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              | Date: 1999-03-24 
 
 Linus im O-Ton über die Linux-Historie-.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.-
 
 q/depesche  99.3.24/2
 updating       99.3.22/2
 
 Linus im O-Ton über die Linux-Historie
 
 Wie alles anfing & warum es genausoweit mit Linux kommen
 konnte wie es bis dato kam & was ganz anders kam, als es
 kommen sollte, erzählt Linus himself in diesem 5000 Zeichen
 starken Auszug aus dem neuen O'Reilly Kompendium
 "Open Sources: Voices from the Open Source Revolution."
 
 psot/scrypt: die letzte q/depesche zum Thema Linux & XML
 war etwas übertrieben formuliert. Natürlich unterstützt der
 Internet Explorer XML & Cascaded Stylesheets nicht nicht,
 sondern doch. Nämlich auf die Microsoft ureigene Weise:
 fast ganz, doch in entscheidenden Punkten doch wieder
 nicht.
 
 tnx 4 critique 2 stefan.lauterer@orf.at  et al.
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 Linus Torvalds
 Linux today has millions of users, thousands of developers,
 and a growing market. It is used in embedded systems; it is
 used to control robotic devices; it has flown on the space
 shuttle. I'd like to say that I knew this would happen, that it's
 all part of the plan for world domination. But honestly this has
 all taken me a bit by surprise. I was much more aware of the
 transition from one Linux user to one hundred Linux users
 than the transition from one hundred to one million users.
 
 Linux has succeeded not because the original goal was to
 make it widely portable and widely available, but because it
 was based on good design principles and a good
 development model. This strong foundation made portability
 and availability easier to achieve.
 
 Contrast Linux for a moment with ventures that have had
 strong commercial backing, like Java or Windows NT. The
 excitement about Java has convinced many people that
 "write once, run anywhere" is a worthy goal. We're moving
 into a time when a wider and wider range of hardware is being
 used for computing, so indeed this is an important value. Sun
 didn't invent the idea of "write once, run anywhere," however.
 Portability has long been a holy grail of the computer
 industry. Microsoft, for example, originally hoped that
 Windows NT would be a portable operating system, one that
 could run on Intel machines, but also on RISC machines
 common in the workstation environment. Linux never had
 such an ambitious original goal. It's ironic, then, that Linux
 has become such a successful medium for cross-platform
 code.
 
 Originally Linux was targeted at only one architecture: the
 Intel 386. Today Linux runs on everything from PalmPilots to
 Alpha workstations; it is the most widely ported operating
 system available for PCs. If you write a program to run on
 Linux, then, for a wide range of machines, that program can
 be "write once, run anywhere." It's interesting to look at the
 decisions that went into the design of Linux, and how the
 Linux development effort evolved, to see how Linux managed
 to become something that was not at all part of the original.
 
 full text
 http://www.linuxworld.com/linuxworld/lw-1999-03/lw-03-opensources.html
 
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 "There is no solution because there is no problem" Marcel Duchamp
 http://www.heimatseite.com/revamp-duchamp
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 edited by Harkank
 published on: 1999-03-24
 comments to office@quintessenz.at
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