On Monday 28 July 2008 08:48:52 pm Florin Iucha wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 28, 2008 at 03:35:42PM -0500, Munir Nassar wrote:
> > Troy.A Johnson wrote:
> > >>>> Josh Paetzel <josh at tcbug.org> 7/28/2008 9:49 AM >>>
> > >>
> > >> On Monday 28 July 2008 07:25:51 pm John Hoffoss wrote:
> > >> If it's any help, I don't take linux ( or most linux users ) seriously
> > >> either.
> > >
> > > With so many charming ambassadors like our friend Josh,
> > > I wonder why the *BSDs aren't more popular. ;-)
> >
> > Because the BSD fundies take every opportunity to troll?  :)
>
> No, it's because they use vi and not vim!
>
> Cheers,
> florin

Well, not to drift dangerously factual, but in one of the more popular BSDs, 
FreeBSD, /usr/bin/vi is really a hardlink to /usr/bin/nvi, /bin/sh is really 
ash, not even hard linked, just gratuitously renamed.  /bin/tcsh is a 
hardlink to /bin/csh but you get different behavior if you invoke it as tcsh 
vs. csh.  awk in the base system is one-true-awk, but if you install gnu awk 
from ports you end up with a binary called gawk.  grep in the base system is 
gnu grep, but it's not called ggrep or gnugrep or anything like that.  more 
is a hardlink to less, but you get traditional more behavior if you invoke 
less as more instead of less.

I think my point is that even the most fearsome of luddites would find a 70's 
era UNIX horribly unproductive and uncomfortable to use, and I wouldn't let 
some hard core FreeBSD user bag on you cause he uses vi and you use vim, or 
that his /bin/sh isn't really bash, unless of course he's bagging on you 
cause vim and bash aren't actually backwards compatable with the original 
tools....

-- 
Thanks,

Josh Paetzel

PGP: 8A48 EF36 5E9F 4EDA 5A8C 11B4 26F9 01F1 27AF AECB
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