Stolen from Deltachat

  • merc@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    MacOS is still Unix under the hood, and has been since they adapted NeXTSTEP.

    Maybe it’s just because I’m fundamentally more of a console user than a windowing-system user, but to me a Unix-based OS is always going to be a winner compared to Windows.

    But, if you want to laugh at OSes, laugh at classic MacOS, where everything would grind to a halt if you clicked and held the mouse button.

    • Maybe it’s just because I’m fundamentally more of a console user than a windowing-system user, but to me a Unix-based OS is always going to be a winner compared to Windows.

      I absolutely agree

      But, if you want to laugh at OSes, laugh at classic MacOS

      Or some weird old Unixes like AIX

          • dukk@programming.dev
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            1 year ago

            Or it could be “Unixes”, as in “prefixes”, or “crucifixes”.

            English is a weird language.

            • merc@sh.itjust.works
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              1 year ago

              Yeah, apparently you need to know the origin of the word to know how to pluralize it.

              One octopus, two octopuses. But you can also say “octopodes” because the elements used to create the word are originally Greek (okto for 8, pous for foot), and that’s how Greek words get pluralized. But, although it was based on Greek elements it was never used in Ancient Greek. It was a modern Latin word, created in the 1700s as a scientific term using those Greek elements. As a Latin word, the “us” ending should be pluralized with “i”, so “octopi” (which is one of the oldest known pluralizations of the word). But, it’s an English word, and the proper way to pluralize an English word ending in “us” is to tack on “es”.

              So, you can go with “octopodes”, “octopi” or “octopuses” and have an argument why any of them is correct.

              For Unix, since it’s a word created in English, it’s probably “unixes”. To claim it’s “unices” you’d have to pretend that “unix” is a Latin word, which it isn’t, and never was, but “ix” is a common declension pattern in Latin, and an uncommon ending in English, so it’s fun to pretend it’s a Latin word and doesn’t get pluralized normally.