> > rm
> > sort
> > tail
> > uniq
> > vi
> > wc
> > xargs
> > yes
> > zcat
> >
> > Any opinions, suggestions?
> > Thanks!
> >
> > Chris

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