> I think the directory structure is a little odd at first, but once you
> learn it it makes more sense (to me anyways).  The one thing that still
> bugs me though is all the variations of bin laying around.. /bin,
> /usr/bin, /sbin, /usr/sbin, /usr/local/bin.  Why is there a /bin and a
> /usr/bin?  and although I can see the logic of keeping root-only utils in
> /sbin, if you have to be root to run them anyway, why not dump it all in
> /bin?  I'm planning to start doing this on some of my boxen, dump all the
> files from /usr/bin, /sbin, /usr/sbin into /bin and then symlink the old
> bin directories, since I assume stuff is compiled to look for /usr/sbin
> and whatnot.  Any reason why I couldn't do this?

Nope. Ain't Linux great...

Personally I hate the practice that seems to have turned up lately of
putting useful luser utilities like traceroute in /usr/sbin. What the
hell? Since when is traceroute a root util?