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Date:      Wed, 03 Mar 1999 08:58:55 -0700
From:      Wes Peters <wes@softweyr.com>
To:        Louis Bertrand <louis@signalpath.on.ca>
Cc:        Jim Mock <jim@corp.au.triax.com>, eT <eT@KryptoKom.DE>, FreeBSD Chat <freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG>, FreeBSD Advocacy <freebsd-advocacy@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Re: what's in a name?
Message-ID:  <36DD5C3F.A0FC6C1F@softweyr.com>
References:  <Pine.BSF.4.05.9903030847300.1372-100000@tronix.signalpath.on.ca>

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Louis Bertrand wrote:
> 
> Pardon an interloper from OpenBSD. I just subscribed and caught this
> thread which echoes a draft of an opinion piece I was going to do for
> DaemonNews.
> 
> On Wed, 3 Mar 1999, Jim Mock wrote:
> 
> > > could it be that the word linux just 'sounds' more like a friendly
> > > operating system than FreeBSD?  and that because of this new users
> > > are more susceptible to using it?
> > >
> >
> > Eh?  How does Linux sound more user-friendly?
> >
> 
> 1) Because it's associated with a real person's name, whose hype as a
> philantropic boy-genius from Finland catches the attention of non-techies
> (may it's that Mozart thing...). I'm not running Linus down -- he is
> articulate and media-savvy and has a lot to do with the success of Linux.
> 
> <humour> But if you changed the name of FreeBSD to Jordan, you'd get in
> trouble with Nike. </humour>

TerryBSD lives!

> 2) Because a name is one of the hardest things to remember about a person
> -- it's an arbitrary choice by parents, and not tied back to a physical
> characteristic. Hence you try to make the name representative and
> associated with mnemonic clues (Linux -> Linus) A big no-no in marketing
> is using initials (IBM is big
> enough to get away with it -- a freenix OS isn't). Try explaining BSD to a
> non-techie, then quiz him/her the next day. If they even remember the
> name, you'll get DBS, BBS, BSB... 

Or worse, DSB, that terrible disease that afflicts teenage boys EVERYwhere.

Comments about TerryDSB are unwelcome in this forum...

> Hence you use something that evokes a
> warm fuzzy response and you're more likely to be remembered. Media scribes
> are like the rest of us: over-worked and underpaid. You need to catch
> their attention.

We'll have to make the TerryBSD daemon thinner, with freckles.  That
oughtta remove any sinister connotations.

> You won't solve the problem by going into denial.

I can if I deny there is a problem.  I don't have any personal need 
for FreeBSD to become a whopping commercial success; I do not seek
the validation of the marketplace for my choices in using and
contributing to FreeBSD.  How's that for denial?

-- 
       "Where am I, and what am I doing in this handbasket?"

Wes Peters                                                 Softweyr LLC
http://www.softweyr.com/~softweyr                      wes@softweyr.com


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