special. You can rename or delete a repository any time you like,
using either the command line or your file browser.
-#### 2.3.1 Making a local copy of a repository
-
-Copying a repository is just a little bit special. While you could use
-a normal file copying command to make a copy of a repository, it’s
-best to use a built-in command that git provides. This command
-is called “git clone”, because it creates an identical copy of an
-existing repository.
+#### 2.3.1 Creating a local copy of a remote repository
+
+As suggested, a repository can be copied through normal file-copying
+commands. But git also provides a "git clone" tool for copying a
+repository. This provides a means of copying a repository over the
+network, and is also useful with a local repository since it is much
+more efficient than creating a normal copy, (creating a local clones
+is blazingly fast).
+
+We've assembled a simple repository that will be used in the examples
+throughout this chapter. Go ahead and clone this repository now so
+that you will be able to follow along:
$ git clone git://cworth.org/git/hello
Initialized empty Git repository in /tmp/hello/.git/