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Re: Technology and historical continuity...



On Thu, Jan 30, 2003 at 11:02:28PM +0000, MJ Ray wrote:
> Not all of England was so hung up on history:
> 
>   The Great Western Railway was created by an Act of Parliament on the 31st
>   August 1835 to provide a double tracked line from Bristol to London, [...]
>   the line was to be of the 7 feet 0inch (214 cm) broad gauge.
>                          -- http://www.greatwestern.org.uk/m_in_gwr.htm

And Toronto's subway uses a different guage, much to the annoyance of
the manufacturer when they order more trains, although the anafacturer
is probably happy to charge extra for the convinience. :)

Besides I though many different gauges had been tried around the world
on smaller lines, but everything that ended of being connected of course
had to match.

> In a victory of inertia and political incomprehension over technical
> superiority, the last of the broad gauge was removed in the 1890s.  This
> story has been played out many times with many different players.  We must
> never let free software be another casualty.
> 
> There, I linked it to Debian ;-)

Besides don't Debian developers sometimes use trains and subways?

Len Sorensen



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