Garfinkel Blasts Linux in Favor of BSDs 29
howardjp writes "Computerworld is running an article by Simson Garfinkel. In it, Garfinkel effectively blasts Linux and the Linux development model in favor of the BSDs and their development model. It is nice to see the BSDs getting the respect and press they have deserved for so long."
Well.. (Score:2)
Whats the point of yelling at eachother?
I don't think "The BSD developers have had different motivations" than Linux developers. We all just want software that doesn't suck, right?
http://www.openbsd.org/ [openbsd.org]
Check out this cool OpenBSD T-shirt [openbsd.org], a shirt any Linux user would be proud to wear.
BSD rocks (Score:2)
I also have FreeBSD 3.4 on another machine and it runs quite well too. Maybe if i wanted every possible service running post-install and a lack of security as well as having the fun of applying the root exploit patch of the week...I would run RedHat. enough said
Re:"Blast?" Oh, please! Give me a break... (Score:1)
Can't we all just get along (Score:2)
Both options are better than an NT/closed-source solution... why can't we all just admit we're happy with what we are, and the OS is suited to what we do?
We'd all be far more productive if we stopped arguing... personally, I'm getting tired of the arguments on slashdot between BSD and Linux. If you don't know which is best for you already, use Redhat - it's simpler to install... if you are an admin of a multi-server, high-availability, high-performance site, then you should have the qualifications and resources to DO THE RESEARCH YOURSELF!!!!!
Can we all stop arguing now please?
"blasts"????? (Score:1)
So did VA/Slashdot get bought out by Rupert Murdock and you never mentioned it?
Re:BSD rocks (Score:1)
I have three SMP machines at work, though, that I'd love to move to OpenBSD on. Given the performance boosts I've seen on my home machine (which has half the processing power of a single CPU at work, and a quarter the RAM), I'd very much like to see the difference in performance at work
Re:BSD developers deserve respect and all, but . . (Score:1)
Re:BSD rocks (Score:1)
Yes, RedHat installs too much crap. But it's considerably easier to uninstall software after installation than to have to explicitly install things like bash.
Re:BSD rocks (Score:1)
"Blast?" Oh, please! Give me a break... (Score:2)
I've read the linked article twice, and I just can't see how anyone would consider it a "Blast" at Linux or the Linux development model. It's one thing to post pointers to controversial articles, but it's an entirely different thing to attempt to stir up flames with a misleading article header like this.
My respect for Roblimo, which generally has been pretty high, now has taken a serious downturn.
Re:"Blast?" Oh, please! Give me a break... (Score:1)
What I was originally trying to point out is that it is pointless us all arguing as to which is better. I'm a BSD advocate, and probably always will be. I've worked on big sites with Linux and it's been a nightmare. I don't know about you, but I'm getting very bored though of the whole slanging match which is counter-productive and has no benefit or effect on the real world.
So, whoever cross-posted it in here and took it out of context deserves a slap, but my words are my own, and the underlying meaning holds true - wouldn't it be better if we put time in writing code than arguing about the granularity of SMP in FreeBSD as opposed to Linux, or how Linux gets more press attention, and how Linux was written by some weird Finnish dude and our BSD wasn't, etc. etc...
OT: What Press? (Score:2)
It is nice to see the BSDs getting the respect and press they have deserved for so long.
<RANT>What I am curious about is how Slashdot seems to secret away BSD articles in the BSD section that have equal merit as any Linux article that graces the main page. For example, the previous BSD-only articles announced 4.0-RC. At the same time, RedHat 6.2-beta was announced (within a day or so) and it graced the main page. Why wasn't 4.0-RC put up on the main page?
If Slashdot is "news for nerds" and "stuff that matters" shouldn't that news be weighted equally? Perhaps a "Linux" section is needed for articles about Linux that don't need to grace the main page. Maybe I should just ignore Slashdot and go read DDN instead. Ok, enough</RANT>
Re:BSD rocks (Score:1)
You're kidding right??????!!!!! I so much prefer FreeBSD's install model [which is probably similar to Slackware's, I guess], where you can explicitly specify which packages you want installed. I just installed RH6.1 and was appalled at the crap it installed without asking me. Or did I miss something along the way? --KN
Re:OT: What Press? (Score:1)
Regardless of this, the BSDs are superb operating systems with a very dedicated developer base; technically superior since they've followed far more coherent development paths than Linux. That said, they don't really _need_ the kind of press coverage Linux gets, since anyone needing the kind of ease of mind they get from *BSD will probably find out about their existence through a bit of research in any case.
Re:BSD rocks (Score:1)
license fees ? (Score:1)
Re:ipv6 (Score:1)
Linux doesn't count because IPv6 is both kernel and userland, and it will only "count" when there is a distribution that includes ipv6-ready userland tools as well as kernel sources that don't need external patches to turn on IPv6.