Linked by Jordan Spencer Cunningham on Wed 8th Jul 2009 18:34 UTC, submitted by rlem6983
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RE[2]: would take google os any day
by bousozoku on Sat 11th Jul 2009 07:37
in reply to "RE: would take google os any day"
"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.
RE[3]: would take google os any day
by Laurence on Sat 11th Jul 2009 09:36
in reply to "RE[2]: would take google os any day"
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.







Member since:
2007-03-26
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.