Brian> Personally I prefer to pronounce it the wrong Brian> way, with a silent g, cause guh-nome sound Brian> guh-stupid to me. I guess it's a question of who a person want to feel stupid around. When Richard M. Stallman wrote the GNU Manifesto in 1985 (see for a copy), he explained in the very first sentence the meaning of the word "GNU", namely a recursive acronym meaning "Gnu's Not Unix". The first section ends with the statement: "To avoid horrible confusion, please pronounce the 'G' in the word 'GNU' when it is the name of this project." Over time many software projects have come out of the GNU project, many of them named with a starting letter 'G', such as Gnumeric, which clearly is not intended to be pronounced the same as "numeric". Gnome is part of the GNU project. Therefore, to pronounce it as if it referred to a subterranean dwarf rather than to associate it with the GNU project is to manafest an unawareness of all things GNU, the Free Software Foundation, and the roots of the open source movement, which would seem to be an extremely unhip thing to do in a Linux environment. There's no law against appearing stupid. As I said, it's just a question of whose standard you respect the most. -- Lynn David Newton Phoenix, AZ