Hi Osama,

While there is technically an ambiguity between "Linux the operating
system" and "Linux the kernel", in practice there is no confusion, for
the following reasons:

 * Most users neither know nor care what a kernel is, and any user 
documentation is going to be referring to "Linux the operating system" 99% of 
the time anyway; the fact that there is a kernel named "Linux" is irrelevant to 
most users.
 * The kernel is an integral part of the operating system, so for most purposes 
"Linux the operating system" and "Linux the kernel" are synonymous. There is no 
need to differentiate between the two.
 * "Linux" is the dominant term used to refer to "Linux the operating system". 
Attempting to use the term "GNU/Linux" may confuse users, who may have only 
ever heard it referred to as "Linux".

I concede that the term "Linux" is used wrongly in this context, but
that doesn't matter; everyone else uses it wrongly too. There is little
value in trying to correct people's usage of these terms, especially
since doing so may confuse some readers. "Linux" is the more common
term, so we should continue to use that.

-- 
Confusing on the kernel Linux and whole system GNU/Linux in basic-commands
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/341377
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.

-- 
ubuntu-bugs mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs

Reply via email to