[geeks] A Real OS? (was: Re: my capitalization.. etc.)
alex j avriette
avriettea at speakeasy.net
Sun May 19 10:47:27 CDT 2002
> Didn't Sun make the move from BSD with Solaris?
i dont think that the current solaris is really either bsd or sysv. you
can see traces of either in lots of places.
> I have read through the Linux source code. I agree that the
> coding isn't the best, but it does support the hardware I
its a crude (but i think effective) test to do something like this:
cd /usr/src
grep -d recurse fuck * | wc -l
or use whatever term of anger you choose. last i checked i had 1800 hits
on the linux source tree and <200 on the openbsd tree. generally such
comments are inserted when something isnt working. just read through
them and see what you find. i prefer working in the bsd tree.
>> Remember that Sun used to -ship- a BSD derivative and that at least
>> one of
>> Sun's founders -created- BSD, back when BSD was just a set of userland
>> utilities.
>
> And yet Sun is on the bandwagon.
i think youre missing the point. i think what pete and i have been
saying is that linux is just finding itself coincidentally in a bit of
hype. had the hype happened four years ago, wrt free operating systems,
linux just wasnt ready, and something else (i'm guessing netbsd) would
have been used. linux is not an ideal operating system for any of the
hardware its being sold on (except x86 stuff dell and others are selling
it on). it does however have the name recognition it needs to be sold --
and thus make money for Sun and IBM. its even a little sexy. and thats
what its about. not the fitness of linux for any particular task. i
should forward you an email a friend of mine sent me from his boss. the
gist is, he installed openbsd on their firewall boxes (in place of some
lame commercial product). the boss sends an email to the department
saying that "$friend has installed Linux (OpenBSD) on our firewall
boxes, and they are more secure now than they were, and theyre FREE!"
anyhow, you get the idea. they dont know, nor do they care what theyre
using. its all about the hype.
> If they'd put all this together and drop the ego trips then
> you'd have the best of all three. Instead you have to use
geeks? ego trips? naaaah...
> The BSDs need more hardware vendor support, too.
no, they dont. what makes linux suck is how over-extended it is
supporting everything. if they would just flatly say "no, we're not
going to support joebobs backwoods video card," the code wouldnt be in
your kernel config and it would be easier to know your kernel. the
developers could focus on more important things. linux supports
everything. but because they support everything, they support nothing
"well." except i guess the intel/amd x86 platform.
> What *BSD has over Linux is the lack of the Stallman disease.
do we really want to get into a bsd vs linux war?
> Why the BSD groups aren't working with major companies to get
> them to realize this I don't know.
perhaps because they realize that the more hype there is the lower the
quality of the OS will be. there's an openbsd faq on this that says,
sure, be an advocate, but openbsd is not for everyone and will not oust
X os on the desktop.
> prefer SysV init files and layout. I'd really prefer to
ick.
> use Solaris x86, but give me a BSD with support for my
> hardware and I'll switch in a heartbeat.
hm. i need solaris for mips.
alex
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