EARLIER today I found yet another article which claims to give the history of GNU/Linux but talks only about Linux, pretending everything started in 1991 [1]. This is a common mistake, found in other articles that I found today [2], but nothing is as upsetting as the Linux Foundation, which cannot claim ignorance, brushing GNU out of the record, even when it comes to supercomputing [3]. The historical record is important and language is too. To use an analogy that I used a fortnight ago, calling native Americans (or Americans) "Indians" legitimises a view where these are foreigners rather than First People ("American Indian" means Indian citizen living in the US), so to say that European conquerors "discovered" America and are now the real "Americans" is like claiming that GNU is somehow the ugly little brother of Linux when it fact it's a distortion of the truth. Google takes it a step further by calling GNU/Linux "Chromebook" and just never attributing anything which is Free software. In the latest episode of TLLTS (probably the longest-running Linux podcast) one of the hosts did not even know that Chromebook had GNU/Linux in it. Lack of proper attribution and intentional blurring of history leads to this. ⬆
Bangalore: Enterprises are the home for Linux operating systems. They are mostly used across servers, for connecting databases and clients and for other purposes. Yet, presently, these operating systems have turned out to be so user-friendly that they have become a common sight throughout houses. So, how did this transition happen? How was this operating system even born? In the next couple of pages, we are taking you to a journey in time. Read on to know about the history of the most popular operating system.
The main difference between Linux and Windows is the way these are developed. Windows is a proprietary system built by a single company - Microsoft. Linux is built by a global community of users under an open source license – a framework that encourages sharing and collaboration.
Earlier this summer, The Linux Foundation released the report 20 years of Top500.org, which marked the 20th anniversary of the Top 500 supercomputer ranking, and (quite naturally) highlighted Linux's dominance on systems within the Top 500 over time.
Comments
Michael
2013-10-16 04:06:13
The GPL is great. As a choice. But he refuses to see it that way or speak of it that way. He wants it (and similar licenses he approves) to be the only choices. He has dug his own grave.