USENIX Reports 69
bruce writes: "O'Reilly has just put up a page with conference reports from USENIX. The BSD BoF session sounds like it was pretty interesting, lots of info there." Yes, "*BSD is Dying" posts are up 75%, thank you very much.
Re:Hi, you're full of shit (Score:1)
That's pretty comical. Uninformed, but comical. Windows developers invest time in the Windows platform because it actually makes them money. See, you can actually make a profit creating Windows software, as opposed to Linux software. That's their justification.
Oh, and there you go telling fibs again. Windows developers are the ones who go around belittling everyone? Dude, most Windows developers don't even give a rat's ass about Linux developers to belittle them. Just because they're ignoring your latest whine of the hour doesn't mean they're belittling you. They just have better things to do than listen to the paranoid rants of the mental lightweights who account for most of Linux's "voice." Now, if you're not aware of Linux advocates propensity to bitch about everything and everyone not associated with Linux or GPL, you're living in a dreamland. Either that or just trying to fool people.
Ahh, and about Perens -- are you just guessing, or telling more lies for the readers? Perens said that the BSD guys were dupes because they had the nerve to release code under the BSD License, thereby giving anybody the freedom (remember that word, Stallman fanboys?) to do what they want with it, and not care who uses it. So again you're wrong, Perens's statement had nothing to do with making deals with Microsoft, but hey, nice try.
Re:Hi, you're full of shit (Score:1)
I'm a windows developer, not a linux developer (in the semi-embedded space). I've noticed atrocious cognitive dissonance effects among embedded windoes developers when presented with (a) linux or (b) the even better (for embedded systems) QNX.
It is possible to make money on linux, particularly in the embedded space. The people who can't make money on linux tend to be the pure-software-only houses... And good riddence to bad shovelware, I say.
Re:anti-bsd posts up 75% on slashdot!!!!! (Score:2)
Then by the same logic.... (Score:2)
intolerant. In fact most power *users* of any following are. It's part of the reason that there are 3 *BSDs.
Given there are over 180 Linux versions, then using your statement, there are MORE rabid Linux users. All pushing 'thier' version.
The 'BSD is dying' gal doesn't help, nor does the
Win2K Server (Score:2)
We don't know how many servers it's taking to power all that do we? There might be twice as many Windows 2000 boxes driving that load as there driving Yahoo.
(Yahoo is second to MS according the Media Matrix - http://www.mediametrix.com/data/thetop.jsp)
I'll admit that Windows 2000 is better than Windows NT 4 - However it's not nearly as stable as Linux or a BSD in my experiance.
Re:Win2K Server (Score:2)
My Windows 2000 install does two strange things.
1. Leaving it running with no open Applications running, it slowly starts to page into virtual memory alot - after 24-36 I have to reboot.
2. For some reason it will cause my motherboard to give me an overheat alarm, even though Red Hat running on the same box will not. The overheat problem just started a couple months ago.
Dispite those issues...it's a better Windows...not that that means much
From 4 to 7 ? (Score:2)
So what if there are 7 "anti-bsd posts" ??
Statistics folks, statistics !
75% is an impressive number, but remember that after your second installation of any OS you have done 100% as many as the day before !! (assuming you won't do them both on the same day)2 C3AF4F2snlbxq'|dc
--
echo '[q]sa[ln0=aln80~Psnlbx]16isb15CB32EF3AF9C0E5D727
Re:anti-bsd posts up 75% on slashdot!!!!! (Score:2)
The Linux users' group in Portland, OR many years ago renamed itself to the ``Portland Linux/UNIX Group", & the mailing list has carried threads about other flavors of UNIX like Solaris, AIX as well as *BSD since then. (We don't get as many posts about *BSD because, I guess, there are older, more established lists that can answer those kinds of questions faster.
And my ISP has ran on FreeBSD for the last few years -- & if I had a problem with his choice of UNIX flavor, I wouldn't still be using my shell account there on a regular basis.
Geoff
Re:Win2K Server (Score:1)
Definitely agreed that we can't be sure on the total cost per page served, etc (there should be a TPC for active-content webpages...or is there?). I have found Windows 2000 to be incredibly stable as a core OS (in other words I have never seen a BSOD or any critical fault on 2000, nor has it slowed down over time or shown any metric that there is an appreciable resource leak), however there are some things that irritate me. For instance previously explorer.exe would crash probably twice a day on me (which would necessitate a task manager/kill process/run process explorer.exe cycle), though with SP2 that has disappeared (I think it's related to ICQ's constant cycling of the toolbar icon), however that is not even remotely a critical OS fault and it would have zero effect on a server.
Re:scariest thing (Score:2)
Indeed, it may be speculated that MS _need_ the server-side .NET on BSD, because Win2000 sure isn't up to the amount of traffic MS's own .NET servers will be able to take :-) - chances are, they'll use BSD servers identifying themselves as win2000 (they've done it before...)
Windows 2000 can handle as much or more traffic than any other server. Microsoft.com, one of the most trafficked sites, is Windows 2000. Unfortunately there are lots of clueless newbies out there who fuxxor the system up significantly and then claim that "Windows 2000 sucks!", but you learn to filter that out.
It's already screwed up - C# itself might be "standardised", but without the full implementation of the .NET APIs it won't be very useful
To port the .Net Framework would be a massive bitch because that Framework largely relies upon the underpinnings of the Windows platform (which is why the framework hasn't been submitted to any universal authority). For example OLEDB, MSMQ, security ACLs, etc. I am very impressed at how amazingly comprehensive the .Net Framework is, and it might shut-up the anti-Win32 wankers out there (bah who am I kidding? Those wankers haven't bothered with facts since day one, so they'll still be going strong).
Re:anti-bsd posts up 75% on slashdot!!!!! (Score:2)
I will say that I am a big Linux supporter, but the reason that I am a big Linux supporter is because Linux has been around for a long time, it is a PC UNIX-like O/S that has enabled me to not see BSODS for a really long time. It has also helped me understand the O/S's that run on high performance computers and thus get better jobs when I had gotten out of school.
I had gone to work for a company after school that used FreeBSD on its build servers, building large data warehouses for web publishing. I programmed for/administered these machines. I like FreeBSD a lot.
I now teach people how to be Solaris admins (in an official, Sun supported way). I like Solaris a lot. Some of the things that Sun Hardware and Solaris does on things like their Starfire machines is out of this world.
The virtual server that I run my web site on (okay there isn't anything to the website, but I've written some cgi's that run on the webserver) is BSDI. I've had an account there for over two years now and the system has gone down once for any noticable amount of time. That's cool.
Now here I am a Solaris instructor, liking Solaris a lot, but not considering myself a SunOS zealot. I just happen to know a lot about it. I still run Linux on my desktop (past 6 years), as I said first because I was sick of BSODs, but now because linux has better device support than any of the other PC based forms of UNIX (and because I'm sick of BSODs). I don't run Linux on my desktop because I want it to take over the world, I run Linux because it runs well. If I ran a local server I would probably run something like FreeBSD, but for now I have no need for that. I run Linux because I want relatively good device support on an O/S that is somewhat similar to what I have to work with every day in my classes and that doesn't crash so often. Typically my system only goes down now when I have to move locations or when I have to upgrade the kernel.
I'm not a linux zealot, I'm not a UNIX zealot, but I refuse to run Windows.
---
"Everybody knows the moon's made of cheese."
Re:scariest thing (Score:2)
The point that OS X doesn't use X Windows is totally valid. Porting the
Re:anti-bsd posts up 75% on slashdot!!!!! (Score:1)
Slashdot won't do that because it would embarrass the whole "Linux is taking the world by storm!" crowd to see that even at the biggest Linux propaganda site on Earth, most people still use Internet Explorer. I wish someone would put the question to Taco sometime when he's speaking, so that he can't just duck it the way he does here. Must be that "new journalism" thing. ;)
Cheers,
Re:BSD is living (Score:1)
Re:scariest thing (Score:1)
Anyway, the simple fact remains, MS have not exactly proven themselves trustworthy in the past
So far, they have a set of client side
Re: Mac IE (Score:1)
Re:scariest thing (Score:1)
Re:scariest thing (Score:4)
Indeed, it may be speculated that MS _need_ the server-side
So MS's plan seems to be Windows on the client, BSD on the server for real reliability, and Win2000 on the server for the real suckers...
See the discussions on this article [slashdot.org] for more details.
Remember, microsoft-man speak with forked tongue...
Indexing Service (Score:1)
yes, the Indexing Service is a beyotch. I'm a Win32 developer, so I use VC all day. I've had compilation failures because the Index Service decided that it should index (and lock) the compiler's intermediate
at least the Indexing Service is not as bad as Office's FASTFIND.EXE.
BSD SMP support (Score:1)
Okay, *BSD so far lacks SMP support (except in Darwin/MacOS X).
btw, FreeBSD has supported SMP since FreeBSD 3.0 [freebsd.org]. Yes, its SMP support has been weak (ala Linux 2.0), but FreeBSD 5.0-CURRENT has much better SMP support [freebsd.org] (ala BSDI).
Re:BSD is living (Score:2)
You answered the question yourself:
"and built a new GUI with some nifty features"
A new GUI with nifty features is NOT a trivial undertaking. After all, how long have people been trying to do this for UNIX? Decades. Did any of them match OS X? Nope.
NO PLANS TO PORT OS X TO x86 HARDWARE!
Actually Darwin, the UNIX bit of OS X does run on x86.
Mac OS X requirements (Score:1)
Obviously, this isn't a very technical explanation. If you're not running Classic frequently*, a G3/400 + 128MB DIMM ($899 + ~$50) should be very comfortable. At 256MB, you should be very happy regardless of what you run.
There are some aspects of the OS that take additional resources because they are much more complex than equivalents in Mac OS or the typical X11 window manager. For example, under Quartz, every window has a backing store, which takes a bunch of memory. Additionally, Quartz considers the compositing attributes of all windows on the screen before rendering, which is what enables the transparency features -- although this means it takes slightly longer to render. Quartz also anti-aliases all text sent to the screen. But the results (for apps that use Core Graphics for text) are several mangitudes better than what I've seen on Mac OS 9 or Windows
Apple is taking advantage of advances in hardware to provide new functionality to users and developers. These parts of the OS are very new, and still have room for optimization. It's also been said that Quartz does things that video cards are not used to accelerating, so everything is being shifted to the CPU. Both of these issues will improve over time.
As of today, there are plenty of areas of Mac OS X that perform substantially better than their Mac OS 9 counterparts. Virtual Memory is vastly better, the Java VM is not only worlds faster and stable but supports JDK 1.3, OpenGL is faster, file I/O is generally faster, TCP/IP is faster. The biggest problem areas are Quartz and Carbon, which are the newest core pieces of the system.
I imagine a plain Darwin installation running XFree will probably perform very similarly to some sort of BSD or Linux distribution on the same hardware. But you're not going to have a lot of things that are present in full-fledged Mac OS X. You will ultimately trade off functionality and features for resources.
(* Classic is the Mac OS 9 compatibility environment for Mac OS X. It's very well integrated with native apps, but has an unending hunger for system resources. As more native apps show up, the less need there will be for Classic, and memory requirements for running a given number of apps should drop dramatically.)
All those nifty little things like the genie effect take loads of CPU
Type this in the terminal:
defaults write com.apple.Dock mineffect scale
Rather than the relatively "expensive" genie effect, this gives you a very simple animaton when you minimize a window.
- Scott
--
Scott Stevenson
WildTofu [wildtofu.com]
What BSD provides to OSX (Score:2)
BSD is a major part of Mac OS X, but it's not like Apple took FreeBSD and slapped a GUI on top of it. In Mac OS X, BSD provides:
- The process model (PID, signals)
- Unix security model (users, permissions)
- posix threads
- BSD sockets
- unix tools and libraries
Apple created:
- Quartz: window server, graphics library, 2D rendering, printing system
- Cocoa: incredible object-oriented development environment
- NetInfo (open source): Mac OS X's distributed auto-configuring network services system
- OpenGL implementation
- Java implementation
- QuickTime - used for all kinds of graphics stuff
- Carbon: APIs that Mac toolbox apps can be ported to to take advantage of modern OS features (represents a HUGE amount of work on Apple's part)
- Classic: An environment that allows the vast majority of exist Mac applications to run on Mac OS X
- All the system-level and user-level glue that allows all this stuff to work seamlessly together for the masses
Mac OS X's kernel is a modified version of Mach 3.0.
- Scott
--
Scott Stevenson
WildTofu [wildtofu.com]
Re:BSD is living (Score:2)
Hrm. FreeBSD has always booted much faster for me than any version of Windows I've ever run. Man, 4.0-RELEASE was just damn snappy booting.
--
SecretAsianMan (54.5% Slashdot pure)
hard-core technical issues (Score:4)
Re:anti-bsd posts up 75% on slashdot!!!!! (Score:1)
Damn right you'll get modded down. I'm not commenting on this thread because the last time I got involved in a thread posting my honest opinions, I got modded down by the Slashdot rank and file for "trolling" (which I wasn't...see the Jargon File entry [tuxedo.org] for the correct definition) to the point that I was actually censored: my account was disabled.
I've given up on Slashdot as a place for honest discussion. If you dare to post opinions counter to the Slashdot orthodoxy, you're slammed and censored.
--
BSD rants and raves (Score:2)
Re:Sun Micro forced to make native jave for FreeBS (Score:1)
Dive Gear [divingdeals.com]
Re:BSD folks do evangalize, don't kid yourself (Score:2)
Many more BSD users are less vocal about their beliefs; it also seems to me that those who tend to say "linux sucks" have been "on the BSD bandwagon" for a lesser amount of time and want to separate themselves from their Linux past. It's really no different than the Freudian defense mechanism of reaction formation.
To conclude, if you're going to judge BSD users on the vocal ones, you're going to judge them all on Brett Glass et. al. That's not fair. We're all pretty vocal if you ask us about BSD, but most of us don't have a desire to shove BSD down the throats of others. If you want a real impression of BSD users, base it on productive discussion on BSD mailing lists (sure they get out of hand sometimes.. nobody is perfect) and NOT slashdot, linux news sites, or even IRC.
Re:scariest thing (Score:1)
Re:anti-bsd posts up 75% on slashdot!!!!! (Score:1)
Re:anti-bsd posts up 75% on slashdot!!!!! (Score:1)
Re:anti-bsd posts up 75% on slashdot!!!!! (Score:5)
There are zealots everywhere -- hell, I know people who go absolutely rabid if you get coffee from Starbucks instead of Seattles Best -- but sometimes it just seems the Linux users could learn a thing or two about tolerance from their *BSD cousins.
Sun Micro forced to make native jave for FreeBSD (Score:1)
Re:anti-bsd posts up 75% on slashdot!!!!! (Score:1)
anti-bsd posts up 75% on slashdot!!!!! (Score:2)
Re:BSD is living (Score:1)
It doesn't matter. The license matters.
Re:anti-bsd posts up 75% on slashdot!!!!! (Score:1)
that's Maynard's "cute" way of refering to the GPL
s/"cute"/accurate/
It is viral. I've seen GP* supporters come out and say it is viral as well and maintain that that is a good thing. Jay is merely saying it is a bad thing. If you actually bother to look through his postings you will also discover why he thinks that is a bad thing. Why not have people choose a license with their eyes wide open? If someone really wants to GPL, fine. But a newcomer should not be led to believe that GPL is the One True License... at least not without seeing alternatives and then making up their own mind. I see no men of straw in his statements.
Re:anti-bsd posts up 75% on slashdot!!!!! (Score:2)
It's part of the reason that there are 3 *BSDs.
And while someone in #freebsdhelp on efnet is just as likely to be running mirc on win2k (using a freebsd NAT box) as they are BitchX in an xterm, the universal sentiment is that 'Linsux' really sux, hence the preponderance of @linuxsucks.com et al dns tags.
What Linux *does* have is a high fad/hip/cool factor which leads to lots of bandwagoning... and banbwagoneers tend to be rabid (vapid) ignorant users (zealots).
Re:anti-bsd posts up 75% on slashdot!!!!! (Score:2)
Re:Then by the same logic.... (Score:2)
The
Re:Sun Micro forced to make native jave for FreeBS (Score:1)
"native port of the Sun JVM in progress"
NB: I still wonder, why Sun doesn't release a "reference" open source implementation of a JVM if they want "the Java platform" to become a wildly adopted standard...
Re:Sun Micro forced to make native jave for FreeBS (Score:1)
> who knows what kind of changes people might make?
And when they start implementing their VMs from scratch, because they have no reference implementation (see kaffe), this will not happen, yeah right!
Remember: It has worked for TCP/IP (4.2BSD), it would have worked for Java too. A missed chance IMHO.
Clue: (Score:1)
Every single BSD advocate I've met or read articles by has not only been zealous, but rabidly so, to the point of insulting every other operating system or point of view. Things like the GPL being "viral" and GPL software authors "stealing from the community", the Linsux line, the widely-distributed picture of Chuck raping Tux, and other such things don't paint a picture of a "tolerant" community to me.
OTOH, I find that a vastly larger percentage of Linux users and developers are polite, approachable, helpful, and provide well-balanced opinions. The loud-mouthed detractors of Windows, BSD, and whichever DE/WM they don't use are a definite minorty.
BSD people I find to be even more zealous and rabid than Windows users, and that takes a lot.
Yes, BSDs are technically superior to Linux in many ways. And I'd be surprised if it weren't - not only are they older, but their development heads often had more experience with managing development (from what I've seen). So they've got the technical excellence, and some good dev teams, but the community that's grown up around them tends to be very hostile and exclusionary.
But posting something that doesn't critcize Linux, the nebulous "Slashdot mentality", the even more nebulous "Linux community", RMS, ESR, or the GPL is an easy way to not only get moderated down, but to attract endless flames, so I've no clue why I'm doing this...
-RickHunter
Re:BSD is living (Score:1)
Lets ask Google what it thinks. (Score:2)
Search for: "Linux sucks":
Results 1 - 10 of about 2,320. Search took 0.62 seconds.
Search for: "BSD sucks":
Results 1 - 10 of about 32. Search took 0.11 seconds.
I rest my case.
Re:Lets ask Google what it thinks. (Score:2)
Operating System Sucks-Rules-O-Meter [zgp.org]
From their page:
This operating system quality and approval metric is based on a periodic AltaVista search for each of several operating systems, directly followed by "sucks", "rules", or "rocks".
there's also one for programming languages [earthlink.net] and some other things - check out the bottom of the first page.
-f
Re:Sun Micro forced to make native jave for FreeBS (Score:1)
Because Sun wants to force all VMs to be 100% compatible with the specs. With an open source VM, who knows what kind of changes people might make?
Legal threat from openssh.com toward openbsd info? (Score:1)
Why I'm looking for more info as I though that the openssh project was closely tied to openbsd. If I'm mistaken it still makes no sense. The openbsd project has been around much longer than that of openssh.
Anyone have more knowledge of this or some links? Thanks.
Re:Hi, you're full of shit (Score:2)
Folks, here's the thing: if you're going to create a software startup, here's where I think your profits are going to come from in the future:
-games
-vertical-market applications
-consulting
Linux is just fine for any of those settings.
/Brian
All extremists may fuck off now. Thank you. (Score:2)
The vast majority of Linux and BSD zealots are either idiots or doing a massively effective job of trying to look like it. This is the same sort of reason that I respect politicians like John McCain and Jim Jeffords -- principles are all well and good, but they aren't going to get things done when an agreement has to be reached.
The fact is that the BSD people are sharing because they feel like sharing, and the GPL people are sharing to make a point. I side more with the GPL people myself (mostly because I don't want my own code abused) but I really have no problem with either side.
The technical issues involved are not at issue here, are they, really (except when dealing with Windows)? Okay, Linux is obnoxiously ad hoc in places. Okay, *BSD so far lacks SMP support (except in Darwin/MacOS X). Neither one fits an OS guru's idea of "purity" (again, except for Darwin/X and xMach). The fact is that technical arguments are as bad as political arguments for being vague -- a little PR can turn any stupid design into a feature with enough mindbending (witness Apple's proud declaration of the early 90s that they didn't like DMA, or old-line DOS zealots talking about being able to replace memory managers as if there wasn't actually a need to do so).
I don't think the zealots are getting us anywhere. RMS has essentially shot his mouth off into irrelevance; ESR (though I don't consider him a zealot, really) is close to doing the same thing. Theo De Raadt puts out an excellent OS, but he's fast becoming a laughingstock for his attitude. Meanwhile we've got companies like Apple and Sun who are in fact contributing back and instead of praising them for getting a start and politley encouraging them to get in step with the community they're serving, the zealots rip into them for biting the hands that feed them.
(Let me let you in on something: of course they've got an agenda. It's called making money. Shut up, take what they'll let you take, and tell them (not us) what else you want. Enough pressure, they will listen.)
The fact is that I support both Linux and BSD, and it's not just because I'm Mac/Unix bytesexual. At the end of the day, these two sides will be the survivors when everything else has gone to hell, simply because they're the only ones guaranteed to still be out there in a form that someone can pick up and run with ten, twenty, fifty years down the road.
One rant from a rabid middle-of-the-roader,
/Brian
Re:BSD is living (Score:1)
other reply stuff:
My BSD boot deals with several network daemons so it can be a little slow at times (compared to Windows boot... but windows doesn't serve apache during boot now does it)
"It doesn't matter. The license matters."... thank you for saying that... I hope Apples license gets better so that we can call this all open source.
Once more I will say Apple good job (or Jobs), and that this is not a negligable undertaking... but by itself they don't have an OS and so there should have been credit to BSD in that quote (that is what I meant.... but when you post at 2AM you really can't be held accountable for saying stupid things)... well until next post
BSD is living (Score:2)
now to reply to the real post:
Apple took BSD and built a new GUI with some nifty features to make the Mac community accept it. Don't get me wrong I love BSD and I think that OS X will be good for it. But really how much did Apple do here?
And yet again there is the shadey sound of Windriver playing with words about FreeBSD. It isn't possible for them to OWN FreeBSD, but watch them overstepping their bounds guys.
Still trying to get at Mitnicks encrypted data (read porn) eh big bro?
Because you know that the goals of Open Source software projects are purely evil... they were planning on trying to sell back the name and then dominate the world muuuaaahhahahahahahah hah ha ha ha ah ahhh ahhha ah....
yeah I seem to recall the boot being a little slow when I last booted a month ago... of course Microsoft has already got the golden pair... fast boot so you can crash sooner.
I really hope this leads to them competing on who can donate the most money to Open Source.
I seem to recall Hotmail switching from BSD to 2k (so thats why my email got so much slower and less predictable)
Damn, I guess I won't be doing the OS-X benchmarking then.
woohoo... I am a java programmer, and while some many people around here hate java support of it will promote Open Source
I wonder if StarOffice will come bundled for a little of taste of Microsofts own medicine (but IE MUST come preinstalled)
"Peace, Love, Linux" -Leo Laporte, TSS [thescreensavers.com]
Re:anti-bsd posts up 75% on slashdot!!!!! (Score:1)
When you compare Linux zealots to everyone else, you are really comparing GPL zealots to everyone else.
GPL zealots believe that the GPL is the One True Way. You can't have a One True Way and not hold everything else in low esteem.
The GPL represents a philosophy about the right way to live. Some people may think software licenses are trivial, but it is the details which combine to form the big picture.
You cannot expect tolerance. A programmer should not tolerate bugs. A GPL zealot should not tolerate BSD-like licenses. The GPL grand plan is not as effective when they exist.
This is the mindset of the GPL zealot. I should know, I am one.
And you should not buy Starbucks coffee because Starbucks follow unethical business practices. Why are people not interested in ethics? Ethics are all we've got to distinguish ourselves from animals.
So perhaps you'd rather we all just forgot about ethics, and tolerated wrong-doing.
BSD folks do evangalize, don't kid yourself (Score:2)
I have one word for you: BULL
When I was writing my book, Linux IP Stacks Commentary for Coriolis, I took pre-publication copies of the book to the THINK conference and let people there paw through them. Let me summarize the reactions I got, by "class":
Admitted Windows Fanatics (AWFs): "I don't understand any of this. Where is the Visual Basic?"
Macintosh Evangalists: well, they didn't say anything -- they were too busy reading and in most cases taking notes. One of them got violent when someone tried to pry the spiral-bound book out of his hands. Fortunately I was able to satisfy the curiosity of the newcomer with another copy that I had held back for just such an eventuality.
Sun advocates: "Hey, this doesn't look anything like the W. Richard Stevens books." (The pre-publication proofs didn't have the dedication in the front, so at that time no one was aware that we authors had a double dedication: To Jon Postel, Primary Mover and Shaker, and to W. Richard Stevens, the guy "who illustrated TCP/IP" for all of us.)
BSD mavans: "Hey, why are you writing this crap about Linux? BSD is way cooler [I refuse to spell this last word the way the BSDfolk tend to say it] and needs more press!" When I point out that the Stevens books already document the NET3 implementation, which I understood to be the core of the BSD stack, they replied "well, we need more bookshelf space devoted to BSD."
There were other, less-easily catagorized responses, which is why this doesn't add up to 100. :)
"We just love UNIX"? Then why is the ONLY hate mail I've received about the book (aside from regular demands to write a second edition covering the 2.4.0 stack) come from *BSD folk? Why does the only mail that contains the word "traitor" come from people who profess allegiance to the Little Red Devil? NOT ONE MEMBER of the fruit group, not one member of the Gremlins-for-Gates parade, not one member of the three-letter-word SUN fans, not one member of the Amiga/BeOS niche-dwellers have written a discouraging word.
(And the really, really funny postscript to all this: I'm bring up a NetBSD box here for some consulting work, because the client insists on it. No rationale based on fact. I'm not kicking, mind you, because NetBSD will do the job.)
Re:BSD is living (Score:1)
I agree. While OSX was in development, Apple would publish documentation on ADC [apple.com] about their progress. The developers ran into many problems due to the huge differences between UNIX and the old MacOS. Some of the problems were related to HFS volumes, application resource forks and the concept of moving files anywhere and not having the application break. These are things many Mac users take for granted and probably haven't even thought twice about under OSX. I wish Apple had archived those docs because they were a pretty good read.
Re:anti-bsd posts up 75% on slashdot!!!!! (Score:2)
Besides, the zealotry of much of the Linux crowd has turned off way too many IT managers out there to start with. I know I'll get modded down for saying this, but some Linux supporters have an attitude that reminds me of things said in the Communist Manifesto. (shrug)
Re:anti-bsd posts up 75% on slashdot!!!!! (Score:1)
What the hell is Objective C++? (Score:1)
A search on Google and Darwin's search page turned up nothing useful. But then I came across this Objective C FAQ [faqs.org].
It says that Objective C++ is a co-mingling of Objective C and C++ syntax that is accepted by Apple's compiler.
I always thought that Darwin used gcc with the objective-c syntax engine. Maybe the Apple complier is something new. Does anyone know the history of this?Python seems to rulez more than Perl, says TPJ (Score:1)
It runs every hour and says Python rules 18.1 over Perl's meager 4.9. Ironic, but at least they are honest.
It also says VB sucks. Which is no surprise. Unscientific surveys have shown a decline in VB jobs and usage with a rise in Java.Re:anti-bsd posts up 75% on slashdot!!!!! (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Opiates (Score:1)
This has got ot be the first time I've seen an educated sports reference in an otherwise purely computer related article. That he went to a Socks game @ Fenway is not a big suprise. But he knew that the Devil Rays sucked [yahoo.com] . I'm impressed.
Re:Opiates (Score:2)
I fail to see how responding to something that was in the article can be off-topic. Would the coward that modded the parent down explain to me why he/she chose to do so?
Re:All extremists may fuck off now. Thank you. (Score:1)
The modern zealot kiddies have picked up where the old lumbering commercial UNIX firms have left off, turning minor technical or philosophical differences into a religious civil war.
The fact is that that nearly all Unix systems are 95% identical from a user interface point of view, and that while there is no single OS "UNIX" anymore, the fate and popularity of various Unix OSes are intimately linked together, against proprietary minicomputer systems in the old days, and against proprietary personal computer system now.
Yet, we have major divisions over twiddly little details such as the thread implementation or the init scripts. This ripples outward until you have the jihad kiddies essentially committing fraticide against each other, and the Unix platform as a whole. Not to mention the OSS licencing issues which have always been more of a debating point (with Microsoft now taking the stand) than anything more than normal due course to developers.
This entire attitude comes from the false idea that platform growth is zero sum game. Every X user is one less Y user, etc,etc. (You can be sure that Bill Gates doesn't see the computer market this way!) Therefore, if you can't convert Windows users to your Unix, it pays to wage a civil war against other Unix users.
This wouldn't be so much of a problem if there was zealous advocacy of and interest in the growth of the Unix platform as a whole, because the technical and cutural issues would be seen in context. Until people start looking at the big picture, the ongoing fraternal flamewars will continue to hurt the platform.
Re:scariest thing (Score:1)
Problem in a nutSHELL: (Score:1)
I am against M$. Yes, I am. I use Win2000 on my workstation & tops @24 day uptime, wich isn't 1/2 of the OpenBSD box, or 1/15th of the Linuxbox's. Win2000 may, or may not have a BSD TCP/IP stack in it. But according to the Duke Of URL's postings a LONG time ago, Linux 2.2 & 2.4 beat 2000, which makes me believe that either BSD needs work, or 2000 needs work.
1. Chinese food. No soul food here.
1. I'm no punk bitch !!!
2. I'm no punk bitch neither !!!
Ooops. (Score:1)
1. Chinese food. No soul food here.
1. I'm no punk bitch !!!
2. I'm no punk bitch neither !!!