<snippink>
> As a former Amiga user and now yet another Linux user, I probably know
> what you mean. Well, I'm not a kernel engineer but maybe it could be done
> with a virtual fs like /dev - so that
>
> 1. /dev/ is not polluted
> 2. /mnt and other real disk space is not polluted
Well, I am neither a former Amiga user nor a kernel developer (but
GNU/Linux user), so I understood MOST of what you two said. ;-) Coming
from a user-angle, though, the main problem with the Linux file system
"style", for lack of a better word, is the unified file tree.
What? The unified file tree? Yes, the unified file tree. The idea
that the silver plastic round thing you just put into the front of the
computer is accessed.... "under" the "storage" in the computer? Does
that, conceptually, metaphorically, make sense? No, it doesn't. Nor
does the need to explicitly "mount" and "umount" (the n having gotten
lost while moving from one office to another a few years back) a floppy
disk. This is one place where, I hate to say it, drive letters a la
DOS/Windows (or some other top-level identifier) are significantly
better from a user perspective.
-- Larry Garfield AIM: LOLG42 lgarfiel@students.depaul.edu ICQ: 6817012-- "If at first you don't succeed, skydiving isn't for you." :-)
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