what counts as a distro

joel_feila@lemmy.world to Linux@lemmy.ml – 48 points –

With that recent post about chrome os not counting as a distro of linux. It does bring a good question, what is a distro of linux?

If Linux is just a kernel then android and chrome os are Linux. Bur no really considers android a distro of linux. So linux is more then a kernel.

KDE say that neon is not a distro but doesn't really why neon is not but kubuntu is.

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Windows

Uhhh, well I'd say it's more like a hypervisor if we're really pushing it with WSL

Windows distributes Linux, through its repositories, ergo Windows a Linux distribution.

What does it do with it then – acts as a hypervisor or sings its source aloud backwards – is an orthogonal question.

What does it do with it then [...] is an orthogonal question.

Hm, ok if we take the word "distribution" for it lexical meaning then maybe, although wouldn't that be "distributor"?
In this field "distribution" is the set of things that constitute the software package, by extension, in the case of free software, it is more a synonym of "flavor" since anyone can redistribute with their own changes added on top. You wouldn't call a supermarket a Cocacola distribution, it's a distributor, but the drinks themselves are the distributions (tho in my mind "distributed" sounds more fitting at this point).
If having a system of OS and server, both property of one maker, where the server distributes a form of an OS x (even just the source code) and the client OS can download those files, make the OS a distribution of x, then I can set up a computer with e.g. OpenBSD (with my own modifications to make it mine) that downloads an Ubuntu ISO from my server, then I load up that ISO into a virtual machine and now I magically turned OpenBSD into an Ubuntu distribution??

::: spoiler Me OMW to argue my pointless argument Explaining my pointless argument :::

You wouldn't call a supermarket a Cocacola distribution

Only because it's kinda unconventional to buy oneself some Coca-Cola by purchasing an entire supermarket.

I would still call a combo meal "a Coca-Cola distribution", and whoever sells it to me a "Coca-Cola distributor".

I can set up a computer with e.g. OpenBSD (with my own modifications to make it mine) that downloads an Ubuntu ISO from my server, then I load up that ISO into a virtual machine and now I magically turned OpenBSD into an Ubuntu distribution??

my server

You're now a distributor of Ubuntu (regardless of the OpenBSD-based thingie), and your version of OpenBSD is an Ubuntu distribution. If, however, your hypothetical OpenBSD-based distro pulled all the Ubuntu bits from ubuntu.com, it would've been just an distribution of an Ubuntu installer.