Linked by Jordan Spencer Cunningham on Wed 8th Jul 2009 18:34 UTC, submitted by rlem6983
Google Google's recent move of revealing the Chrome OS to a suspecting public has put a great many people on alert. Some say it's a major privacy issue, some say Google oughtn't to become more and more monopolistic, while others think that the wide array of popular Linux distributions shouldn't become even more fragmented than it already is. "Google's decision to create its own Linux distribution and splinter the Linux community decisively once again can only be seen as foolhardy and self-obsessive. Instead of treading its own path, Google should have sought to leverage the stellar work already carried out by Mark Shuttleworth and his band of merry coders and tied its horse to the Ubuntu cart."
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RE: would take google os any day
by Laurence on Wed 8th Jul 2009 22:48 UTC in reply to "would take google os any day"
Laurence
Member since:
2007-03-26

i hope that google chrome os buries Linux kernel so deep that nobody actually notices it.


It already is to anyone who isn't a kernel developer.
In fact the whole point of a kernel is it's the deepest part of the OS.

I can only assume from your post that maybe you have Linux's user space tools like Bash confused as being the kernel. Please correct me if this wasn't the case.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 5

bousozoku Member since:
2006-01-23

"i hope that google chrome os buries Linux kernel so deep that nobody actually notices it.


It already is to anyone who isn't a kernel developer.
In fact the whole point of a kernel is it's the deepest part of the OS.

I can only assume from your post that maybe you have Linux's user space tools like Bash confused as being the kernel. Please correct me if this wasn't the case.
"

As soon as GRUB starts, you notice the Linux kernel because of the list. Non-technical users should never see that. It's good to see that Ubuntu has limited the periodic file system check to the login display, instead of showing a scrolling display of text which will once again confuse the non-technical.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 2

Laurence Member since:
2007-03-26


As soon as GRUB starts, you notice the Linux kernel because of the list. Non-technical users should never see that. It's good to see that Ubuntu has limited the periodic file system check to the login display, instead of showing a scrolling display of text which will once again confuse the non-technical.

Again, that's not the kernel, that's the init scripts, which are user space.

Plus I don't know which distro you're using/used, but most desktop distros hide the output from the init scripts behind a graphical screen. In fact, graphical booting has been a included feature for many a distro for a good number of years now.

I know Arch and Slack have a text boot, but those are aimed squarely at the geeks who like to tinker and not the average home PC user.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 2