You've misread me. I'm far from understanding which facilities Plan 9
provides for "ron minnich," the CS/CE person. I should be able of finding
facilities it provides for "me," the lowlife. Or I'd dump it as an option
for Getting My Job Done (tm), as did many before me. No public recognition
of Plan 9 lies in that direction.
In passing, I may actually be able to figure out how to cope with your
"challenge." That wouldn't change Plan 9's status as a "niche" OS, however.
I happen to know that Plan 9 presents a network transparent environment, so
trying out a C compiler at plan9.bell-labs.com shouldn't be any harder than
trying it out at the local machine which is incidentally much harder to
grasp "conceptually" than the same task performed on FreeBSD because
network transparency involves additional layers of abstraction whether you
admit it or not. A stand-alone Plan 9 system amounts in conceptual
complexity "for the user" to at least three interconnected machines. Very
little has been done to cover that.
--On Monday, June 30, 2008 5:22 PM -0700 ron minnich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
On Mon, Jun 30, 2008 at 2:20 PM, Eris Discordia
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Not a very kind comment. Though, it is possible that it's true.
What was there for me to understand about Plan 9 that I did not? Barring
a "mystical" bond with its exquisite kernel, of course.
Let's pretend I want to try out the C compilers at
plan9.bell-labs.com. i want to see what they do, maybe differently
than my local ones do.
How do you do that?
ron