dvd+rw-tools Ported to FreeBSD 62
Dan writes "Matthew Dillon has finished porting Andy Polyakov's excellent dvd+rw-tools to FreeBSD. These tools support DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R, and DVD+RW format dvd burners, including the popular Sony 500A, which he has bought himself. He says that these tools should work on a wider variety of burners than the half-broken GNU dvdrecord tools work on."
rejoice (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:rejoice (Score:2, Interesting)
dvd+rw-tools locks my machine half the time...
made about $30 worth of coasters so far
not being free is a DEFINITE bummer though
Re:Isn't it funny that *BSD has to port everything (Score:5, Insightful)
No, it isn't funny. That means that most programmers are using OS specific syscalls in their programs. It's a terrible thing to do, yet the Linux community does it constantly...
Release a program that only works on the BSDs, and watch the Linux users come out in arms like their first born has been slaughtered... I really hate hypocrites.
Re:Isn't it funny that *BSD has to port everything (Score:2, Insightful)
You are also saying that there are no people that promote and/or support a Linux program that don't care that it doesn't run on another system, but are upset when a program doesn't work on their system?
I beg to differ.
Re:Isn't it funny that *BSD has to port everything (Score:5, Funny)
I did that once by accident. Usually I test my software on a Linux distro before making a release, but I didn't do it once. I had QNX installed on my extra partition and didn't want to wipe it out. So I just released it.
I realized my mistake about twenty minutes later when the bug reports started coming in...
Re:Isn't it funny that *BSD has to port everything (Score:5, Informative)
Not necessarily. I count 8817 ports in the tree right now, of which only 4663 have local patches.
In many cases, the "port" is used as nothing more than a convenient front-end to the package system.
Re:Isn't it funny that *BSD has to port everything (Score:5, Insightful)
Besides, I never said that all software was system specific, but a LOT of it is. Additionally, many programs that were originally OS specific, but someone wrote patches, and the author integrated them into the main tree instead of requiring patches in the port.
Another instance of the word "port" being insanely over-used...
Re:Isn't it funny that *BSD has to port everything (Score:3, Interesting)
Isn't the English language great?
Re:Isn't it funny that *BSD has to port everything (Score:1)
Maybe it can check all the port holes on the port side of the ship, but, of course, only while the ship is in port.
Re:Isn't it funny that *BSD has to port everything (Score:2)
Re:Isn't it funny that *BSD has to port everything (Score:2)
OpenSSH
Re:Isn't it funny that *BSD has to port everything (Score:5, Insightful)
Otherwise I'd say the *BSD community has been moving along fine, and wuold have with or without the existance of Linux or GNU. Look at applications such as MySQL, Apache, and clustering software. People have been using BSD since before the invention of Linux, somehow they survived without "ersatz hacks" (crazy german) If a troll is killed by a falling tree in the forest, will anybody miss him?
Re:yay (Score:1)
i swear, i love *bsd
dvd+rw-tools == dd(1) (Score:3, Informative)
Tried it some time ago under SuSE 8.something, worked.
- Hubert
Re:dvd+rw-tools == dd(1) (Score:3, Informative)
Re:dvd+rw-tools == dd(1) (Score:2)
- Hubert
Re:dvd+rw-tools == dd(1) (Score:2)
half-broken GNU dvdrecord (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:*BSD is dying (Score:1)
Sorry if this is off topic (Score:2)
Matt (Score:1)