Bringing Linux to the Masses
Note: I changed the title of the article from “Etymology of A Linux Distro” to the current because a lot of readers pointed out that it’s not appropriate to have BSD systems, and rightly so, on a Linux list.
Computing is fun! Well at least thats until Microsoft drove it out of the equation. I mean with Windows everything is just bland, monotonous, and just ordinary. Even it’s name is such a snooze-fest! The whole idea of window computing by no mean exclusive to Microsoft, it has been around for quite some time, one could argue that it isn’t that “earth shattering” of an invention. So why name your flagship product after a technology that’s not yours and has been around for quite sometime? Beats me! On the other hand, another company that actually puts the fun back into computing, also has a stupid name; Apple. Huh? Isn’t that the first word one learns in first grade “A is for Apple.” I could say or think “apple” without stirring any emotions or thoughts whatsoever, go ahead try it. Think Apple.
On the flipside of things, there is a whole different world of OS names, some are funny, some are insightful, some are romantic, others are cute, some are too small to fill their creators’ huge egos, and finally some are like their proprietary rivals, just boring. So if you ever wondered what your favorite Linux distro means, you will probably find the explanation here. (or BSD, I know they are not the same but I decided to add to the diversity of this article.)
1-Ubuntu
The meaning of Ubuntu is pretty much known by everybody in geekdom, just in case you have been living under a rock, Ubuntu.com definitions is: “Ubuntu is an African word meaning ‘Humanity to others’, or ‘I am what I am because of who we all are’. The Ubuntu distribution brings the spirit of Ubuntu to the software world.”
2-PCLinuxOS
Pretty much obvious, 3 words jammed up into one, PC + Linux + Operating System.PCLinuxOS has a GUI that resembles Windows, in an effort to make switching to Linux easier. Hence the use of the word PC (even though PC is not exclusive to Windows, which is a misnomer Was named after the pclinuxonline website and forums (Thanks subgeniusd and bob l)

3-openSUSE
openSUSE is the SUSE community project sponsored by Novell and AMD. SUSE is an German acronym for “Software- und System-Entwicklung” (”Software and system development”). However some claim that it’s a tribute the computer engineer Konrad Zuse.

4-Fedora
Fedora is a community Linux project sponsored by Red Hat. The name “fedora” is derived from the fedora that the shadowman is wearing in the Red Hat logo. (see below)
5-Mandriva
This Linux distro was the original Mandrake Linux distro, which was maintained by MandrakeSoft, however MandrakeSoft lost a legal battle against Hearst Corporation over the name “Mandrake”. MandrakeSoft later on bought Connectiva, the result of the fusion = Mandriva
6-Sabayon
Sabayon is a distro produced in Trentino, Italy and is named after an Italian dessert also called Sabayon. Sabayon (or Zabaglione) is made of egg yolks, sugar, and sweet liquor.

7-Debian
Debian was first introduced by Ian Murdock in 1993. The name itself is a portmanteau of his girlfriend (now wife) Debra and his name Ian.

8-Damn Small Linux
Damn Small Linux is a very small Linux distro with the size of only 50 MB. Hence the name. Like Duuuuh

9-MEPIS
According to the original creator of MEPIS, Warren Woodford, MEPIS orginally didn’t mean anything, he just misheard a friend on a bad Skype connection, and liked the name!
10-FreeBSD
FreeBSD is not exactly a Linux distro, it’ more like a sibling of Linux, and it ranked 11 on distrowatch. BSD is a Unix derivative developed by the University of Califrnia at Berkeley, BSD itself is an acronym for Berkeley Software Distribution. FreeBSD is the free branch of the Berkeley Distro.

11-CentOS
CentOS is based on Red Had Enterprise Linux (RHEL), it basically stands for Community Enterprise Operating System.
12-Dreamlinux
Dreamlinux is a Brazilian Linux distro based on Debian and looks very similar to Apple’s MAC OSX. I don’t really think there is a real reason behind the name. Just mashed up “dream” and “linux” together, talk about orginal! Sorry guys.
13-Puppy Linux
Puppy Linux is a small live CD distro that focuses on ease of use. This distro has it’s own mascot called “Puppy” which is a real Chihuahua.

14-Kubuntu
Pretty much straight forward KDE + Ubuntu = Kubuntu. Edit: Claydoh and martalli pointed out that Kubuntu means “towards humanity” in the Bemba language. However I still believe in my original explanation, and the Bemba bit was a coincidence that was revealed later.
15-Zenwalk
This one kinda stumped me. Visiting their website I was greeted with the tagline “ever tried zen computing?”, so the Zen part is pretty much explainable. But walk? The logo of dolphin? Do dolphins even walk? LOL. Well I e-mailed JP Guillemin, the creator of the distro, asking him for an explanation. His answer was wicked:
Hi, Zenwalk is intended to sound (and mean) similary as Nextstep, the famous OS created by Steve Job when he was fired by Apple
![]()
Cheers

16-Slackware
Slackware was created by Patrick Volkerding. Slackware initially was a private side project, and to prevent it from being a serious one, Patrick named it “slack.” In reference to the term slack from the Church of SubGenius (Thanks to the many who pointed this out) The kinda name stuck :).

17-Knoppix
Knoppix is a Debian based Live CD distro developed by Klaus Knopper and named after him.
18-Gentoo
Gentoo is a source code based distro, meaning that everything is compiled from scratch, which contributes to it’s speed. This fact prompted to a name change (originally Enoch) to Gentoo, which is the fastest swimming penguin. Oh and since this is a naming topic, I actually convinced a friend of mine to name her cat “Gentoo”, how cute is that?

19-Slax
Slax is a live CD distro based on Slackware, and from it comes the name. Nothing interesting here, move along.

20-Sidux
Sidux is a Linux distro based on the unstable branch of Debian which is codenamed “Sid”, which in turn is named after the Sid Phillips character in Toy Story - usually destroys and tortures his sister Hannah’s toys. You see, geeks do have a sense of humor ![]()

21-Ubuntu Studio
Ubuntu Studio is just a special derivative from Ubuntu geared to general multimedia production.

22- PC-BSD
PC-BSD is a BSD based distro. It aims to be easy to install by using a graphical installation program, and easy- and ready-to-use immediately by providing KDE as the default, pre-installed graphical user interface, hence adding the “PC” prefix. Pretty unoriginal if you ask me.

23-Xubuntu
Whats up with all these Ubuntu derivatives? Sheeesh…Xubuntu is just XFCE + Ubuntu. Next!
24-Foresight
Foresight is a Linux distro that uses Conary as a package manager, it allows rolling updates, rather than the 2 big releases a year most distros do. For example, when banshee 1.0 comes out next month Foresight users will have it in less than a week, while Ubuntu users will wait until October (Thanks to pcutler from the forsight IRC channel for explaining this). Anyways, with Conary, Forsight in a sense gets software you otherwise will have to wait for in other distros, pretty neat
25-DesktopBSD
From the site: “DesktopBSD aims at being a stable and powerful operating system for desktop users.” Meh.
26-Red Hat
This one has some really interesting stories behind it, I’ll leave the floor to Red Hat co-founder Bob Young to explain:

27-OpenGEU
OpenGEU was originally Geubuntu, which is a distro based on Ubuntu but uses GNOME and Enlightenment as window manager, the “G” and “E” stand for this combo. But due to some legal boo-haa it was changed to OpenGEU.

28-Elive
This one is just a Debian based live CD that also uses Enlightenment as a window manager.
29-Freespire
In August 2005, a distribution Live CD based on Linspire’s source pools named Freespire hit the web by accident. It later evolved to become it’s own distro. Linspire also has a interesting tale behind it’s name. Linspire originally was “Lindows” but some spoiled brat in the Microsoft legal department decided that “Lindows” infringes on their “Windows” brand and decided to sue. Microsoft’s case didn’t really hold water in court, so Microsoft decided to settle and pay $20 million for Lindows to change to Linspire.
30-Frugalware
I couldn’t find any documented reason, but it’s probably taken from the frugality philosphy. According to Wikipedia:
Frugality in the context of certain belief systems, is a philosophy in which one does not trust, or is deeply wary of “expert” knowledge, often from commercial markets or corporate cultures, claiming to know what is in the best economic, material, or spiritual interests of the individual.

31-Fluxbuntu
Again with Ubuntu? Just an Ubuntu based distro that uses Fluxbox as it’s window manager.
32-Xandros
Xandros’s name is derived from the X Window system and the Greek island Andros. Edit: Mike Bego, one of the founders of Xandros, commented below and after a couple of E-mails we arrived to this conclusion: Will Roseman (co-founder) chose Andros island because he thought of Andros in the mythological context relating to “Isle of Man”. Isle of Man was, according to one legend, where man was born. So the Andros part would be where desktop Linux was born. Mike also denied that the distro was named after the X Window System, he added the X just because it improved the sound / image of the name .

33-TinyME
TinyME is a small light-weight version of PCLinuxOS, it’s derived from two words; “tiny” and “me”

34-gOS
gOS is an Ubuntu based distro that has tight integeration of Google apps, the “g” stands for Google if you haven’t figured it out yet. gOS stands for ‘Good OS LLC’ which is the name of the company behind the distro. (Thanks to konradc from stumbleupon for pointing this out)

35-Backtrack
Backtrack is security testing and penetration detection distro with a collection of security and forensics tools. The name is derived from this fact; “back tracing” the intruders.
Update: Mint Linux crew have finally replied to my E-mail
36-Mint Linux
Clement Lefebvre from the Mint team has replied to my Email saying the following:
Linux Mint was a website dedicated to Linux with tutorials and articles about other distributions and applications. At the time it wasn’t a distribution itself. “Mint” was fresh, it connoted quality, it was easy to spell and to remember and it also vaguely had something to do with the cold and icy surroundings of our beloved penguins
![]()
So there you have it, 35 36 of the top Linux distros out there, and how they got their names. I hope that I got most if not all main stream distros, if I missed any or think that I missed your favorite distro please comment or e-mail me.
honest_ape
April 6th, 2008 at 6:28 am
Great article, Rami. It’s amazing how many Linux distros there are. I enjoyed reading about how they all got their names. I also learned about a few distros I had never heard of.
Great read.
Amrush
April 6th, 2008 at 9:12 am
Very nice articles .. I hope one day I find the time to try this or that distro
..
thanks for the good read ..
NickF
April 6th, 2008 at 10:00 am
It’s University of California at Berkeley, not University of Berkeley
anon
April 6th, 2008 at 4:47 pm
meh, lamo.. Windows is much easier to use than most of these. Long live Windows!
meneame.net
April 6th, 2008 at 4:54 pm
Significado de los nombres de las distribuciones Linux [ENG]…
Listado de las 35 distribuciones Linux más populares con el significado de sus nombres. Algunos significados son más que conocidos para la mayoría (caso de "Ubuntu") y otros fácilmente deducibles (caso de "PcLinuxOS"), pero tamb…
Bruno
April 6th, 2008 at 5:06 pm
in distrowatch, the #5 is mint… it isnt ever show at this list =T
I_Want_Steve's_Job
April 6th, 2008 at 5:06 pm
Sure windows will live long, it makes sure of that by buying Linux distro names like Lindows for 20 million. So yeah, I usually drop 20 million on lamo things too…then right after that I install this bloated thing called Aero on my Vista box, which tries to be like Compiz but fails horribly. Long live Vista (aka Windows ME pt deux)
Obelisk
April 6th, 2008 at 5:12 pm
Nice list, but I find it hard to believe you didn’t include ArchLinux in your list, you listed some rather smaller distros. Even distrowatch.com shows Arch placed at #20. Not that it really matters I suppose. Good article.
O porquê dos nomes? « Um blog sobre aquilo que me apetecer
April 6th, 2008 at 5:13 pm
[…] Descobre aqui! […]
Rami Taibah
April 6th, 2008 at 5:20 pm
@Obelisk and Bruno: Both of these distros were under consideration in addition to Vector Linux, however I couldn’t figure out the reasons behind the names. I tried to contact the given contacts on the respective site of each, but didn’t get any reply *yet*
If any of you know the background of the naming of these 3 distros, please stand up
David
April 6th, 2008 at 5:25 pm
The NetBSD Project is just about to have it’s 15th anniversary. Launched Apr 19, 1993, the name was chosen to represent the contributions of developers all over the Internet to the ongoing development of the BSD operating system.
Vincent
April 6th, 2008 at 5:34 pm
Odd… I would’ve sworn gOS meant “Green OS” which would probably refer to the Everex Green PC it came with, but I can’t find it anywhere.
Bill
April 6th, 2008 at 5:59 pm
@Obelisk- cheers to ArchLinux!
Etymology of a Linux Distro : little brain
April 6th, 2008 at 6:03 pm
[…] wondered where your favourite linux distro name comes from? Find yourself. Great list. April 6, 2008 | Filed Under information, […]
Luis Felipe
April 6th, 2008 at 6:13 pm
Hey!
I’d like to recommend you add in your list a brazilian distro, called Kurumin. It’s an interesting name, based on some cultural stuff.
TAsn
April 6th, 2008 at 6:17 pm
Good post, I don’t want to be too picky, but:
“3 words jammed up into one, PC + Linux + Operating System”
well PC (1) + Linux (2) + Operating (3) System (4) is 4 words, not 3
35 top Linux distros out there, and how they got their name | Simple Drops
April 6th, 2008 at 6:17 pm
[…] ever wondered what your favorite Linux distro means, you will probably find the explanation here.read more | digg story addthis_url = […]
Tux Reports News » Blog Archive » Etymology of A Linux Distro
April 6th, 2008 at 6:24 pm
[…] The number of distributions continue to grow each day - but have you wondered where the names come from? Rami provides a quick look at the etymology of several distributions. […]
Flonky Flonk
April 6th, 2008 at 6:25 pm
*snore*
Having a toplist of Linux distros is like having a toplist of McDonalds locations… same shit, different name.
fenix
April 6th, 2008 at 6:29 pm
dumb article. I hate people like you bashing MS. I bet your usin windows, your using MS products and your probably writing your aticles in MS word.
honest_ape
April 6th, 2008 at 6:36 pm
@Flonky
Have you tried Linux? I use windows, but I’ve tried Linux, and it’s not shit at all. Just because you don’t like something doesn’t make it shit.
@fenix
I know for a fact the writer uses Linux, and he’s not bashing windows, other than a slam on their name. If anything, he’s bashing the marketing team who came up with the name.
Did you even read this before you posted your comment? Or did you just see Linux and comment on it?
I use Windows, and I thought this was an interesting article.
Rami Taibah
April 6th, 2008 at 6:39 pm
@Luis Felipe: Definately I will look at it, please e-mail me (contact page) about the meaning of it.
TAsn: Ya your picky
and I can’t count
Flonky Flonk: Obviously you didn’t read the article or even read the title, since you came over here from Digg with the assumption that the Digg title accurately reflects what this article is. This article isn’t meant to count Linux distros, but rather explain the reasons behind naming them. Hence the use of Etymology, read beyond the headline before you pass judgement.
fenix: Well your entitled to hate MS bashers. But no I am not using Windows, I washed my hands from it 3 years ago. Oh and just the fact that you think I used MS word for writing this, shows how technically gifted you are. FYI, MS Word is rarely used for web development. Oh and if you insist, I wrote this on Google docs, thank you very much.
Yiannis
April 6th, 2008 at 7:10 pm
You’re etymology for slackware is wrong. It comes from the Church of The Subgenius, whose goal is to help you achieve “slack” a state of being where you use the least amount of energy possible to drift through life
Silveira Neto
April 6th, 2008 at 7:10 pm
I loved this article. I read it all. Thanks.
Yiannis
April 6th, 2008 at 7:13 pm
whoops, forgive the typo i meant your
giorgo
April 6th, 2008 at 7:21 pm
Xandros is named under its founder Alexandros Typaldos
bob
April 6th, 2008 at 7:23 pm
where the fuck is arch!?
Top 35 Distro’s of Linux | Compaholics.com
April 6th, 2008 at 7:26 pm
[…] 35 Distro’s of Linux So here we have a list of another top Linux distro list. I can’t help but notice that Ubuntu is practically […]
Federico Kereki
April 6th, 2008 at 8:11 pm
In the Gentoo description, “it’s” should be “its”. Other than that, a nice work!
Penguin Pete
April 6th, 2008 at 8:12 pm
*Ahem* Slackware was named after the mystical substance “slack”, the intangible psychic currency of the Church of the Subgenius. This is why Slackware versions of Tux often show him smoking a pipe or with “Bob Dobbs” on his chest.
www.ntopics.com
April 6th, 2008 at 8:42 pm
Etymology of a Linux distro | Royal HeHe2-ness!…
hehe2.net — if you ever wondered what your favorite Linux distro means, you will probably find the explanation here….
frits
April 6th, 2008 at 8:45 pm
Wasn’t PCLinuxOS named that way because it was distributed by PC Linux magazine?
Linus
April 6th, 2008 at 8:53 pm
Frugalware comes from the word frugal which means:
economical: avoiding waste;
Gran Maestro
April 6th, 2008 at 9:49 pm
I would add to above list also gNewSense.
Perhaps less known but very significant, “a GNU/Linux distribution, that takes all the non-free blobs out of a rather popular distribution and makes it free”.
Enjoy
ani625
April 6th, 2008 at 10:12 pm
Absolutely superb list.
Have used half of them.
Currently on Ubuntu.. ftw!
disgruntleddutch
April 6th, 2008 at 10:13 pm
Good article overall, just one nitpick about your post regarding FreeBSD. FreeBSD is no sibling of Linux. The two I’m afraid aren’t even related genetic wise. BSD is generally seen as a derivative of AT&T UNIX whereas Linux was developed to mimic Unix. If anything Linux (and I use Linux based distros everyday) is the adopted sibling to BSD based operating systems.
Rami Taibah
April 6th, 2008 at 10:25 pm
@disgruntleddutch I totally agree with what you said, I got this comment a lot already on different social sites. But the thing is I started writing this using distrowatch.com list, half way through the list I found that there are some BSD distros on there, I decided to throw them in the mix. Maybe the title is a wee off key, but in general both Linux and BSD are more similar than not
subgeniusd
April 6th, 2008 at 10:25 pm
“Wasn’t PCLinuxOS named that way because it was distributed by PC Linux magazine?”
Close. PCLinuxOnline, a popular website after which Texstar and fellows named the
distro. (Which I’m using at the moment btw.)
slackware96
April 6th, 2008 at 10:45 pm
SLACKWARE FOR PRESIDENT
they.com - The wink makes it evil » Why gentoo? Why debian?
April 6th, 2008 at 11:21 pm
[…] Etymology of a Linux distro | Royal HeHe2-ness! Leave a Reply […]
Monty
April 7th, 2008 at 12:29 am
Just checked distrowatch.com.
You have sidux, slax and then Ubuntu Studio and PC-BSD but you skipped Vectorlinux? Weird. Oh well.
What’s in a name? « Linux Dump
April 7th, 2008 at 12:43 am
[…] in a name? April 7, 2008 at 8:43 am | In Articles | This is a nifty little article explaining the meanings behind the names of 35 of the most popular Linux […]
paul cutler’s blog » Blog Archive » links for 2008-04-06
April 7th, 2008 at 1:31 am
[…] Etymology of a Linux distro | Royal HeHe2-ness! How the Linux distros got their name. And yes, Foresight is on their. (tags: linux) Bookmark to: Hide Sites […]
claydoh
April 7th, 2008 at 1:44 am
Kubuntu actually means ‘towards humanity’
http://www.kubuntu.com/faq.php#kubuntumeaning
Rami Taibah
April 7th, 2008 at 1:58 am
@Monty: I didn’t really skip Vectorlinux, I just didn’t know what it meant, and the guys behind the distro didn’t really answer my emails.
links for 2008-04-06 :
April 7th, 2008 at 2:38 am
[…] Etymology of a Linux distro | Royal HeHe2-ness! (tags: linux etymology) […]
SE’s Weblog » Hervee ta linux heregledeg esvel sonirhodog bol…
April 7th, 2008 at 4:22 am
[…] Hamgiin urgun hereglegddeg 35 Linux distros neree haanaas olj avsan talaar end bna […]
burnin
April 7th, 2008 at 4:47 am
Fun article.
And you are on point about Microsoft taking the fun out of computing. I started with 8 bit machines where you had access to both hardware schematics, memory maps, and in some cases OS source code. In the DOS days you still had hardware specs but the software was becoming locked down, and eventually hardware and software were becoming black boxes, I pretty much gave up on hobby computers due to this, then linux came along and saved the day.
And I have to laugh at the whiny windows users posting their rants, lol, ignorance is bliss I guess.
Oshu
April 7th, 2008 at 5:00 am
So tell me, how does including some BSDs on a list of linux distros add diversity? It is a serious demonstration of ignorance. Why not call your article (and I use the term generously) “Etymology of An Open Source Operating System” ?
Putting operating systems that are not linux on a list of linux distros just makes you look stupid. If you wanted to spice things up, you should have done a sidebar on BSDs or something similar. However, you just threw them on the list. It shows that you don’t care enough about the subject of your work to really understand it.
Calling FreeBSD a sibling of Linux is about as meaningful as calling a Toyota a sibling of a Subaru.
Ok, enough hashing let me try it your way. Here are some suggestions for adding diversity to your list of linux distros:
* OS/2: Not really linux, but lets call it a distant great uncle.
* CP/M: Um, it has a command line, just like linux!
* AmigaDOS: Yay! Look at all the diversity on my linux list!!
* Multics: Ancient grandpappy of linux. I is good blogger! Diversity FTW!
speedygeo
April 7th, 2008 at 5:45 am
Suggestion: another article about the logos…
Mepis is Memphis in the original intention? I don’t know, just ask…
But overall, no a so great creativity…
Windows and Apple have their great idea… When you see a window or an apple…
martalli
April 7th, 2008 at 5:47 am
I thought I might point out that kubuntu’s name probably evolved in the fashion you describe, but it happens to mean “toward kumanity” in Bemban…I refer you to the wikipedia page for more: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kubuntu#Name
NickF
April 7th, 2008 at 7:15 am
“University of Califrnia at Berkeley”. It’s spelled California.
tres
April 7th, 2008 at 7:24 am
I am really surprise at the way Oshu reacts to this article. I believe that this article was just fun and interessting. no more
Praetorian
April 7th, 2008 at 9:06 am
I hate it that there’s always someone bashing linux users about any tiny flaw they hear about without using it themselves. The average intelligence of those people posting those type of comments is lets be nice… Below Average.
Also in case you were wondering where Windows got its name, think of this analogy… System resources are the cold air from your air-conditioner, what happens when you open the windows?
Using Ubuntu FTW!
Praetorian
April 7th, 2008 at 9:17 am
Sorry for double-posting but after refreshing to check for typos (I know I should check before submitting).
I just wanted to let Oshu know that technically Toyota and Subaru are related, well ownership-wise anyway. Toyota has a 8.7% share in Subaru (more specifically Subaru’s parent company Fuji Heavy Industries) and they are planning to double their share very soon due to a revision of Japanese laws that will enable Toyota to own up to 17%.
I know that’s totally tangent, however I didn’t really like your examples or ignorance. As previously stated the author already said that the title is not really appropriate
“@disgruntleddutch I totally agree with what you said, I got this comment a lot already on different social sites. But the thing is I started writing this using distrowatch.com list, half way through the list I found that there are some BSD distros on there, I decided to throw them in the mix. Maybe the title is a wee off key, but in general both Linux and BSD are more similar than not”
Perhaps you should read everything first before commenting Oshu.
By the way forgot to mention it already, but great article Rami, I didn’t know a few of these distros name origins. Thanks!
Sudheer
April 7th, 2008 at 12:11 pm
Good compilation. Keep them coming.
Regards,
Sudheer
35?Linux???????? - Someus.cN
April 7th, 2008 at 12:50 pm
[…] Linux???????????????????????35??????Linux?BSD?????????? […]
Gadgeterija (beta) » 35 distribucija Linuxa i etimologija njihovih naziva
April 7th, 2008 at 2:20 pm
[…] budi lijen Rami Taibah s hehe2.net-a sastavio je popis 35 razli?itih distribucija, ukratko ih opisao te ako je to poznato dodao porijeklo nastanka njihovih naziva. Dodajem još […]
honest_ape
April 7th, 2008 at 2:44 pm
@Oshu
Here’s some diversity for you: You’re a dick.
El origen del nombre de las diferentes distribuciones Linux | KDE Blog
April 7th, 2008 at 3:47 pm
[…] Para ver la lista completa, visitad la página de Royal HeHe2-no […]
darkefl
April 7th, 2008 at 4:07 pm
What about Arch Linux?!
Michael Bego
April 7th, 2008 at 4:29 pm
Although Will Roseman did pick Andros as the isle to be used in the name, that name was taken. I suggested we put an “X” at the front. Although we were investors in Metrolink (heavily involved in X-windows), X-windows was not behind choosing “X”. I chose the “X” much more randomly to just sound and look good.
BeyondRandom
April 7th, 2008 at 5:17 pm
Great List!!
nickwe
April 7th, 2008 at 6:36 pm
arch linux is missing…
Etimologias en Linux « Kushelmex Open Blog
April 7th, 2008 at 7:33 pm
[…] Aqui pueden checar la lista completa y los significados […]
what’s the meanings of various names of linux operation system zz | En.dogeno.us
April 7th, 2008 at 10:26 pm
[…] is from Royal HEHE2-ness! By Rami […]
qeek
April 7th, 2008 at 11:14 pm
I thought Ubuntu was an old African word for “I can’t install Debian”.
zcat
April 7th, 2008 at 11:20 pm
nitpick; FreeBSD is no more free than the original UCB BSD, so not exactly a ‘free branch of it’. OpenBSD and NetBSD are two other branches, which are also free. And although they’re all “unix-like operating systems” none or them are even remotely related to Linux, they’re more closely related to Apple’s OSX (which might be described as a non-free branch of BSD)
mepis
April 7th, 2008 at 11:27 pm
I use Ubuntu, Fedora and Mepis, Mepis is becoming my favorite.
With Mepis all devices and wireless work from the get go on all my desktops and laptops.
Ubuntu Gusty (7.10) was a big improvement but still needed some tinkering to get the wireless up an running.
Etymology of a Linux distro | Royal HeHe2-ness! | TechnoPrimitive
April 7th, 2008 at 11:53 pm
[…] Etymology of a Linux distro | Royal HeHe2-ness! […]
abc
April 8th, 2008 at 12:19 am
No mint, this is rigged
Caesar Tjalbo
April 8th, 2008 at 3:09 am
From Wikipedia:
“Pardus is an open source Linux distribution developed in Turkey, as a product of the Pardus Project. It was named after the Latin (and scientific) name for the Anatolian Leopard.”
?????????? ????????????? Linux ? Dimaka ???.????
April 8th, 2008 at 3:51 am
[…] ? ? ?????? ? ????????????? ???????? Linux ?????????????: Etymology of a Linux Distro. ????? ?? ?????? ? ???? ????, ?? ?????, ????????? ? ???, […]
Oshu
April 8th, 2008 at 5:45 am
It has finally happened. Linux use has become so popular that the ignorant mainstream joe-blowhards are writing articles about it. This duchebag took a list from Distro Watch and posted it to his blog. When numerous people pointed out that he had moronically included versions of BSD on his list of linux distros did he fix it? No. Did he change to title to reflect that it was a list of more than just linux? No. He just made some lame excuse about adding diversity.
“Golly Jeepers! That dadgum BSD sure seems like linux to me!”
Look Rami, I know that is blows your mind that a site called “DistroWatch” would trick you by including some BSDs, but let me show you how this works. The site is called “DistroWatch” and not “Linux Distro Watch” pretty sneaky, huh?
I know, I know, but Linux and BSD are so similar, you say. I agree, it is terrible confusing. I mean, Men and Women have more parts in common that different. Will you put some swell fellas on your list of Top Sexy Babes? Why not, it sure would add diversity.
By you logic, all unix-like operating systems are the same? New flash to you Mac OS X users, according to OS Genius Rami Taibah, you are running linux!
It is sad that he really does think that the various BSDs and Linux distros are more similar that different. That very statement just shows you how little our man Rami knows about operating systems.
It’s ok, Rami, I’m here to help.
Repeat after me:
FreeBSD is not a linux distro.
PC-BSD is not a linux distro.
HPUX is not a linux distro.
AIX is not a linux distro.
Tru64 is not a linux distro.
Windows Vista is not a linux distro.
A ham sandwich is not a linux distro.
Brittany Spears is not a linux distro.
nixnews.com
April 8th, 2008 at 6:16 am
Etymology of a Linux distro | Royal HeHe2-ness!…
As the page says, “if you ever wondered what your favorite Linux distro means, you will probably find the explanation here”. Thirty-five or so distributions are given attention, complete with logo and some explanation, however unsatisfying, for the …
jesse
April 8th, 2008 at 7:28 am
No wonder the winblows fanboy in the fourth reply posted as anon … what he said was “I’m not smart enough to use linux”. I wouldn’t want to admit such acute intellectual deficiencies in public either. My 70 yo mother uses Linux and has no problems even though she didn’t start using computers until a few years ago. Either she’s a genius or anon is somewht intelectually retarded. rofl (oops, did I just respond to flaimbait?)
Oshu:You are correct that BSD != Linux but it’s a similar subset of people that use both so it is of interest to the same people. So his heading isn’t accurate - so what? Get over it. Does it really warrant several diatribes? And to call him a douchebag because of it? wtf? You really are being a dick. Pull your head in.
Andrei
April 8th, 2008 at 11:10 am
What about Vector Linux
tres
April 8th, 2008 at 1:01 pm
Man, that Oshu guy has a lot of frustration to vent.
April 8th, 2008 at 4:52 pm
“arch” means something like “ultimate” (as in “archenemy”), so “archlinux” is “ultimate linux”.
mmartin
April 8th, 2008 at 5:06 pm
Great idea for an article. But,…
You made a grave spelling mistake: It is the “X Window System”, see: no ’s’ after “Window”. The one with the ’s’ is from an evil place called Redmond. Alternate allowed spellings are “X11″ or simply “X”.
And no, I don’t think I am nitpicking.
gm
What’s behind that Distro’s name? « The Chhamanator
April 8th, 2008 at 7:21 pm
[…] What’s behind that Distro’s name? Posted on April 8, 2008 by chhamanator from Royal Hehe2-ness […]
Boycott Novell » Links 08/04/2008: More GNU/Linux in Schools, Glance at Gentoo Linux 2008.0 Beta 1
April 8th, 2008 at 7:36 pm
[…] Etymology of A Linux Distro […]
Bob I
April 9th, 2008 at 12:21 am
The way PCLinux OS got its name for you article is incorrect. It got its name from a magazine put together by Tex & other linux enthusiasts. here is the link:
http://pclosmag.com/html/Issues/200709/page01.html
McBain
April 9th, 2008 at 3:57 am
I’m confused, Rami. When people informed you of your mistakes on some of the name origins, you corrected them. However, when people pointed out your mistake in including BSD distros on a list of Linux Distros, you did not correct your article.
I can only guess it is because you sincerely believe that “both Linux and BSD are more similar than not.” Here is where you are utterly mistaken.
Allow me to enlighten you.
Lets start with administration. The utilities and procedures for managing installed software, updates, services, users, partitions, and more are very different.
How about filesystems? Linux generally uses ext3. BSD uses FFS. Again, totally different.
Dig inside the kernels: completely different!
Ok, now here is the most important part: BSD proponents do not believe in Free Software (that’s free as in speach, not beer). Whereas Linux is released under the GPL, which requires all who use the source to share the source, BSD uses the BSD license.
The BSD License allows companies like Microsoft to use the source code from BSD in their products (and Microsoft does), but not to have to share ANY source code with anyone. The BSD belief is that it is fine to take from the community, make money off their work, and give nothing back.
Including BSDs on a list of Linux distros is like a slap in the face to all the hardworking programmers who graciously release their code under the GPL and believe in community sharing. Without the GPL, there would not be nearly so many wonderful Linux distros to choose from!
Worst of all, your list misleads those who don’t know any better into thinking there is not much difference between Linux and BSD. This is just dead wrong. While it might be true that a Linux Noob = a BSD Noob, a Linux Expert is not a BSD Expert without a lot of learning. Further, a Linux developer is not a BSD developer. Linux developers believe that everyone has the same rights and obligations to share.
In summary, Linux and BSD differ technologically, philosophically, and most importantly ideologically. PLEASE either change the title of your article or remove the BSDs.
Rami Taibah
April 9th, 2008 at 10:38 am
@Claydoh @martalli @subgeniusd @Bob l @Mcbain
Thank you all for your input, I have amended the articles as per your comments. Thank you once again
Nik Chankov
April 9th, 2008 at 11:34 pm
Nice post Rami
I knew them as distros, but I didn’t know how they get their names.
Where OS’ Got Their Names » aaron cirilo’s
April 10th, 2008 at 5:02 am
[…] Etymology of A Distro […]
aristarkhos
April 11th, 2008 at 4:12 pm
very nice!
Rami Taibah
April 13th, 2008 at 6:06 pm
Ok guys, Mint Linux guys replied, I added it. Finally! It’s kinda interesting check it out!
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April 14th, 2008 at 6:04 am
[…] Etymology of a Distro - If you ever wondered where they came up with that goofy name for your favorite Linux distro this is a great article to check out. […]
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April 14th, 2008 at 4:34 pm
[…] PC, South Park, las computadoras apestan Videos Guia Ubuntu en Vimeo Videos Guia Ubuntu en la guía Etimologia de una Distro […]
Patrik
April 14th, 2008 at 6:26 pm
McBain said:
“Ok, now here is the most important part: BSD proponents do not believe in Free Software (that’s free as in speach, not beer). Whereas Linux is released under the GPL, which requires all who use the source to share the source, BSD uses the BSD license.”
Funny… with the BSD license being a permissive free software license (as opposed to the restrictive FS license that is the GPL) I do prefer GPL though…
I wouldn’t dare presume what the developers of the BSD distros believe in, but with regard to the license they tack on the system I’d say they probably like free software…
McBain continues:
“The BSD License allows companies like Microsoft to use the source code from BSD in their products (and Microsoft does), but not to have to share ANY source code with anyone. The BSD belief is that it is fine to take from the community, make money off their work, and give nothing back.”
Of course, in order to get the source code, the system had to be open/free in order to legally be able to use code. The license they use (BSD) so strongly considers the users freedom that it even allows others to use the code, without having to give something back. (And this is why I prefer GPL)
But saying that the BSD license is not a free software license… that is just plain wrong.
And since you dragged up the issue about kernels, while yes, the kernel “Linux” is indeed GPL:ed I dare you to check out what Linus Torvalds prefer; the pragmatics of open source, or the philosophy of free software.
One little beef with the article: #24, “Foresight” seems like a bit of a advertisement, not much on the name itself, but rather about how “grand” their rolling update manager is. And I don’t really know, maybe it is a big deal to get Banshee 1.0 a couple of months before Ubuntu get it.
Otherwise great post, especially about Gentoo, that I actually had wondered about but never bothered to find out, thanks
Rami Taibah
April 14th, 2008 at 6:59 pm
@Patrick: Reading it again, I can see what your saying, but trust me it wasn’t meant so. I never tried foresight ( I am really tempted to though) nor do I have any hidden agenda. It’s just that I didn’t really understand the idea of “rolling updates” so I asked the guys at the IRC Foresight channel, and that is exactly what they said. So ya understandably they would compare themselves to the most popular distro out there (Ubuntu), which made it sound like advertisement
Patrik
April 14th, 2008 at 7:10 pm
No worries, I am sorry if I came off a bit strong. It just didn’t seem to fit into the rest of the post.
How *nix Distros Got Their Names? | PinoyTux Weblog
April 15th, 2008 at 4:18 am
[…] are more interesting distro names that you can read over at hehe2.net’s blog who lists a few more distros and their name meanings and it is worth checking […]
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Linux Users | Royal HeHe2-ness!
April 16th, 2008 at 8:19 pm
[…] I personally tried out at least 10 distros, 4 desktops, and 5 window managers. My recent article Etymology of A Distro got me interested in a couple more distros such as Zenwalk, Foresight, and Sabayon. Play the field, […]
wejde
April 17th, 2008 at 10:57 am
So many distros, so little time.
Will I ever see my family again?
Top Stumbles - Best of StumbleUpon
April 21st, 2008 at 3:42 pm
Etymology of a Linux distro | Royal HeHe2-ness!…
How did Linux distros got their name? Well here are 35 of the most popular Linux distros out there, and their etymology…
Geoserv
April 21st, 2008 at 3:46 pm
STUMBLED!
Sweet list.
VOTED for you at:
http://hehe2.net/linux-general/etymology-of-a-distro/trackback/
Anonymous
April 24th, 2008 at 6:07 am
Not technically Linux but for all you distro surfers you could look at ReactOS, it is based on Linux instead of UNIX, I still use Linux but it is an intesting project until Microsoft sues them into submission.
Scootch Over Tux, It's Gentoo The Cat's Time Now! | Royal HeHe2-ness!
April 24th, 2008 at 10:21 pm
[…] a recent very popular blog post of mine, Etymology of A Distro, I mentioned that I convinced a friend to name her cat “Gentoo”. And since we all know […]
DW
May 5th, 2008 at 6:42 pm
Do a post on the etymology of the GIMP, LateX and BSD. They all sound dodgy and I think put people unfamiliar with the terms off using FOSS.
Weird quiz
May 6th, 2008 at 1:47 am
Thanks for the title update