>> fact, Cygwin was once known as GNU/Win32.) > I don't think there is any reason to mention this. It is really ancient > history now.
I have BA in History. :) >>As such, the user environment is more similar to a GNU/Linux system> >>than, for example, Sun Solaris. >I find the term GNU/Linux a real abomination. I think the theory is that someone could put a Linux kernel with, say, BSD versions of the CL tools. But, it's never happened, so it does seem like a waste of four letters (as I write this on my Debian GNU/Linux laptop connected to my Red Hat Linux firewall). I'll move around the BUGS stuff, I was going to add that to intro.3 also. COPYRIGHT looks good? I was already thinking that COMPATIBILITY seemed too wordy. Here's a maybe better one: COMPATIBILITY Cygwin uses the GNU versions of many of the standard UNIX command-line utilities (sed, awk, etc.), so the user envi- ronment is more similar to a Linux system than, for exam- ple, Sun Solaris. The default login shell for Cygwin is bash, the GNU "Bourne-Again Shell", but other shells such as tcsh (an improved csh) are also available and can be installed using Cygwin's setup.exe. The Bourne-compatible shell ash is used as /bin/sh. __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Tax Center - online filing with TurboTax http://taxes.yahoo.com/ -- Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple Bug reporting: http://cygwin.com/bugs.html Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/