"der.hans" wrote: > while I'm at LJ's web site, here's another article I was wanting to > post. This one's online, so I can drop in a URL :). > http://www2.linuxjournal.com/lj-issues/issue84/4553.html >From the article: But under UNIX the highest level--the root--of the filesystem is always designated with the single character ``/'' and it always contains the same set of top-level directories [list] and each of these directories typically has its own distinct structure of subdirectories. Note the obsessive use of abbreviations and avoidance of capital letters; this is a system invented by people to whom repetitive stress disorder is what black lung is to miners. Long names get worn down to three-letter nubbins like stones smoothed by a river. ...and I suppose it had nothing to do with the fact that unix grew up in a time when each byte was precious in the extreme. On a related note, I've heard financial analysts have totalled up the money spent "fixing" the "y2k bug", added estimated losses and reported losses, and concluded that had we used 4 digit dates all along, it would have cost around ten times as much ... the y2k bug, it turns out, was NOT a bad thing after all, but rather, a good thing... but I still thing that people who write "01" for the year on their checks suck. Heheh. -- jkenner @ mindspring . com__ I Support Linux: _> _ _ |_ _ _ _| Working Together To <__(_||_)| )| `(_|(_)(_| To Build A Better Future. |