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Meeting Topic: "GNU Hurd: The Latest" Presented by: Mike Bushnell [mib at gnu.ai.mit.edu] Who: Boston Computer Society Linux/Unix User's Group Date: 17 July 1996, Wednesday Time: 7:00 pm. Place: MIT, Room 6-120 The Hurd is the high-level operating system for GNU. It is currently under development by Michael Bushnell, Roland McGrath and Miles Bader. It is almost, but not quite, at the point where you can do real work on it. GNU was designed as a replacement for Unix, so the Hurd is multi-tasking and multi-user, POSIX-compliant, and will have networking and X-windows and all that good stuff. Hurd is an acronym for ``Hird of Unix-Replacing Daemons''. Hird, in turn, is an acronym for ``Hurd of Interfaces Representing Depth''. The Hurd homepage is at: http://www.cs.pdx.edu/~trent/gnu/hurd/hurd.html Linux is a UNIX-like operating system built around POSIX standards. From its inception less than six years ago, it was developed over the Internet by a group of people who (for the most part) have never seen each other, and now runs on an (estimated) 1,000,000 computer systems. The operating system (and the source code for it) is free to anyone who wants it. This is probably the largest development project ever accomplished using the Internet. For the latest information on this talk, please see the URL: >>>> http://www.bcs.org/Groups/linux/linux.html or call the BCS Waltham Office at (617)290-5700.
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