Martin Steigerwald:
...
> I have /tmp on tmpfs in /etc/fstab as follows:
I also have /tmp on tmpfs, /var/tmp on disk, works perfectly fine here.
I kindof prefer each user to have their own TMPDIR, you can do that by
having this in /etc/profile, while not perfect in every regard, it
works fine here:
if [ "$UID" != 0 ]
then
TMPDIR=$HOME/tmp
export TMPDIR
if [ ! -d $TMPDIR ]
then
/bin/rm -f $TMPDIR
/bin/mkdir $TMPDIR
fi
fi
...
> On AmigaOS it was clear in the sense that they called the ram disk well
> "Ram Disk"¹. If you understand what RAM means, you get that its lost on
> switching off and possibly a reboot. (AmigaOS also has a (non default)
> RAM disk driver that does survive a soft reset.)
RAM = random access memory, which I guess SSDs kindof are.
> But why do I even argue about usability here. :) Linux is still a system
> that is based on UNIX concepts (not code, concepts). And I bet the
> inventors of UNIX did not have the typical desktop user of the current
> times in their mind. You bolt a desktop environment on top of Linux
> all the way you want⦠below the surface Linux will not really be as
> user friendly as AmigaOS :)
...
> Sometimes I would love to start a new OS out of the lessons learnedâ¦
...
Perhaps, but swapping floppies was terrible and the choise to use scsi
instead of ide made the disk alternative expensive.
Below the surface there was e.g. copper lists, I don't call that user
friendly much but a lot of users played with it.
Don't remember much of the amiga, what was it that was user friendly
underneath ?
Regards,
/Karl Hammar