Debian: A Brief Retrospective 258
IanMurdock writes "This weekend, Debian turned 10. To mark the occasion, I've written a retrospective, published at LinuxPlanet. There's also a very nice piece, based in part on my early writings about Debian as well as the retrospective, at internetnews.com."
Woohoo! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Woohoo! (Score:5, Funny)
It should be ready some time in 2008, at which point the "Ano-15" package will be in the Planning tree.
(and yes, I'm a die-hard Debian user)
Re:Woohoo! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Woohoo! (Score:2)
ObDrinking Buddy (Score:2)
Hell, it's 5 o'clock. It's 5 o'clock somewhere.
Re:Woohoo! (Score:5, Insightful)
My day job is selling medical equipment on the internet but I'm also the "computer guy" for the company I work at. Which btw has the added benefit of some extra job security, because no one else knows how to fix the network when it breaks.
I started tinkering with RedHat and Mandrake about 3 years ago, and have recently installed Debian on a little backup server we have here at work. What a breath of fresh air! I am so glad to be out of RPM hell - those of you who have tried it know how frustrating it is to try and install an RPM, only to find out that you need files A, B, and C to make it work. Then you find out A, B, and C need X, Y, and Z, etc. etc. and that eventually you need an entirely new kernel. You can spend hours trying to fuss with those dependencies. Ugh.
Now with debian it's as simple as:
apt-get install whatever
and bam, you're done! It's awesome! I had a backup server with trouble ticket system up and running in my office here within a few hours (and probably would have been faster if I was more expert).
The Debian apt system is simply awesome, and I highly recommend it for anyone who wants a stable, easy to maintain linux box.
Re:Woohoo! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Woohoo! (Score:2, Informative)
How many times does it have to be said that RPM is not comparable to apt?
RPM is the package format, like dpkg (.deb). You should compare apt on Debian to up2date [redhat.com], Red Carpet [ximian.com], YaST [www.suse.de], URPMI [linux-mandrake.com] or even apt for RPM [freshrpms.net].
I am tired or Debian or (help us) Gentoo users raving about "RPM hell" out of ignorance. Debian with apt has some nice things going for it, including the amount of software available in "testing" and "unstable" (as compared to what is offered by RedHat through up2date or Ximian through Red Carpet). T
Re:Woohoo! (Score:3, Insightful)
In all those cases, Person B is quite correct, of course, but perhaps we should be pondering this question: "Why exactly do people persist in associating dependency problems with RedHat and nice easy a
Re:Woohoo! (Score:2)
I think you see the "dependency hell" thing persists for several reasons:
Re:Woohoo! (Score:4, Insightful)
elgaard> Gentoo? Gentoo?
elgaard>
elgaard> LA! LA! LA! LA! LA!
elgaard> Don't even SAY FreeBSD!
elgaard> I've I've NEVER HEARD OF THEM!
> --User Disconnected--
I have FreeBSD on an ancient 486 monocolor laptop. I think I was 2.1.7? when I installed. I can't rightly remember anymore. It's 4.8 now. No need to reinstall. I put Gentoo on my main workstation when I had issues with some hardware not liking FreeBSD. That was version 1.2 I think. Now I have 1.4 release. Didn't have to reinstall. I have emerge sync in cron. Updating my system goes something like this:
emerge -uD world
That's about it. Occasionally I'll have to update config files with etc-update, but not very often. I have nothing against Debian. It's a really decent distribution. The versions of things just aren't new enough. I upgrade a lot and use a lot of bleeding edge hardware on my main workstation though. In the past if I couldn't get FreeBSD to like something, I'd use RedHat just because it's practically the business standard GNU/Linux. This happens a lot with laptops. Now I have this mentality:
If I can get FreeBSD to work, I'll use it. The benefits so far outweigh the downside that it's not worth wasting the time to elaborate.
If it's a personal machine and I can't get FreeBSD to work, I'll use Gentoo now. The reasons I can't get FreeBSD to work are almost always going to be very easy to fix with Gentoo because of the source derived nature, and use of nearly bleeding edge code. There is a better chance I'll have support. Plus the source derived nature is a given and not an afterthought.
If it's a customers machine and I can't talk them into FreeBSD
The last thing I'm trying to do is piss on Debian. It's really great. I just have no need for it. If I want seemless bleeding edge stability, I have Gentoo when I can't get FreeBSD to play ball. I'm used to, and more comfortable doing things from source. I've been using source since Slackware. So in my case I'm going from one extreme to another. I don't really need something in the middle.
Re:Woohoo! (Score:2)
apt-get install whatever
and bam, you're done!
There's no step three? There's no set three!
Re:Woohoo! (Score:2, Interesting)
apt get retrospective (Score:5, Funny)
Here's looking at you, kid (Score:5, Funny)
My hat is off to you, Ian Murdock.
Moderators don't use Debian or something ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Just hard to install =)
Re:Moderators don't use Debian or something ? (Score:2)
ftp://ftp.uni-kl.de/pub/linux/k
I don't get it. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I don't get it. (Score:2)
Me neither (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Here's looking at you, kid (Score:2)
Watch out for those teen years (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Watch out for those teen years (Score:5, Funny)
my thoughts on Debian. (Score:4, Insightful)
Debian is NOT going to preserve anything. If it continues on its current path (which is fine for me as I am a Debian user) it will find that it is cornered it its own niche.
The rest of the Linux community is moving FORWARD towards the mainstream. Debian remains locked in its "old fashioned ways" and will never be a leader in anything (as far as the MAJORITY will be concerned).
People want ease of use, ease of installation, and commercial applications to be included. They don't want to have to find them somewhere else, manually add a deb repository, and then install.
I have to say that I am nearly 100% pleased with Debian. That's not to say that is what is going to matter in the future. I like staying away from the current direction that Linux is moving but I don't believe that the rest of the community necessarily believes that's the best way to go.
That's my worthless
Re:my thoughts on Debian. (Score:4, Interesting)
a Debian based distrobution that includes the software they think people
want.
What is so hard to understand?
Where is Linux going again? (Score:3, Insightful)
When people talk about where Linux is going like it's a bus (or bandwagon) I get confused. Who says Debian should be the Linux platform for mainstream commercial apps when MS is overthrown? (If any of that happens; I'm not saying it will.)
Talking about "the Linux community" is like trying to talk about "the Slashdot community"...people try t
Innovation versus Stagnation (Score:3, Insightful)
"Moving forward" (Score:5, Insightful)
In interest of disclosure: I use RedHat at work and Gentoo at home.
I personally don't have Debian on any computer I am responsible for. That said, I want Debian to exist. I don't want it to "lead"; I want it to be a sort of reference distro for the rest of us. If I see a package in Debian's stable branch I'm pretty confident that it's a reliable version of that application. No other distro, not even RH Enterprise, gets that much trust from me (though RHE comes close).
Debian's slow package release cycle is a feature, not a bug.
Re:my thoughts on Debian. (Score:2)
the majority. That crowd of farseeing Wizards, who landed on Microsoft.
It's Unfortunate (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It's Unfortunate (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It's Unfortunate (Score:5, Insightful)
It kind of sucks to read about all the great ideas and ideals that Debian represents and then get a dose of the real Debian community in #debian.
There are a fair number of assholes and jerks in #debian@freenode, it's true. But that sort of thing happens in any community. No matter what the subject, there will be people who get their entire sense of self-worth from treating those less-far-along like crap.
The key is to realize that there are other avenues for help. The debian-user mailing list [debian.org], in contrast to #debian, is almost always friendly (even when someone does something stupid, the response may be stern, but almost never *mean*); and it's tremendously more informative/educational/useful. I highly recommend it.
Re:It's Unfortunate (Score:2)
My favorite computing experience ever. (Score:5, Informative)
It still boggles my mind that my Thinkpad has been running the same initial installation for the last 2 years, without so much as a hiccup.
Everyday I appreciate all the hard (volunteer no less) that has gone into this hodgepodge of kernels and free software that I can use as I see fit.
My thanks to all the persons that make Debian what it is.
Re:My favorite computing experience ever. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:My favorite computing experience ever. (Score:2)
Re:My favorite computing experience ever. (Score:2)
I had Win2K running on my development machine for 3.5 years without a hiccup. The only reason I reinstalled was because I (from a Mandrake dual boot on a new hard drive) over-wrote part of the partition when I screwed up installing Grub to the wrong location, and then screwed up further by trashing too much trying to recover using dd.
But yeah, Debian is great if yo
What Next? (Score:5, Interesting)
How about a robust, secure, directory service integrated into the distribution itself? Something that slaps NIS around and isn't vaporware like Ophion [sourceforge.net]. That alone could be a huge killer app that would kelp those of us in corporate environments who want to move to debian as a workstation based solution.
Looking and Debian versus Slackware (Score:5, Interesting)
Today, I'm having a hard time justifying keeping my Slackware install in place on my workstation. It's running 8.0, and I've manually updated enough stuff because of the lag in Slackware's development that I doubt an upgrade of sorts would work properly, yet I want the goodies that gnome2 provides, which looks too daunting to build by hand, with all of its assorted libraries and tools. So, at this point, switching to Debian, which I know is going to see active development for quite some time, is a very attractive option.
Debian's usefulness in the last few years gained so much that the aforementioned workstation is only Slackware, or even non-Debian Linux Box in my control.
The end of dselect being a requirement is probably what prompted that, though I still haven't ever had a successful i386 ISO-based install with it, it's been the two-floppies method.
Re:Looking and Debian versus Slackware (Score:3, Interesting)
I left Slackware at that time for the simple reason that it was just too difficult to use the latest software.
Slackware also does not have any easy way to install dependant packages. Who the hell has the time to sit around and find, compile, and install dependencies only to find out you have another one to go?
Debian solves ALL those issues
Re:Looking and Debian versus Slackware (Score:3)
I found the wide array of RPM based distros a pain, because meeting package dependency requiremenets was very hard if I didn't stick
Re:Looking and Debian versus Slackware (Score:2)
Re:Looking and Debian versus Slackware (Score:2)
Be sure to get *all* the X packages, or something will "suggest" your system to become totally hosed!
Re:Looking and Debian versus Slackware (Score:2, Insightful)
I've tried most of the Linux distros out there... Slackware still remains on my notebook and on my servers.
Why?
When it comes right down to it, there is just nothing simple and straightforward like a distribution that doesn't pretend to know more than you do. Dependency tracking simply is not that big of a deal. If I try to run something and I miss a dep, what comes up?
Re:Looking and Debian versus Slackware (Score:4, Informative)
I'm not trolling here, but by definition, unstable in Debian speak refers to the package management of the package is not thoroughly tested. Unstable does not necessarily have anything to do with the software within the package.
More retrospectivity (Score:4, Interesting)
It's a shame they seem to tail off around 1995, it would be nice to see some serious newsgroup discussions that occurred during the past seven years... although this lack of serious discussion may coincide with AOL'ers getting newsgroups access.
Me, me, me! (Score:5, Funny)
Today I wrote a comment on Slashdot about the retrospective on Debian on LinuxPlanet [slashdot.org].There's also a very nice comment, based in part on my early ideas [slashdot.org]from another slashdot story, it is, as well, retrospective.
Yeah, but.... (Score:4, Funny)
39 candles.
29 for me, 10 for Debian.
w00h00!!
This weekend, Debian turned 10..... (Score:2, Insightful)
Waiting for sarge... (Score:2)
Granted the install is a bit lengthy, but maintai
Re:Waiting for sarge... (Score:2)
you can netinstall straight to whatever (stable/testing/unstable) you want. not that upgrading would be much of a chore with apt-get anyways.
Re:Waiting for sarge... (Score:2)
And yes, apt does make updating a snap, it's one of the best features of Debian, IMHO. But installing a more recent relase is even easier. Now, I'm not putting down Debian, I love the OS. I just wish they updated a bit more frequently than about once every two years. Debian's great, I just want more of it!
Nice article (Score:5, Informative)
Debian still stands out as the distro most reflective of the GNU philosophy. Its packaging system is possibly one of the best uses of the GNU development toolchain I've seen, and its division of software between 'free' and 'non-free' in dselect is yet another example that this is the GNU distro.
I must admit, the project seems to be languishing a bit right now in terms of usage; some of this I blame on the lack of availability of the latest unstable packages (Debian seems to be quite conservative as far as this goes, going so far as to use the 2.2 kernel as its default install option). I also wonder whether the success of more commercial distros has to do with the inclusion of non-free software (especially in the form of drivers) and tools that are contrary to the GNU philosphy, yet more in tune with the needs of business users.
Regardless of the fact that I am no longer using Debian, it will always hold a special place in my heart. Thanks for all your hard work.
Debian isn't the most GNU distribution. (Score:2, Flamebait)
Actually, that's not true anymore. Things have changed and Debian is not the best example of free software or GNU. Check out GNU/Linex [linex.org] instead.
You'll not see a link to Debian from the FSF/GNU sites for this reason. Debian still distributes non-free software. Yes, you can install Debian without the optional non-free stuff, but they really do encourage installing non-free software on your system easily.
While RMS currently has
Re:Debian isn't the most GNU distribution. (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, that's not true anymore. Things have changed and Debian is not the best example of free software or GNU. Check out GNU/Linex instead.
You'll not see a link to Debian from the FSF/GNU sites for this reason.
You mean, like the one on this page [gnu.org], found by following "Links to other sites" from the main page [gnu.org]?
Re:Debian isn't the most GNU distribution. (Score:4, Funny)
Well, just to be fair, I'll quote the "GNU/LinEx Technical Specs" [linex.org]:
In other words, GNU/LinEx is a modified version of the Debian GNU/Linux operating system. No, I don't even want to think what the proper name of the system should be if the GNU concept of proper credit is followed.
Slashdot and Debian (Score:5, Insightful)
All my Slash test boxes, including the laptop I'm typing on, run Debian.
Thanks to everyone involved who puts together and maintains the distro. Its package management is top-notch. Excellent work y'all.
What I don't get (Score:5, Interesting)
If you know tomsrtbt [toms.net], a rescue disk made (largely) by one person, one wonders why he alone can make PCMCIA support work out of the box while the 1000s of Debian developers are busy discussing if RFCs belong in main or non-free.
Not that there would be a better distribution than Debian, but tat does not mean there's no room for improvement.
Re:What I don't get (Score:3, Interesting)
Use either:
Libranet 2.0 (or buy the most current one)
Knoppix Debian installer
I have done the Libranet install and it worked flawlessly and didn't require me to configure any hardware. You can have it installed in less than 20 min depending on the speed of your cd-rom drive and other hardware. The actual work of the installation takes about 2-5 minutes, the rest is just waiting for the packages to be installed.
I've also us
Re:What I don't get (Score:2)
Decade old installation (Score:2, Interesting)
Let's get this straight (Score:5, Interesting)
Asid from Red Hat which is in the business of big honking big Iron servers,
1. Debian is the only other real distrubution that has real server admins relying on it.
2. Developers favor Debian. At first I just found it neat that so many develoers of my favorite apps tended to package for debian, but now it seems that debian is the defactor developer distro. It is stable for developers who want little change or very Unstable ") for those that want the most. I dont think anyother distro seems to based, except again for Red HAt(ie, apps developed only for redhat) Of course, if something is developed for debian only, dont think it can be the case that is is Debian only, I could be wrong but I would liekt o know
3. Community: It is the largest. Bar None. On IRC there might be anywheres of 500 prople logged in. You can count on at least 1-2 people there that will know what you are tallking about. This is a key feature for why I use debian
From the original Murdock post... (Score:5, Interesting)
My how things have changed.
6) Debian will make Linux easier for users who don't have access to the
Internet.
Debian's main strongpoint is apt-get, which would not be so useful for users with no internet access. The beauty of Debian is that you can install it once and update it forever. Seems Debian's original goals and their current strongpoints are quite different.
Re:From the original Murdock post... (Score:2)
6) apt-get of course works just fine with a local r
Didn't you hear? Debian is dead (Score:3, Interesting)
But these days, the same voices which always talked about Debian seem to talk about Gentoo, and more to the point...very few people seem to talk about Debian. Apart from turning 10, what's the last major thing it accomplished? I'm sure many people still use it, but the driving force behind it seems to have died. Now it's main distinguishing feature is being the closest-to-official FSF/GNU distro, if you care about stuff like that.
I know apt is great, and Debian's installer, great, whatever, but really...is it still as big as it was?
Re:Didn't you hear? Debian is dead (Score:3, Insightful)
I do think Debian is losing its edge in the developer community though. It used to be that most developers used Debian on their main workstation, but now you are seeing Gentoo mentioned a whole lot. I guess being that Gentoo is bleeding edge and source based, this does make sense.
Debian is also useful as a base for other distributions. Xandros, Lindows and Libranet are all Debian based. Havin
Re:Didn't you hear? Debian is dead (Score:2, Informative)
Having Debian around as a base system for others to build on is really turning out to be a great thing for the community.
Re:Didn't you hear? Debian is dead (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, it does make sense and it just seemed plain weird that many of the maintainer's of the flagship OS of the Free Software movement were surprised that there was a substantial group of users who actually wanted to compile Open
Re:Didn't you hear? Debian is dead (Score:3, Informative)
Yes, there are also people on workstations who spend all of their time in X, and for some reason still want to boot into a virtual console and execute "startx". I hardly think we need to discuss the usual reasons for this, nor that it would be particularly flattering. If you are building on your own system all or even most of your packages from source, you are alm
Re:Didn't you hear? Debian is dead (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure, by Slashdot standards, I can accept the label, "Debian zealot". That's fine.
But no, really, I do not understand your criticism.
The point is, the source is available and usable in a relatively straightforward and managed manner if you wish to use it.
You can pull the source packages from the same mirrors housing Debian binary repositories.
Re:Didn't you hear? Debian is dead (Score:2)
**
Debian Linux distribution 10 years old today Around the Net
Following on from the FreeBSD project which celebrated its 10th anniversary a few months ago, the Debian Linux distribution reached the age of 10 today. Debian has been an amateur effort throughout its lifetime, and its success is a testament to how little difference money sometimes makes.
Despite the abscence of funding, Debian is the second most popular Linux distribution we find on internet web site
Re:Didn't you hear? Debian is dead (Score:2)
Have you ever run a system out of testing/unstable; within the last 6 months? If you haven't, you should also be cautious of pronouncing Debian to be hopelessly out-dated (not that you did, but that this is no doubt on your mind).
Is it still as big as it was?
No, it's bigger.
Should you care about the Debian Social Contract, even if you aren't into "that sort of thing"? Well, you should, but no, you don't have to, because the Debian
The Most Superuser-Friendly OS (Score:2)
I've run servers on 3 or 4 Windowses, half a dozen Linux distros, two BSDs, an
hmm (Score:3, Insightful)
fond memories of debian (Score:4, Interesting)
Debian books? (Score:4, Interesting)
I know all the documentation is "out there" but I've "been there, done that" with regard to rooting out all the distributed sources of documentation which exist on the various topics, and to be honest I don't relish the idea of making my life be "about Debian" for the same amount of time that it took to find out all the little tricks that I now know about my RedHat installation... Switching distributions will never be trivial if you have large pre-existing software packages running. Does anyone have any suggestions for moving away from RedHat, and any reasons why there aren't any good up-to-date books on Debian? I just like having at least one reference on hand - we have good books on Perl, MySQL, Apache, Sendmail - why not Debian as a whole?
Sorry if this seems negative - it's not really, I will in all likelihood be switching come November when my RH Network subscription expires. I can't get over how Red Hat is turning its back on the small users like me who can't afford at the moment to buy Advanced Server licenses, don't want or need support, but just need the errata updates! I mean, I am trying to develop a business here, and if/when I switch to another distro, I won't be coming back. It's just too much hassle (the small details and differences are the ones that kill you, as I'm sure everyone here will agree)... very short sighted on RedHat's part.
Red Hat's attitude reminds me of Netscape's just prior to Microsoft destroying them - Netscape seemed to lose interest in the very people that had made them successful, i.e. the small users out there who used their browser. Netscape thought they could instead focus on the corporate server market, and we all know what happened. I tried calling Red Hat about their policy of "end-of-life" for 7.3 and even 8.0, and all the woman I spoke to would say was that I could always buy the Advance Server edition. I explained that I am in that curious middle-ground position of running serious, production servers and yet not being big enough to be able to afford that, and she basically hung up on me. Unbelievable. If that's their attitude, then to be honest I really do hope that they go out of business.
Suggestions welcomed, and sorry for the rant.
Re:Debian books? (Score:3, Informative)
There is a great wealth of quality documentation and reference information available in electronic form. I know that you would like a dead-tree book, but as a volunteer, non-profit distribution, I don't know that this is the Debian way.
As you say that you have already had a successful install, there's no need to go over that.
First, you will want to read the APT HOWTO [debian.org]
I think cheap RAM will put Linux on top. (Score:2)
I may be wrong, but my reading
Re:My favorite Debian moment (Score:5, Funny)
You know: "Emacs? It's a nice OS, but i lacks a good text-editor!"? Anyway, Debian is just great. But I guess I don't have to tell you that - You hate it our you love it.
Re:My favorite Debian moment (Score:3, Insightful)
half of debian seemed to depend on emacs.
Quite a bit of Debian depends upon a text editor. Emacs was probably just what you chose to install. If you were to put even nvi on there, you could remove everything else.
Liar. (Score:5, Interesting)
Which of the above packages would have any meaningful use outside of Emacs? What functionality would you lose by not having any of the above? Given that it's an optional package with almost no reverse dependencies, I call your bluff.
Fake! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Fake! (Score:3, Funny)
Subtle, yet funny. :)
Linux is gaining popularity! (Score:2)
You can tell by the bloatware jokes.
Re:Liar. (Score:3, Funny)
Do you want to continue? [Y/n] n
You should have hit Y.
Your disk space wants to be free.
Re:Liar. (Score:2)
Delete Emacs? Yeah, right.
Re:FP? Silly me (Score:2)
Re:FP? Silly me (Score:2)
Re:FP? Silly me (Score:2)
http://netcraft.co.uk/survey/developers/debian.
has a nice list that i found by minutes googling as i didn't find the list instantly on debian.org..
Re:FP? Silly me (Score:2)
Don't use FTP... (Score:3, Informative)
/joeyo
Re:FP? Silly me (Score:2)
Use an http connection to download. I've found it more trouble free than an ftp connection.
Re:Debian is rapidly becoming obsolete (Score:5, Informative)
I think you're thinking of something else [openbsd.org]. Seriously, I've been on the debian-users mailing list for a long time, and it's made up almost exclusively of nice, outgoing, helpful people. I've never seen a newbie with a legitimate question get an RTFM from the regulars. Sometimes you'll see stupid questions like "y isn't debyan as cool as red hat?" get flamed, but you'll see that anywhere.
Re:Debian is rapidly becoming obsolete (Score:2)
Re:Debian is rapidly becoming obsolete (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously, I've been on the debian-users mailing list for a long time, and it's made up almost exclusively of nice, outgoing, helpful people. I've never seen a newbie with a legitimate question get an RTFM from the regulars.
Well, be careful. I have seen newbies with legitimate questions get RTFMs there; just not in that form. Rather, they're typically delivered in a less mean-spirited way. For example, someone posting "I got this error message: _______. What does it mean? What do I do?" might get a response of "Google is your friend for this sort of thing. I googled on that error message and got this webpage (________), which has an explanation and a solution." Sometimes a link to Eric Raymond's "How To Ask Questions The Smart Way" will be provided, as well. Much kinder than an RTFM, but in the same vein.
Not that I think that's a bad thing. To me, part of being helpful is to help people learn how to help themselves in the future . . .so long as one does so kindly (which, for the most part, debian-user does, and #debian@freenode doesn't).
But at the same time, I didn't want what you wrote above to give the impression that no one is ever encouraged to do some work themselves.
Re:Debian is rapidly becoming obsolete (Score:2)
Oh, I certainly agree. I think that much of the difference is in the tone, as in:
instead of:Re:Debian is rapidly becoming obsolete (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Debian is rapidly becoming obsolete (Score:2, Funny)
newb: "Debian fucking sucks, it can't do X. And its very hard to do Y."
debian-user: "Why didn't you just use apt-get for Y? And it can do X, you just have to edit some files in
newb: "How the fuck am I suppose to know all that you elitist prick?"
debian-user: "Next time you have a question, go RTFM or do a Google search before you come in here claiming Debian sucks and flaming people."
newb: "Fuck you you fucking ass!!@#$@"
Re:Debian is rapidly becoming obsolete (Score:3, Informative)
The first answer given was:
Now, that ques
Re:FSF (Score:5, Insightful)
The FSF doesn't recommend carrot cake, drinking beer, or ironing your underpants either. But it wouldn't be fair to reword that as suggesting they're recommending you don't eat carrot cake, drink beer, or iron your underpants.