From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Message-Id: <3.0.5.32.20011029125442.019a81a8@mail.real.com> To: 9fans@cse.psu.edu From: Skip Tavakkolian Subject: Re: [9fans] What makes Plan 9 unique? In-Reply-To: References: <20011026165846.944DB19A2B@mail.cse.psu.edu> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Date: Mon, 29 Oct 2001 12:54:42 -0800 Topicbox-Message-UUID: 1026676c-eaca-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 I suspect that a lot of poeple are incubating ideas. Many of the nuances are missed unless you start writing and experimenting with your own filesystem, or services, etc. The ease of developing distributed (geographically and functionally) systems is the Plan9 revelation. I sense that the critical mass is forming. Also there is collateral effect that Plan9 is having on other OSes. The problem for a lot of us is that we have very little time to dedicate to our causes; Plan9 is one of them. I suspect that most of us work on Plan9 on our own time and equipment. Given precious little time, should the priority be on developing Plan9-workalike tools for environments that would never support them the way Plan9 can, or should we develop tools like those being suggested? [How the movie ends is entirely up to us.] At 10:16 AM 10/29/2001 GMT, Ozan Yigit wrote: >presotto@closedmind.org writes: > > >> Perhaps because noone in the community that writes code has it as >> a very high priority? > >this is not the first time people made attributions to the community >priorities, and i always wonder what those may be. here is an interesting >platform that should be used for some important computational needs, but >does it? i know a lot of people care, but what is being done with it? > >[i worry that if not the actors, certainly the overall direction is >beginning to look more like that of the memorable movie it was >named after... :-] > >oz >--- >www.cs.yorku.ca/~oz | if you couldn't find any weirdness, maybe >york u. computer science | we'll just have to make some! -- hobbes > >