> Message: 1 > Date: Mon, 18 Jul 2011 14:00:49 +0200 > From: Jerome Herman <jher...@dichotomia.fr> > Subject: Re: Lennart Poettering: BSD Isn't Relevant Anymore > To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org > Message-ID: <4e242071.9050...@dichotomia.fr> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed > > On 17/07/2011 15:02, "C. Bergström" wrote: >> On 07/17/11 07:43 PM, Dick Hoogendijk wrote: >>> Op 17-7-2011 14:17 schreef Subbsd: >>>> community decreases. It is a pity that many developers of FreeBSD have >>>> left in Apple, the small part works over {NET,OPEN,DRAGONFLY}.BSD but >>>> as a whole it already absolutely small small groups of people. >>> And do you feel this will be the end of FreeBSD? >> I doubt that *BSD will *end*, but at which point does lack of usage >> make an OS irrelevant? >> >> 1) Is it used in production? If so does it serve a critical role? >> 2) What commercial support options are available? (Also what popular >> commercial/proprietary software are available ) >> 3) How well is it keeping pace with existing sw and hw technologies? >> 4) How focused and productive is the development community? >> >> I have some personal views on the above, but I consider *BSD severely >> lacking in a few areas. (No I can't personally help and only kick >> these questions off from the sidelines) >> >> Software typically exists to solve a problem. What problem is *BSD >> trying to solve? If something serves a purpose then there should be >> no denying it's future relevance. > The problem *BSD is trying to solve (in my humble opinion) is reliable > long term maintenance, from developers and sysadmin point of view. > Linux frequent API/ABI breaks makes it a real hell to maintain. And the > ever changing method of configuration/ever moving location of > configuration files doesn't help. > > *BSD are stable in every sense of the word. > > This of course implies that there are a lot fewer "advanced" features in > BSD than in Linux (by advanced I actually mean hyped). But then again > most of these features end up in the rubbish can with Linux. SE-Linux ? > Realtime ? Hal ? Containers ? You do not want to look in what state they > are in. And you hardly want to learn how to use them as the entire thing > is very likely to change completely before 6 months are passed. > > Jerome Herman > Amen!!
I'm sick and tired of Linux people reinventing the wheel five or six times with very little if any benefit to the end user. Thank goodness for more sensible *NIX types with BSD. _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"