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authorThomas Schwinge <thomas@codesourcery.com>2012-05-24 23:08:09 +0200
committerThomas Schwinge <thomas@codesourcery.com>2012-05-24 23:08:09 +0200
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-[[!meta copyright="Copyright © 1996, 1997, 1998, 2008, 2009 Free Software
-Foundation, Inc."]]
-
-[[!meta license="Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is
-permitted in any medium, provided this notice is preserved."]]
-
-[[!meta title="The Hurd and Linux"]]
-
-[[!tag stable_URL]]
-
-by <A HREF="http://www.stallman.org/">Richard Stallman</A>.
-
-<P>
-People sometimes ask, ``Why did the FSF develop a new free kernel
-instead of using Linux?'' It's a reasonable question. The answer,
-briefly, is that that is not the question we faced.
-
-<P>
-When we started developing the Hurd in 1990, the question facing us
-was, ``How can we get a free kernel for the GNU system?'' There was
-no free Unix-like kernel then, and we knew of no other plan to write
-one. The only way we could expect to have a free kernel was to write
-it ourselves. So we started.
-
-<P>
-We heard about Linux after its release. At that time, the question
-facing us was, ``Should we cancel the Hurd project and use Linux
-instead?''
-
-<P>
-We heard that Linux was not at all portable (this may not be true
-today, but that's what we heard then). And we heard that Linux was
-architecturally on a par with the Unix kernel; our work was leading to
-something much more powerful.
-
-<P>
-Given the years of work we had already put into the Hurd, we decided
-to finish it rather than throw them away.
-
-<P>
-If we did face the question that people ask---if Linux were already
-available, and we were considering whether to start writing another
-kernel---we would not do it. Instead we would choose another project,
-something to do a job that no existing free software can do.
-
-<P>
-But we did start the Hurd, back then, and now we have made it work.
-We hope its superior architecture will make free operating systems
-more powerful.