Tim wrote: > Speaking as someone who studied (at college) computing from the > component level, and has built systems from the chip level. I mean > breadboarding CPUs, RAM, I/O, etc., not just putting together IBM > clones. As well as studying programming at that level (hand compiling > the op-codes from mnemonics used to write the program). I'm quite > astounded by the number of people who want to redefine what an OS is, to > something that it's not, just to suit their egos. The OS simply is that > which lets software make use of the hardware, not what makes it > convenient for us to make use of it. > > So answer this: Which bit of the software on this computer system is it > that actually does the OS functions, the *real* OS function? With all that education you have, perhaps you can explain something I've been wondering about: Why do we have both terms "kernel" and "operating system" if they're both the same thing? If people can't agree on what an operating system is, but do agree on what a kernel is, maybe we should avoid the ambiguity of "operating system" and simply call a kernel a kernel? Björn Persson -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list