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authorantrik <antrik@users.sf.net>2010-03-10 08:16:38 +0100
committerantrik <antrik@users.sf.net>2010-03-10 08:16:38 +0100
commit86c987aaf3d5013406755f2f142ae271d8c4754b (patch)
treedfea6fac9777f29b4072c577d7f3095216a8ba00 /community/gsoc
parent73457ea1f5ac3663bfc6890de97f87823fa493a4 (diff)
gsoc/organization_application: half the packages? 65% now!
Diffstat (limited to 'community/gsoc')
-rw-r--r--community/gsoc/organization_application.mdwn2
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/community/gsoc/organization_application.mdwn b/community/gsoc/organization_application.mdwn
index b2ec557d..3df9e719 100644
--- a/community/gsoc/organization_application.mdwn
+++ b/community/gsoc/organization_application.mdwn
@@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ approach.
To offer these possibilities, the Hurd uses a true multiserver microkernel
architecture. That makes it quite unique: The Hurd is the only general-purpose
multiserver microkernel system in development today that is nearly ready for
-everyday use, and offering almost perfect UNIX compatibility. (More than half
+everyday use, and offering almost perfect UNIX compatibility. (Almost 65%
of the packages in the Debian repository are available for the Hurd.) All other
existing true microkernel systems are either research projects not nearly
complete enough for actual use, or limited to embedded systems and other