All a "Standard Distribution" would be is an agreement amoungst gentleman to follow a set of guide lines when making a distribution. There is nothing compulsive. Anybody would be free to make a distribution that doesn't follow the "standard". But if the majority of distributions agree to follow a set of guidelines, the big software giants (and the little guys) can know what to expect from these distributions and write code accordingly without haveing to write a seperate package for each distribution. The "standard distribution" would be more of an "accepted practice by the big names in Linux" On 19-Aug-98 Adams, Simon wrote:
I'm pretty new to linux and am still confused to a certain extent on the issues behind GPL etc. But my understanding of Linux is that Linux is the kernel only and the rest distributions who are free to put anything on top.
There fore how can you have a standard distribution. Or are we only talking about core sets of utilities.
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