From f7cc93166ae25dc6936b7115f4196030c1eca288 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Thomas Schwinge Date: Wed, 8 Oct 2008 00:26:42 +0200 Subject: UNIX. --- hurd/faq/gramatically_speaking.mdwn | 2 +- hurd/faq/slash_usr_symlink.mdwn | 2 +- 2 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) (limited to 'hurd/faq') diff --git a/hurd/faq/gramatically_speaking.mdwn b/hurd/faq/gramatically_speaking.mdwn index f6073376..7aa3edac 100644 --- a/hurd/faq/gramatically_speaking.mdwn +++ b/hurd/faq/gramatically_speaking.mdwn @@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ is included in the section entitled [[meta title="Grammatically speaking, what is the Hurd?"]] -*Hurd*, as an acronym, stands for *Hird of Unix-Replacing Daemons*. *Hird*, in +*Hurd*, as an acronym, stands for *Hird of [[Unix]]-Replacing Daemons*. *Hird*, in turn, stands for *Hurd of Interfaces Representing Depth*. We treat *Hurd* as a title rather than as a proper name: it requires an diff --git a/hurd/faq/slash_usr_symlink.mdwn b/hurd/faq/slash_usr_symlink.mdwn index d78913fb..6fa6c58d 100644 --- a/hurd/faq/slash_usr_symlink.mdwn +++ b/hurd/faq/slash_usr_symlink.mdwn @@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ is included in the section entitled [[meta title="Why is `/usr' a symbolic link to `.'?"]] -The distinction between `/` and `/usr` has historical reasons. Back when Unix +The distinction between `/` and `/usr` has historical reasons. Back when [[Unix]] systems were booted from two tapes, a small root tape and a big user tape. Today, we like to use different partitions for these two spaces. The Hurd throws this historical garbage away. We think that we have found a more -- cgit v1.2.3