←back to thread

Origin of 'Daemon' in Computing

(www.takeourword.com)
236 points wizerno | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
twobitshifter ◴[] No.41895073[source]
Do you pronounce it as demon or like Matt Damon?
replies(4): >>41895179 #>>41895682 #>>41895755 #>>41906311 #
dcow ◴[] No.41895179[source]
I believe it officially is pronounced the same as demon. But colloquially I hear a lot of (and sometimes find myself using) “damon”.
replies(1): >>41895528 #
whartung ◴[] No.41895528[source]
I’m in the Matt Damon camp. Always pronounced it that way, never really gave it much thought. Just seems “right” to me.
replies(2): >>41895827 #>>41896995 #
JadeNB ◴[] No.41895827[source]
And now we can perhaps hash out whether the `lib` in `/usr/lib` is pronounced with a long or short 'i'. I hope I'm not the only one who pronounced it the first way with no real thought, and never noticed until I heard someone else say it with a long 'i' that that was obviously the logical pronunciation.
replies(2): >>41896449 #>>41896881 #
brianmurphy ◴[] No.41896881[source]
I have always pronounced lib like the word liberal.

I was mind-blown the first time I heard someone pronounce etc as "et-see".

et-see rolls off the tongue so much better than ee-tee-see that it makes perfect sense now.

replies(1): >>41900337 #
1. emmelaich ◴[] No.41900337[source]
I've pronounced it as `etcet` as short for `et cetera`. But that's probably my Australian habit of shortening everything.