Wind River To Stop Selling BSD/OS 396
David writes "According to an article on Bsdnewsletter.com, OS company Wind River has said it will be stopping sales of BSD/OS on this December 31st, and product support exactly one year thereafter. Only 15 more weeks to grab the final 5.1 update before this piece of history might be gone forever..."
So it is confirmed then? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:So it is confirmed then? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:So it is confirmed then? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:So it is confirmed then? (Score:2)
Flow, as in river of blood?
Re:So it is confirmed then? (Score:2)
The article should be titled (Score:3, Funny)
Just a little cubicle humor.
Idea to rename the last BSD/OS version (Score:5, Funny)
Joke (Score:5, Funny)
A: A funeral.
Hardly any BSD users used BSD/OS, anyway- (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hardly any BSD users used BSD/OS, anyway- (Score:2)
BSD/OS is 2k! Of course no home enthasist is going to run. But a business is a different. Also BSD/OS I think had jail and better smp scalability for years. Infact it may still be better then 5.0.
Re:Hardly any BSD users used BSD/OS, anyway- (Score:2)
It's a pity but maybe now they will be nice and donate the code the freebsd project like the previous managment said they would.
OTH hand it is wind river so probably not. I can dream though...
Okay, okay... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Okay, okay... (Score:5, Funny)
It's almost as bad as the "Apple is dying" nonsense that's been going on since 1984.
But wait a minute...Apple's OSX runs a BSD variant....omg! IT's TRUE! IT'S TRUE!!!!
Re:Okay, okay... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Okay, okay... (Score:3, Funny)
Yet another crippling bombshell hit the beleaguered "*BSD is dying" community when the latest Netcraft survey plainly stated that *BSD accounts for nearly 2 million active sites, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. The "*BSD is dying" trolls are collapsing in complete disarray.
Fact: "*BSD is dying" is dead
Re:Okay, okay... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:This is offtopic, but I have to ask (Score:2)
Re:This is offtopic, but I have to ask (Score:3, Informative)
This is a running joke that has been going on for a very long time. BSD's imminent death has been greatly exaggerated more than once, and this joke is poking fun at that fact.
On Slashdot, this has evolved into a troll, which you can find information about in quite a few places.
Everything2 has some general information on "BSD is dying" [everything2.com].
Wikipedia has this to say about BSD is dying:
Re:This is offtopic, but I have to ask (Score:2)
Who is crazee enough to fill those shoes today? I guess we'll be saying the same about "Darl McBride" in 2007.
Re:This is offtopic, but I have to ask (Score:2)
OOG, Hot Grits Guy, Haiku guy, and yes, even goatse.cx and Penis Bird guy are part of this entity we call slashdot. The germ of the idea was created by Taco et. al., but what made it work, what made it fun to read and post were the
Man, I still have a BSDI box in the closet (Score:2)
That was back in the day when Solaris/X86 2.5 just wouldn't load on any PC that I had.
The app I needed only ran on BSDI and Solaris PCs (wahh, they now support Linux though).
Ahh, those were the days. I even coded up all the CGIs I needed in C (blech).
M.B.
That was quick (Score:5, Interesting)
The whole house was wired up for geekiness. They had terminals in various places and plenty of computers. The AV room had massive speakers, a projection screen, and tons of components. Outside, there was a RCA DSS dish, which had been on the market for less than a year as I recall.
In one of the hallways there were a few gold CDs of various releases in picture frames. At the time, they were still working on the 2.0 release (first one called BSD/OS as opposed to BSD/386, if I remember correctly), so there were only a couple up there.
They certainly seemed to have their business affairs in order. Now here it is and their company has been eaten by another, and now the former flagship product is being killed.
I shut down my last BSD/OS system almost 4 years ago and moved to Slackware, so it won't affect me. I just wonder what happened to them when things were obviously quite good at one time.
Re:That was quick (Score:2)
I think they want to sell FreeBSD for alot cheaper since BSD/OS was very expensive and has limited enthusian and hardware support. They will continue support contracts but FreeBSD is where they make all their money in.
I hope they do well with FreeBSD in the future.
Re:That was quick (Score:3)
Unfortunately, a year or so later Windows NT swept down upon our group like a plague of management-mandated locusts. When the dust settled, our BSD/OS desktops were gone. I was sitting in front of a windows NT workstation, trying to convince myself that the SCO X server I had duct-taped on top
Re:That was quick (Score:2)
BSD Dead? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:BSD Dead? (Score:2, Interesting)
From a users' perspective, there should be almost no functional difference between using a BSD machine, a Linux machine, and a commercial UNIX (Sun, HP-UX, etc) machine. All of the differences that I have seen have been in adminstration. So, even if BSD is dying, Admins will be the only ones to really notice.
Re:BSD Dead? (Score:2)
There is someone here with a pretty good sig that sums up the Linux vs. BSD comparison, so I'm going to steal it.
"BSD is for people who love Unix; Linux is for people who hate Microsoft."
Re:BSD Dead? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:BSD Dead? (Score:2)
Me Too!
I cringe visibly whenever I have to admin a Linux box now.
Re:BSD Dead? (Score:2)
Re:BSD Dead? (Score:2)
it's really more a matter of preference for many things these days. The apps are the same - Samba, Apache, postfix, GNOME, KDE, etc. They run great on Linux, and they run great on FreeBSD (and the other BSDs, I assume, I just haven't tried them pesonally). I can't stand the BSD toolchain, others love it. I think GNU rocks, some people loathe it. So be it! "Let one thousand flowers bloom" and all that - it's all Free Software, so we can live and let live.
SMP (Score:4, Interesting)
SMP? (Score:2)
Seemed obvious (Score:5, Interesting)
In any case, I do not feel that this is a significant loss. The major BSD development is happening in FreeBSD and NetBSD, BSD/OS was never a strong contender.
None the less, this does clearly demonstrate what happens to software that is owned by closed source companies.
Re:Seemed obvious (Score:2)
Not dead, just homeless. (Score:5, Funny)
Please expect this fine OS to be smelling a bit ripe at your nearest highway exit ramp with a sign that says "Will boot for partition space".
Commercial Arm (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Commercial Arm (Score:3, Informative)
Ah, the memories... (Score:5, Interesting)
No, I didn't hack it... It was the first server I admin'd that got hacked (circa 1997).
I was a network guy in those days and somehow inherited the admin of that machine (running Livingston Radius!) and managed via unrestricted telnet.
All of my unix experience came from having installed Redhat *once* as a lark, but since in the land of the blind the man with one eye is king, I was it.
I remember seeing all those funny named process in the top display, doing a search on Altavista and then begining to panic.
Eventually we switched over to FreeBSD and Solaris and my interest in unix (and hopefully, my knowledge) grew from there.
Re:Ah, the memories... (Score:2)
Re:Ah, the memories... (Score:2)
Re:Ah, the memories... (Score:2, Informative)
Why on earth would someone crack and trash a system? There goes the neighborhood.
We switched the mach
Speaking from ignorance here... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Speaking from ignorance here... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Speaking from ignorance here... (Score:2)
Re:Speaking from ignorance here... (Score:2)
Re:Speaking from ignorance here... (Score:2)
It should be AH-1Z Cobra chopper.
Re:Speaking from ignorance here... (Score:5, Informative)
We use several of their products at my company to develop MCF5407 systems. Not that I'd buy WR products again though...
Actually, they're really a "aquire and kill" company...over the last several years they've gone on a major aqusions binge, and many of the products of companies they've aquired (mostly competitors, and often with superior products) they've either let stagnate or killed outright.
Re:Speaking from ignorance here... (Score:3, Funny)
I prefer SCO's policy of "Aquire and Rape" to WindRiver's more liberal leanings.
Re:Speaking from ignorance here... (Score:4, Interesting)
There are very few reasons, from a technical perspective, to use proprietary operating systems instead of GNU. Especially with the new Linux 2.6 kernel (with pseudo-real-time capabilities and the uCLinux MMU-less additions), there are more and more reasons to move away from proprietary RTOS for most embedded applications.
Re:Speaking from ignorance here... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Speaking from ignorance here... (Score:2)
There are very few reasons, from a technical perspective, to use proprietary operating systems instead of GNU.
How about the fact that the Linux kernel is geared towards desktop and server machines, and as a result it's very hard to strip the kernel down to a reasonable size? Linux isn't a "one size fits all" solution, and projects like uCLinux are only applicable to a small subset of embedded projects. Another problem with Linux from an embedded developer's point of view, is the regularity with which ke
The full letter (Score:5, Informative)
Who used BSD/OS? (Score:2, Interesting)
Was BSD/OS popular before the free BSDs? I see on their site that they have some information about embedding BSD/OS -- is there a piece of hardware we might all know about, or is it more for internal hardware projects?
It had one heydey... (Score:5, Interesting)
Anyway, make a long story short. Gauntlet ran Solaris, HP-UX, and BSDI, because it actually modified the kernal and several peripheral systems to make it more secure.
Well, it was geared to a specific release of BSDI. I suspect this was one of the big sellers, and when Gauntlet essentially died of old age (and a company that had no interest in keeping its customers), BSDI lost a big chunk of the market.
Then you add the rise of the really "Free" BSD's and Linux, and that pretty much ended it.
But I'll say that BSDI was one of the most robust, forgiving, stable platforms I ran; a fortune 1000 company ran its entire email gateway systems on a pair of BSDI 4.x boxes running a customized FWTK proxy. They only reason it was retired was because the new guys were only Windows literate and BSDI scared them.
Anyway, I can't say enough good things about BSDI.
Re:It had one heydey... (Score:5, Interesting)
At one point, I seem to recall that Wind River were acquiring Walnut Creek or otherwise taking on the publication of FreeBSD. Whatever happened to that? It seems like they poured blessings all over FreeBSD, then didn't reap the benefits of resultant FreeBSD's growth.
Re:It had one heydey... (Score:2)
What I meant... (Score:2)
The support from NA was at its best poor. At worst, it was a rip-off.
Re:Who used BSD/OS? (Score:2)
Was BSD/OS popular before the free BSDs?
It was mature long before the free BSD's were, and as a result gained a foothold in the ISP market when the Internet started to expand. You could also get the source for what was a comparatively reasonable license cost at the time, (early to mid nineties). As an example, Stephen's seminal "Advanced Programming in the Unix Environment" was so informative in part because of the authors ability to poke around the BSD/OS source code.
Chris
It's important to keep perspective here (Score:5, Insightful)
Free and Net BSD will continue to serve our community alongside of Linux as always, completely unaffected by today's announcement.
Re:It's important to keep perspective here (Score:2, Informative)
Also, BSDi has given code up to open source in the past, the BSD auth system being the largest of these contributions.
Re:It's important to keep perspective here (Score:2)
You mean like this:
Commercial Vendors - Consulting [freebsd.org]
Consultants for hire [netbsd.org]
?
What about F5 BigIP and 3DNS? (Score:5, Interesting)
I wonder if they will try to maintain BSD/OS themselves or migrate back?
Re:What about F5 BigIP and 3DNS? (Score:3, Insightful)
Who cares? The value of hardware depreciates very quickly. When Intel processors were at about 100MHz, 500MHz Alpha machines were going for $100,000. Now, you can grab them for $300.
Where's it go? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Where's it go? (Score:2, Funny)
it will probably be copied into the linux kernel.
Re:Where's it go? (Score:2, Insightful)
As for the extinction of BSD/OS, well, when I heard a rumor that it was coming, I credited that rumor pretty strongly. When WR came along to buy us (I worked for BSDi at the time) I was skeptical of th
I still love BSDi (Score:3, Interesting)
Of couse now we are moving to FreeBSD and Linux, but it's sad to see an old friend reach the end of it's life. There were a lot of great things in BSDi (like the IPFW firewall syntax - it rocks) but I guess all good things must come to an end.
Fiarwell, my old friend.
Par for the course (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Par for the course (Score:3, Informative)
In May 2000, they bought AudeSi [bizjournals.com] for $40,000,000 and Norwegian company ICESoft for $25,000,000
In April 2001, they bought the software assets of Berkeley Software Design Inc. [bizjournals.com]
There's an interesting quote from Business Week [businessweek.com] at this time.
owning the assets of an open-source software company doesn't guarantee gaining access to the talent of programmers in the open-source community
Rather not surprisingly, in January 2002, they sold FreeBSD [com.com]
Re:Par for the course (Score:2)
Many Linux developers would look unkindly on a company that played dog in the manger with code. And it might make them a rather hard market to sell into.
OTOH, they could infuriate the BSD developers no end by GPLing the code. To the extend that FreeBSD and NetBSD and OpenBSD have influence, that could make *them* a difficult market to sell into.
OTOH, they could just put the code
Re:Par for the course (Score:2, Interesting)
Personally, I started using VxWorks almost 10 years ago and always considered it a decent OS. Sure, it's just one big memory space, but in a lot of ways it's a good sol
Re:Par for the course (Score:2)
Re:Par for the course (Score:2, Interesting)
Right, because of all the embedded development sales opportunities that were going towards BSDI??
Let's review. Was BSDI a highly successful embedded operating system? Was BSDI known for being used in realtime and/or small-scaled operating environments across tens of architectures?
Answers: No, no, and no.
Aside: pSOS was bought for tools and customer acquisition. It was a buyout ISI was actively interested because their company was taking on water rapidly. I mean, sure, WRS wouldn't mind eliminat
I Won't Miss It (Score:2)
FreeBSD (Score:2)
Japanese BSD (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Japanese BSD (Score:2, Informative)
BSD is certainly used here, but Linux is much more popular and better known to the public. Of course, Windows and Office is still the default for most people and businesses, though.
*BSD is alive and kicking, news at eleven (Score:5, Informative)
Wind River had trouble dealing with the BSD thing for a long time. Keep in mind that their aim was *embedded* stuff, not the UNIX we all know and love.
In that regard, their announcement is just a move back to a market Wind has been more successful in.
I, too, knew the end was coming when I was one of the five people that received a pink slip in January, and I was (and I still am) worried about what happens to the people left behind. I hope they do well; some have troube dealing with the loss of something they've worked on for a decade or more.
Of the five that have left, many have found a new place, but some are still looking. If you're looking for some *real* good folk, ping them. (I work at a leading Dutch security company now).
I've had a *wonderful* 6 years at BSDI/Wind, and would like to thank the people I've worked with (including customers) for making it happen.
BSD development will continue, it will just happen elsewhere. May the source be with you.
Geert Jan
BSD/OS dead (Score:2, Informative)
We used to run BSD/386 back in 1992 and used BSD/OS upto about 4.1. Around that point BSD/OS started to lag behind in the fast pace of development, but most importantly, in support. When you pay tens of thousands of dollars for licenses with no visible return you tend to start looking for alternatives.
We switched our whole ISP (now around 600 servers) to FreeBSD with little hassle.
It's a shame
*BSD isn't dead in Japan. (Score:2, Informative)
You can see BSD Magazine [ascii.co.jp] and much more
Which to buy? (Score:2)
What to buy...what to buy...hmmm [windriver.com]...hmmm [freebsd.org]...just can't decide how much I'd like to spend! I need to get my hands on a copy of BSD to host my site! Stat!
Re:Stop selling WHAT? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Stop selling WHAT? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Stop selling WHAT? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Good riddance. (Score:2, Informative)
Ummmm. FreeBSD? OS X? Come on now, with OS X, we have a flavor of FreeBSD that is now the largest shipping *nix in the world.
Re:Good riddance. (Score:2)
It is strange that Apple would choose to tout that their OS is based on 4.4BSD
Oh! You were trying to be funny! OK, but you really need to post at a higher level in the topic if you want your message to be seen.
BSD and OS X - good points (Score:2, Insightful)
This topic came up today, and a Unix guy who is programming a MacOS application was there. I asked him, "How much of BSD is used when a normal user uses MacOS X?" (Meaning no terminals). After thinking a moment, he answered "None."
Now he may have missed some odds and ends, but given his background and the fa
Re:Good riddance. (Score:2)
Not true. For performance reasons, Apple uses Mach as a monolithic kernel.
It is an absolutely ridiculous claim that the GNU tools are better than the BSD tools. In fact, the paper you link to does NOT include BSD-versions of the tools in their comparison.
Re:Good riddance. (Score:2)
Re:What A Surprise (Score:2, Interesting)
That's fairly subtle, considering the events of the last day or so. Bravo, and, I think, a point well made.
There are differences, of course, between publicly consumed intellectual property, like music, and sector-targeted intellectual property, like software: Differences in support requirements, public perception of traditional ownership and rights, the respective industries' take on enforcement and public relations, and the kinds and scope of typi
Re:What A Surprise (Score:4, Insightful)
(Sorry to respond to this troll but I feel I must)
You shouldn't -- if you want the program you're using to die, that is. Volunteer OSS projects needs funding; after all, people have to eat and pay the bills you know! Everyone who wants OSS to suceed to should, as often as is possible, either buy physical items (like cdrom's manuals and the like) or donate money to keep the project(s) alive. It's in your best interest if you use the software, and it's also fair to the authors. An exception to this would be if a project is already well-funded (quite rare) for instance if IBM was paying every kernel hacker a decent salary to work on the kernel.
Voluntary donations drive so many of our most precious social services, like charities, public television and radio, and Free Software. Hopefully in the future it will drive artists to produce music. I've always wanted a p2p program that would have a button on the side when you're downloading a song that says "click here to give $1 to the artist.".. but that's going a little off-topic.
Donating is better (Score:2)
Re:What A Surprise (Score:2)
I think you forget all the gov aid most large corps have had, either in tax cuts or direct money like the farmers.
Heck some companies, like united fruit, even get military aid.
Re:huh? (Score:2, Funny)
That's the point. BSD is dying.
*ducks quickly*
Re:A legit question (Score:2)
BSD/OS is (was) the closed source BSD.
Hopefully it will mean a few more people to help with the opensource projects
Re:how can a piece of history be gone forever..... (Score:2)
Re:Give it a rest, Kevin (Score:2)
And for you by the sounds of it. Grow up you prick, everyone on here is sick of your stupid posts.