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What is the thing with those abbrev? Is there a technical reason why you couldn't write device, not dev? Or was that just lazy
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Condor324966yInteresting, I didn't know about /usr yet. But personally I would classify universal resources more as a /etc thing, given that all the configuration files reside there. Unix isn't very well-known for its intuitive naming so I guess it makes sense ๐ค
/usr and /usr/bin in particular seem much more like a /bin equivalent to be nowadays (which it kind of is, /usr/bin is often a symlink to /bin). -
@david-hil
Back in the day, the longer your file/folder names were, the less space you had for your files. Keep in mind that these were back in the days when MB were considered huge. -
@iamavalos @ocaiquemello
It was actually backronymed. Originally /usr was for user directories. When programs got bigger they moved from /bin to /usr/bin (which was on a different, bigger disk) which caused the home folder to be moved.
The more you know -
@iamavalos @ocaiquemello @Condor
This Twitter thread does a great job of explaining
https://twitter.com/Foone/status/... -
Parzi88336y@SanitizedOutput "originally"
That'd make more sense tbh, but I guess /home works too... -
mt3o19146yIs worth to mention that in the past, in larger networks, the usr was mounted as shared resource over the network.
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notorios5436y@SanitizedOutput ok, I knew my users were there when I was using Linux. Top comment had me judging my memory. About to be a Mandela effect up in here.
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Today I learned:
`/usr` stands for “universal system resources” not “user”
`/dev` stands for “device” not “development”
Had no idea.
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