Happy 100000th birthday, Debian

(lists.debian.org)

99 points | by pabs3 4 days ago ago

17 comments

  • esseph 5 hours ago

    I will always have a soft spot in my heart for Debian. It always seemed the most true to a lot of the early Linux/OSS principles.

  • tra3 an hour ago

    I can’t remember why I picked Debian in early aughts but I’m glad I did. Happy birthday!

  • trenchpilgrim 4 hours ago

    Debian isn't always my first choice, but it is my favorite choice when I build systems that need to stand the test of time.

  • reactordev 4 hours ago

    Happy birthday Debian, RIP Murdock, it’s my go to distro for headless.

  • germandiago 4 hours ago

    Congratulations! Love what this project has done for software. It is amazing.

  • Yhippa 5 hours ago

    Deb and Ian

  • WD-42 4 hours ago

    Debian is a gift.

  • kazinator 5 hours ago

    Great Scott! A reminder in the nick of time.

    Happy #b10000, TXR.

    August 2009 - August 2015.

  • pcloadlett3r 4 hours ago

    100000nd* birthday

    • jibal 2 hours ago

      binary one-zero-zero-zero-zero-zero th

  • zevisert 5 hours ago

    It's not linguistically correct for Nth to be used with a binary number, right? It's not like we would say 0b10nd, would we?

    I mean, I get the intent with Debian's post, and I think it's fun! I'm more curious if there's other suffixes to use for this kind of thing when it's not base10

    • jibal 3 hours ago

      100000th is syntactically correct. That it's semantically binary rather than decimal is the joke.

      > I'm more curious if there's other suffixes to use for this kind of thing when it's not base10

      No, of course not ... why would there be?

      We don't say oneth, twoth, or threeth, we say first (1st), second (2nd), and third (3rd). For all other digits and numbers not ending with 1, 2, or 3 we use th. So zeroth (0th), tenth (10th), hundredth (100th), hundred thousandth (100000th). Stick 0b in front and it's 0b100000th.

    • phyzome 4 hours ago

      All that matters is the last digit, so "th" is correct. In binary you would just have _th and _st.

    • lotyrin 4 hours ago

      I don't think this happens enough for us to be able to derive descriptive usage, never mind prescriptive rules.

  • andyferris 4 hours ago

    I am definitely having a birthday party when I turn 1,000,000. :)