Date: Tue, 03 Jun 1997 22:24:22 -0700 From: Paul Traina <pst@shockwave.com> To: Michael Smith <msmith@atrad.adelaide.edu.au> Cc: chat@freebsd.org Subject: Re: sgml formatting code Message-ID: <199706040524.WAA03281@precipice.shockwave.com> In-Reply-To: Your message of "Wed, 04 Jun 1997 14:34:09 %2B0930." <199706040504.OAA11867@genesis.atrad.adelaide.edu.au>
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From: Michael Smith <msmith@atrad.adelaide.edu.au> Subject: Re: sgml formatting code The alternative is not _currently_ palatable; I agree that we need to help make SoSy part of the solution. I actually don't disagree with your goals, I disagree with your analysis. :-) I'd rather not be saddled with ancient festery versions of perl and tcl, which is what happens when they get bundled with the system. Yes, I can install a perl5 port, but then I'm never quite sure which perl I'm running, especially when the bloody port gets installed with a funky name so that it doesn't conflict with the bitrot freebsd has inflicted on me. Not to mention that I need to groff on one machine out of 50. It's the machine that I build freebsd releases on. The rest of the time, groff doesn't need to exist. I also resent that I've got several hundered K of perl interpreter laying about on it's lazy bum because of about 8k of perl code that's in the system that doesn't even exist under BSD and would be better off being rewritten in C in the first place. So, any way I shake it, I get screwed by having stuff in the base system. If I run a devlopment machine, I've got old code getting in my way, if it's the machine in the bathroom that runs the SNMP controlled bum-wiper, I'm still stuck with perl and tcl and gcc and all this other crud, just in case I feel like writing some code by waving the sponge back and forth. FreeBSD could be so much more than it is today if we could get over the idea that "unbundled" means "unfeatured." It's not like the days when DEC decided to unbundle little things like the macro assembler, dreknet, and the bliss compiler, so you'd have to go out and buy 5000 licenses just to keep your campus running -- all the code is still there if you want it, but if things are unbundled, you've got a choice. Monolithic systems are Stalinist constructions... of course, having just last week seen "Children of the Revolution", I now have a deeper understanding of Australians, Joe. Regards, Paul p.s. all of the insults are only meant in fun -- I'm just having too much fun writing this to be polite :-) p.p.s. for the peanut gallery, "Children of the Revolution" is a relatively famous (and damn well done) commedy about a woman in the Austrialian Communist party who meets the hero of the Soviet Union, Josef Stalin.
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