> hello > > in the new year. Let's hope 1999 will become the breakthrough in Hurd > development. > > Some notes about the documentation: > > Web pages > --------- > > I found that in the current Hurd pages important and unimportant > information, outdated and actual are mixed somewhat randomly. So I felt > it was necessary to have a completely new structure. I made two > prototypes for a new structure which can be viewed at > http://chianti.philosophie.uni-stuttgart.de/~matthias/hurd. Please take > a look at them and comment. The pages are not fully-working, some links > do not work. They are rather intended to discuss structure and design > issues.
I quite like the "all in one" page; it compactly does an overview that answers the questions: "What is Hurd, and why would I care?" (With all the free software projects out there, these are quite legitimate questions.) You might want to "steal some material" from: <http://www.ntlug.org/~cbbrowne/osmk.html> on microkernels, and <http://www.ntlug.org/~cbbrowne/oshurd.html> on Hurd. -- Christopher B. Browne, [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED] Web: http://www.ntlug.org/~cbbrowne SAP Basis Consultant, UNIX Guy Windows NT - How to make a 100 MIPS Linux workstation perform like an 8 MHz 286

