I understand that etymologically, it makes perfect sense to pronounce daemon the same as demon because it’s the same word. But I’ll never stop pronouncing it day- instead of dee-, as if it’s a Ferengi captain.
I pronounce it like the German word for demon, Dämon [ˈdeːmɔn] 🔊 because daemon is how Germans would write the word in lowercase ASCII.
I pronounce it da-eh-mon in my head, it sounds more old-timey than “dee-mon”.
Is that because you have a daemon in your brain, swapping neurons to force you to pronounce it wrong?
More likely a DaiMon using a thought maker.
How do you pronounce denut?
Takes a comment instead.
:(
I left a comment about taking one, so it was balanced. Now you’re up one.
Why should I?
Please write a 250-or-more word essay explaining 3 reasons why I should.
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systemctl restart artistd
Demon != Daemon
It took me way too long to learn this, please don’t confuse me.
Liar. Daemon = Demon. There’s lottle red demons in your PC doing stuff
You’re thinking of Gremlins!
A comment
Thank you.
Any background process, routine, or program contributes to the complexity of the overall system, which does indeed contribute to ruin as entropy gradually builds and collapse/death/crashing becomes inevitable.
Which is to say, I agree with these definitions.
Okay.
thank you
If a daemon is an agent of ruin then … Systemd must be … Oh no !
Why is the daemon smoking? Are they taking a break from their duties? Is this what happens when I run
rc-service sshd stop
?thank you for making your art
TODO write a clever comment
The origin for computing is actually documented too.
The term daemon was coined by programmers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Project MAC (Mathematics and Computation) in 1963, inspired by Maxwell’s demon, an imaginary agent in physics and thermodynamics. In a thought experiment devised by James Clerk Maxwell in 1867, a demon would control a small massless door between two chambers of gas, forcing fast-moving molecules to pass through in one direction and slow-moving molecules to pass in the other direction. In Greek mythology, a daemon was considered a supernatural being or power.
https://www.techtarget.com/whatis/definition/daemon
There’s also a response on Virginia Tech’s website from a professor from the group that used the word first.
Your explanation of the origin of the word daemon is correct in that my group began using the term around that time frame. However the acronym explanation is a new one on me. Our use of the word daemon was inspired by the Maxwell’s daemon of physics and thermodynamics. (My background is Physics.) Maxwell’s daemon was an imaginary agent which helped sort molecules of different speeds and worked tirelessly in the background. We fancifully began to use the word daemon to describe background processes which worked tirelessly to perform system chores. I found a very good explanation of all this online at:
I also found this stackexchange post that adds even more context to it.
You don’t tell me what to do!
Sorry.
Or do you? vsauce music starts playing (you made me talk)
smash
hsams
As if there was any doubt.