top | item 43048877

(no title)

happyweasel | 1 year ago

IMHO, Deutsche Linux-Distribution (DLD) was the first german linux distribution (first release in 1992).

discuss

order

FirmwareBurner|1 year ago

So it's not just a meme that Germans like to put "Deutsche" in front of every product/company name, it's the reality. How imaginative, the marketing departments who come up with these names must be making bank.

Sweepi|1 year ago

Well who ever came up with "Deutsche Linux-Distribution" most likely did not have a marketing department.

Besides, putting "German" in your product name at the time (199x) actually was a savvy marketing move, especially if you are the first in a particular niche. There were lots of buyers who wanted to buy fully translated software back then, and the sticker "Software and Manual in German" probably is the most successful sale booster of the 80ies and 90ies in Germany.

This of course does not even touch the subject of localization issues, just to name 2 from the top of my hat:

[1]For years (maybe a decade?) Apple maps had issues if you tried to enter an address the "German" way: <Streetname> <Number> instead of <Number> <Streetname>.

[2]To this day websites ask me for "states" in my shipping address. Yes, Germany has states. We mostly dont care about them. No one puts the state in a shipping address. Shops, please stop getting annoyed when I dont know if you expect me to enter a 2-or 3-length string as abbreviation for my state (which you dont need for anything, anyway). VAT is a federal tax, therefore its not different from state to state.

pvitz|1 year ago

That the distribution was a fully translated system together with a thick manual (of course also in German) was the whole point and idea. Your comment is too dismissive in my opinion.

ta1243|1 year ago

So it's not just a meme that Americans like to slap a flag on everything they import from China, it's the reality. How imaginative, the marketing departments who come up with these names must be making bank.

layer8|1 year ago

It literally just meant a Linux distribution with German localization.

hnlmorg|1 year ago

Every country does.

American Express

British Telecom

Etc

skrebbel|1 year ago

I mean, Americans put "National" in front of everything. At least the German version suggests some level of awareness of a world beyond the borders.