Giles Coochey wrote: > On 02/07/2012 14:48, Tilman Schmidt wrote: >> Am 01.07.2012 07:40, schrieb Les Mikesell: >> [distinction between /bin and /usr/bin] <nice summary snipped> > 3) Cheap retail hard drives passed the 100 megabyte mark around 1990, and > partition resizing software showed up somewhere around there (partition > magic 3.0 shipped in 1997). Um, nope. 100M drives weren't "cheap" until well into the nineties. *Companies* could afford them by '92 or '93. '90? I think it was the holiday season of '89 that my bosses in the tiny, tiny software co. I worked for gave us presents, and mine include a *huge* 30M h/d (*way* bigger than the 20M I had), knowing they'd get use of it, with me working at home one weekends.... <snip> > /usr/local was for your specific installation's files. Then somebody > decided /usr/local wasn't a good place to install new packages, so let's > add /opt! I'm still waiting for /opt/local to show up... Sun added /opt; I think Oracle used it, too, about the same time. At least here, my manager believes in /usr/local.... <snip> mark > -- > GPLv3: as worthy a successor as The Phantom Menace, as timely as Duke > Nukem Forever, and as welcome as New Coke. ROFTL! _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos