FreeBSD to Celebrate 10 Year Anniversary in SF, CA 103
Dan writes "A long time ago, in a galaxy far far away...in the early part of 1993...the last 3 coordinators of the 'Unofficial 386BSD Patchkit' would go on to start the FreeBSD project that has grown to be used by millions of websites and installations around the world. Murray Stokely is talking about Jordan Hubbard, Nate Williams, and Rod Grimes. Looking for a catchy name, David Greenman suggested FreeBSD and it stuck. With the help of Walnut Creek CDROM, the first CDROM distribution, FreeBSD 1.0, was released in December of 1993."
Any Necraft data? (Score:1)
Re:Any Necraft data? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Learning from BSD's mistakes (Score:1)
Much of early linux borrowed from Net2 and 386BSD and later replaced this code.
Linux also had similar growing pains but lack the copyright problems that held back BSD allowing Linux to capture the lions share of the market before BSD was able to be officialy free of AT&T.
Linux has also has simi
Moderation (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Moderation (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Moderation (Score:2, Interesting)
Furthmore, you can't credit Linux with GCC either. GCC is worked on by many many people using many different systems. By your logic, you should be kissing Apple and Sun's butts since they infused quite a bit of help into GCC and GNOME. You should also kiss Troll Tech's butt for QT which let's KDE exist. And of course you should kiss SGI's butt for giving you GLX (part of XFree n
Re:Moderation (Score:2, Insightful)
You cannot credit Linux with the open source movements achievments. Sorry, try again.
The only reason the corporations are using Linux is because of the hype. The only reason Linux is the more popular kernel is due to the AT&T lawsuite that existed when both Linux and BSD were new.
Sure, companies make
Re:Moderation (Score:1)
You are correct if you mean in for the average desktop user. However, FreeBSD has been known to blow linux out of the water with speed. Further more, try on a 2.4 kernel compiling 4 different apps at once, it slows the machine down to a crawl if not locks it up. You'll never see t
Re:Moderation (Score:2)
Journaling file system? BSD has an equivalent. ACLs? BSD has em. Sure, some drivers may be missing, but people could port those over to BSD fairly quickly if the so cared.
The only *critical* feature that you'd be missing is enterprise volume managment. Which again, is a feature born from the corporations, and just happens to have been put into Linux by those corporations. ALSA is also pretty good, but again, this could be ported to BSD as ker
Re:Moderation (Score:3, Insightful)
Slashdot could add a new lameness filter to prevent people from posting comments that contain the words "BSD" and "dead". How often do you really need to use the word dead in casual converstation?
I was originally going to just joke that any comment that contained the word "BSD" should be filtered, but the idea of filtering "BSD AND dead" is not that bad an idea.
Re:Moderation (Score:2, Insightful)
How about:
Oh, wait, that's never going to happen in a billion years.You're right, it won't come up in casual conversation.
Re:Binary patches? Please? (Score:1)
Re:Binary patches? Please? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Binary patches? Please? (Score:2)
I publish binary updates for 4.7-RELEASE and 4.8-RELEASE right now. I will be publishing updates for 4.9-RELEASE as well, and also 5.x RELEASES once I get some new hardware.
This will be integrated into FreeBSD more fully in the future (included in base, upda
Re:Binary patches? Please? (Score:2)
That's exactly one of the reasons I don't want it as part of the project yet. Right now, quite independent of the issue of trusting the *person* building updates, people have to trust the *machine* building updates -- which isn't exactly an ideal situation. Of course, people trust the root CVS repository, but that's something whi
Re:Troll-in-one (Score:2)
OpenBSD 3.2, Pentium 75MHz, 32MB old 72pin EDO RAM, old narrow SCSI 520MB Seagate drive on some old Taiwanese VX motherboard I found thrown out during my local clean-up day:
Time to create 22MB file from
Time to copy that file to same disk: 1 min 17 seconds. (plenty of old head thrashing).
firewall# dmesg
OpenBSD 3.2 (GENERIC) #25: Thu Oct 3 19:51:53 MDT 2002
deraadt@i386.openbsd.org:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/c o mpile/GENERIC
cpu0: F00F bug workaround
Broken 1.0 releases? (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm the reason why the mitsumi CD-ROM driver was broken, and of course Rod had just cut the gold master (and back then it was a major pain to make masters) and could not update the sources.
After about 20 patches, he just just gave me a commit bit...:)
BWP
Re:Broken 1.0 releases? (Score:1)
Circa 95-96
Re:*BSD is not dying (Score:1, Offtopic)
What a useless story (Score:2)
Re:What a useless story (Score:1)
Sco's gift (Score:1)
Rod Grimes (Score:1)