On Wed, Jan 30, 2002 at 11:13:05PM -0800, Jim Beard wrote:
> 
> That's basically dual booting between a BSD and a Linux system, which 
> seems a little bit silly to me, 

Unless you want to compare the two, or you want to learn one but still
get a lot of work done on the other, and you can't afford two machines ...

BSD and Linux are not the same.  Heck, switching from one Linux
distro to another can take some getting used to.

I was dual booting Debian and OpenBSD for a while.  Made perfect sense
to me.

> although, if you were set on doing it, I 
> would recommend making a large Unix File System partition on the 
> machine, I'm sure both the darwin and the linuxppc systems could both 
> use it.

Aren't ffs and ext{2,3}fs different implementations of a UFS?  Is there
such a thing as a generic UFS?

-- 
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