(07-04-2012, 07:51 PM)schnurbart Wrote: I saw a post not long back that described EF as Published to be something other then hard core or real ie vanilla.
I have atleast used the term 'vanilla' in my posts, but not as you described (real vs vanilla). Then again, I am not a native in English so I might have and often do miss how words are intepreted or what other meanings they might have.
My definition for 'vanilla' simply refers to original, un-touched version. No bias attached whatsoever. As with ice cream: you can't go wrong when choosing vanilla
Allrightie, had a look at the dictionary, and I think I now understand what you meant:
Slang Dictionary
vanilla definition
plain; dull. (See also beige.) : The entire production was sort of vanilla, but it was okay.
Computing Dictionary
vanilla definition
1. (Default flavour of ice cream in the US) Ordinary flavour, standard. When used of food, very often does not mean that the food is flavoured with vanilla extract! For example, "vanilla wonton soup" means ordinary wonton soup, as opposed to hot-and-sour wonton soup. Applied to hardware and software, as in
"Vanilla Version 7 Unix can't run on a vanilla PDP 11/34." Also used to orthogonalise chip nomenclature; for instance, a 74V00 means what TI calls a 7400, as distinct from a 74LS00, etc. This word differs from canonical in that the latter means "default", whereas vanilla simply means "ordinary". For example, when hackers go to a chinese restaurant, hot-and-sour wonton soup is the canonical wonton soup to get (because that is what most of them usually order) even though it isn't the vanilla wonton soup.
--
(emphasis added by me)
There it is, with
wonton soup and everything!
Having worked in ICT industry the
vanilla I was familiar with simply meant the
default or
standard version you get when you buy something. That's how I used it in the context of my posts.
I was not aware it can mean
dull as well.
English language: