-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 > Alright.. if someone really wants to start this flame war, I'll toss a > stick or two on the fire and duck out. :) Good Strategy... (-= > You can be enthusiastic about your kernel all you want (I compile and > install new kernels within 24hrs of hitting the ftp sites), but it's the > rest of the tools that make the system useful. :) The question is not one of tools, the question is one of system libraries. Are the standard C libraries part of what makes something an operating system or not? I say not since it's a matter of taste and a matter of how you want to use the system, those libraries are not required for an OS by any means; an OS needs a kernel and a shell. From there everything else is optional that you add on to increase functionality. I run Linux with a bunch of add-ons to put the functionality where I want it; some is gnu, bsd, apache group, the x dudes, a whole crapload of independant works, and pile of stuff I wrote myself because the other options didn't do it. No one group of those is more important than another, my system doesn't do what I want without any of them. --Nick -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (GNU/Linux) Comment: pgpenvelope 2.10.2 - http://pgpenvelope.sourceforge.net/ iD8DBQE7gnJpv+hjYTGg7s4RAp+yAJ4ib8PT8egxxkxgvAJSQgO056m0TwCdH20j 0PgXvOiYxtNPqCFz1BKEShI= =WjfG -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----