http://www.eweek.com/print_article/0,3668,a=43861,00.asp

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June 23, 2003
Is It Time for BSD?

By  Jim Rapoza

The intellectual property claims of SCO against Linux are very
likely to backfire. But SCO's aggressive legal tactics have
still put a chill on Linux deployments. In many cases, upper
management and corporate lawyers have been spooked by SCO's
scare tactics and are putting the kibosh on Linux usage until
the smoke clears.

However, the alternative is not necessarily Microsoft Windows
for servers and applications. There are other open-source
operating systems that in many enterprise implementations have a
better track record than Linux. What's more, these operating
systems have already survived the legal trial by fire that Linux
is enduring.

The operating systems I'm talking about are all members of the
BSD family. Without getting into too much historic detail, BSD's
origins go back to the 1970s, when it was developed at the
University of California at Berkeley and became known

as the Berkeley Software Distribution. The BSD code broke plenty
of new ground, especially in incorporating TCP/IP, which
contributed strongly to the growth of the Internet.

Also, because the BSD license is much more open than the
standard open-source GPL, much of the code in BSD found its way
into other operating systems. However, in the 1990s, BSD found
itself in a similar, and in many ways worse, situation to that
of Linux today.

Instead of facing legal action from a company like SCO�which
many outside of the tech world would be hard pressed to
identify�BSD was under attack from AT&T, which was trying to
control the rights to Unix.

The case ended in the mid-1990s, when it was discovered that
AT&T had illegally placed BSD code inside Unix (will history
repeat itself?). However, during much of the time that BSD was
under legal threat, its adoption slowed and tended to feed the
increasing interest in Linux at that time.

If you believe that an open-source operating system makes sense
for an IT project, the BSD family deserves your attention. The
three main BSD operating systems are FreeBSD, NetBSD and
OpenBSD, and all three can be downloaded for free at their
respective Web sites (just add .org to the end for each Web
site). All have superior security, scalability and networking,
and while they are very similar in many ways, each has unique
strengths.

OpenBSD is the most secure of the BSDs and in my opinion is the
most secure operating system, period. For details, take a look
at eWEEK Labs' June 2 review of the operating system (Page 58).
NetBSD has been designed to run on almost any platform, from
handhelds to ancient computer systems. FreeBSD is probably the
most Linux-like of the three, with good third-party application
packages and user utilities.

But no matter which one you choose to run, you are guaranteed to
get a very reliable and secure operating system that's ideal for
firewalls, Web servers, application servers or almost any
enterprise application. Also, while they don't tend to have as
many applications as Linux, the BSD operating systems can
generally run most Unix and Linux applications in emulation
mode.

Probably the biggest weakness in the BSD operating systems, for
those seeking an everyday operating system, is the lack of good
desktop applications. However, the BSDs have plenty of strengths
in back-office applications. And if you really want a BSD-based
system that has an excellent�maybe even the best�desktop and
user application environment, there's always Mac OS X, which is
based on BSD.

I firmly believe that when all is said and done in and out of
court, Linux will be fine. If you're not facing any corporate
friction about deploying Linux, there's no reason to stop.

But if you're facing foot-dragging on Linux from corporate
bosses thanks to fallout from SCO's suits, you can still pursue
an open-source option through any of the BSDs.

And if you were just shopping around, just considering Linux and
hadn't looked at a BSD, you may want to reconsider and do some
comparing between the systems. You might find that a BSD will be
a better fit.

East Coast Technical Director Jim Rapoza can be reached at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Copyright (c) 2003 Ziff Davis Media Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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