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06/04/09(Thu)14:02 No.4608543 File :1244138532.gif-(76 KB, 440x360, steve_jobs.gif)
I'd
just like to interject for a moment. What you're refering to as OSX
(oh-es-eex), is in fact, OS ten, or as I've recently taken to calling
it, OS number ten. X is not a capital letter itself, but rather another
roman number of a fully functioning system made useful by the Romans,
later European countries and cultures comprising a full numbersystem as
defined by basic math.
Many people use a modified version of
the roman numbering system every day, without realizing it. Through a
peculiar turn of events, the version numbering which is widely used
today is often of Arabian form, and many of its users are not aware
that it is basically the same as the Roman numbering system, developed
by the Romans.
There really is an X, and these people are
reading it, but it is just a part of the system they use. X is the
number: the sign in the system that allocates the information to the
other systems that you use. The number is an essential part of an
numbering system, but useless by itself; it can only function in the
context of a complete sign system. A number is normally used in
combination with the the alphabetic system: the whole system is
basically the alphabetic system with the Roman numeric system added, or
OSX. All the so-called “OSX” distributions are really distributions of
"OS ten". |