Hi :)  
Yes, the main points were good.  I was just pointing out a few minor, trivial, 
mostly irrelevant details that were a little askew.  

I like this quote from Linus' posting 1991-08-26 to the usenet group
"Hello everybody out there using minix -
I'm doing a (free) operating system (just a hobby, won't be big and 
professional like gnu)"

Btw the term Gnu/Linux seems to be trying to say "Gnu on top of a Linux kernel" 
(which makes sense and is pretty accurate) but most people will read that as 
"Gnu divided by Linux" (which is absurd and meaningless).  I prefer Gnu&Linux 
because it is both added together that makes the whole system.  Each to their 
own though! [shrugs] 


However all that is an aside from the original tangent which was that i really 
like the way this list is able to give people help on interesting features of 
all the major platforms.  Also that it's good to have packages that work on all 
systems so people can keep using what they are familiar with.  
Regards from 
Tom :)  





>________________________________
> From: Kracked_P_P---webmaster <[email protected]>
>To: [email protected] 
>Sent: Saturday, 1 June 2013, 20:04
>Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Re: no answers to my question
> 
>
>
>Thanks for the links Girvin.
>
>The whole point is not the specifics of the genealogy of the OSs that 
>can be supported, but it does support them and can be "easily" ported to 
>some others, as long as there are not any hardware issues like tablets.  
>MSO would never support such a diverse market, like LO does and could be 
>ported to.
>
>-----------
>
>I have a cross-platform package that has specific downloads for:
>Windows
>Linux - deb and rpg
>Mac OSX
>Solaris
>HP-UX
>and maybe AIX, if I remember correctly
>plus a Java based version.
>
>The key is not needing to learn a different package for each of the 
>different hardware and OS combinations.  That is a big thing for people 
>who use more than one OS.  I use Ubuntu/Linux for my main system, with 
>dual booting laptops that have Ubuntu and Windows on them.
>
>I choose OpenOffice, originally for the Windows and Linux cross platform 
>options, and then switched to LO when it first came out. I really did 
>not want to have two different packages for each productivity option 
>[for the most part].  LO, GIMP, Inkscape, VLC, and some others, are 
>installed on all my Ubuntu and Windows single or dual booting systems.  
>That way I do not have to worry which OS I am using at that time on the 
>document or graphics that I am working on for someone.  No need to 
>switch systems or change to another boot on the laptops.  I just have to 
>make that the data is on a disk partition [for laptops] that can be 
>accessed by both Windows and Ubuntu, or on a USB drive [flash or big 
>external] or on my network [if in range of my laptop when I am not in my 
>place but 10 floors down in the common areas of the building].
>
>On 06/01/2013 02:27 PM, Girvin R. Herr wrote:
>>
>>
>> Tom Davies wrote:
>>> Hi :)
>>> Not all our devs are volunteers.  Some are paid by various companies, 
>>> notably SUSE but also Redhat and others to work on LibreOffice.  Such 
>>> companies might normally attempt to create their own "in house" 
>>> product but instead choose to collaborate on creating something shared.
>>> Macs are based on Bsd, which in turn is unix-based. Gnu&Linux are 
>>> also unix-based.  So Bsd and Gnu&Linux share the same parent but do 
>>> have differences. 
>> Just to keep the record straight, on Linux day #1, Linus Torvalds 
>> based his Linux on Minix  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MINIX , which 
>> in turn was based on Unix.  I do believe the Minix disk filesystem is 
>> still included with today's Linux.  Yes, I just checked and it is (man 
>> mkfs.minix).  Then GNU had a bunch of *nix utilities, such as ls, tar, 
>> gcc, etc. which Linus merged into Linux.  Linux grew from that 
>> grafting ever since.  That is why Linux is referred to as GNU/Linux.  
>> To be accurate, the term Linux only refers to the kernel operating 
>> system, not the GNU tools. GNU/Linux is not Unix, but it is very close 
>> and the philosophy is very similar.  BSD and GNU/Linux are two 
>> branches of the same Unix tree.  Although a bit dated (the Linux 
>> kernel is now up to 3.x), here is a nice chart I just found: 
>> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Unix_history.svg
>>
>> Clearing the air...
>> Girvin Herr
>>
>>> Apparently a lot of Raspberry Pis are used to play around with 
>>> hardware experimentation such as control's for various types of 
>>> robots.  One chap put quite a few together to create a super-server.  
>>> So significant numbers are not being used as desktop machines at all.
>>> Regards from Tom :)
>>>
>> <snip>
>>
>
>
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