On Mon, 26 Mar 2012 15:18:00 -0700, Bengt Richter <b...@oz.net> wrote: > Hi, > What is nongnu ?? > > Funny that your contact address for this email in the mailto: link > on http://savannah.nongnu.org/contact.php is @gnu.org, > not @nongnu.org or some subdomain thereof. > > What's the significance of the nongnu distinction??
There is software which is free (needless to say, given the context, in a "GNU compatible" way) but which is not part of the GNU project. Most programs start as part of the GNU project. The GNU project is absolutely desperate for anyone who can write anything that compiles, and so the bar is incredibly low. (Think: crud like GDB, bash, etc.) But as soon as these programs reach a low bug count, achieve user-friendly interfaces for interactive and programming use, and demonstrate pristinely clean, perspicuously transparent code base, GNU programs get promoted to the Non-GNU side. (Or wait, might I have that somewhat backwards?) > BTW. Note that you get to http://savannah.nongnu.org/ > if you ping gnu.org and use the returned ip address in a browser like: Amazing, isn't it! Welcome to the 1990's, where we have multiple domains on one host. (And even multiple IP's on the same network interface, bah!) (Wanna rent one? $15.95 a month, 5 kilobytes of personal space, and you get yourdomain.com.meaningless-string.my-domain.com to promote your "brand" in a professional way! Wow, deal!) :)