Wind River lays off FreeBSD developers; Q&A
In the interests of full disclosure. I'm also nik@freebsd.org, although not a WRS employee. I was employed by BSDi in Europe, before the European team were laid off as part of the WRS acquisition. These questions were answered by WindRiver's PR department.
Q: WRS has already been through two rounds of layoffs in the recent past. Why this third set of lay offs now? Are the FreeBSD developers the only ones affected?
Wind River has only had two rounds of layoffs. During the second round Wind River decided to divest itself of the FreeBSD project. We spent several weeks looking for a suitable corporate sponsor but did not find any company with sufficient interest and financial capability in this challenging economy. This week's layoff of the FreeBSD employees is therefore Wind River's "final option" in executing the plans set in motion by the second round of layoffs.
Q: WRS currently own the trademark "FreeBSD". Do WRS plan to retain the trademark? If so, why? If not, will WRS let the trademark lapse? Or are there plans to transfer it to a third party, such as the FreeBSD Foundation?
Wind River plans to ensure continuation of the altruistic, open stewardship of the FreeBSD trademark. We feel strongly that the FreeBSD project must be protected and encouraged and that a FreeBSD trademark in the wrong hands could be very detrimental. We continue to search for the best solution. No specific third-party has yet been determined, but transfer to a suitable third-party is the leading option being considered.
Q: WRS own the "bsd.com" domain. Will that be retained?
Possibly. Wind River will continue to invest in BSD/OS and participate as a highly interested member of the *BSD community. As such, the bsd.com domain may be important for Wind River. We are weighing this against the needs of the *BSD community and hope to resolve the issue later this month.
Q: What's happening to the "FreeBSD Mall", at freebsdmall.com?
freebsdmall.com continues to operate and take orders, and all new and existing orders from customers for FreeBSD 4.4 or other products will continue to be fulfilled. Wind River is still evaluating its long term options and strategy for the FreeBSD Mall, but plans to maintain its presence and service either internally or externally.
Q: As part of the BSDi acquisition, WRS will (presumably) have picked up customers who had subscribed to the BSDi CD sets of FreeBSD. Will WRS continue to service those customers, or are their subscriptions now cancelled?
Like all customer contracts, subscription orders will continue to be fulfilled.
Q: BSDi (and, it seemed, WRS) had made some headway in producing additional FreeBSD boxed products to go in to the retail channel. Will WRS continue to do this?
Wind River is currently continuing activities to promote FreeBSD 4.4 through the retail channel. Future FreeBSD releases will probably not be produced or distributed by Wind River.
Q: Will WRS continue to produce the usual 4 disc CD sets of FreeBSD, including one for the recently released FreeBSD 4.4?
Yes, for FreeBSD 4.4.
Q: WRS had been funding work on the FreeBSD Handbook, in order to print the second edition in the near future. [ Disclaimer, I'm co-editor of this work, along with your employee, Murray Stokely ] Will WRS continue with plans to print the second edition of the FreeBSD Handbook?
Wind River will encourage any stewards that emerge to take on FreeBSD publication to complete and publish this work.
Q: WRS houses the "FreeBSD Test Lab" at its Alameda campus. Will WRS continue to host this facility?
No. Some equipment from this lab will be transferred to Yahoo! which hosts much of the build structure equipment for FreeBSD, as well as the primary CVS source repository and main FreeBSD mail server. Wind River does not plan to maintain the FreeBSD test lab at its Alameda, CA headquarters.
I would like to preface this by saying that *BSD is NOT dying.
Thank you.
.sig wanted: Must be concise, funny, and display my cleverness.
Just wondering but after leaving a project like the ones these developers where do you guys think they will land. Gnome? IBM? RedHat? Some other branch of *BSD?
Seems a waste of some talent, someone here has to have an idea where this level of development team would be headed.
Neck_of_the_Woods
#/usr/local/surf/glassy/overhead
I'd like to know.
// Agent Green (Ian / IU7 / KB1JQO)
// IEEE 802.3: All 10base Are Belong To Us
<TROLL>
I'm a troll. I like Slackware. Slackware rocks my world.
Wind River didn't treat Slackware nicely.
After Walnut Creek CDROM become BSDi and then became Wind River, Slackware got the short end of the stick.
Luckily, Slackware found other means of support (distribution channels, CD pressing, order processing, FTP space and bandwidth) quickly enough to survive.
</TROLL>
No I'm not bitter. I just like Slackware!
-Tom
What happens to "free" OS's when corporate greed^H^H^H^H^H financing (the so-called saviour) takes over? Corporations traditionally gut anything not making money - what's to become of the carcass?
satire, n: 1) witty language used to convey insults or scorn; 2) a form of humor lost on most slashdot moderators.
This is sad...
But how does this affect to the future of FreeBSD? The FreeBSD is, after all, an open source project and will continue to evolve with or without commercial support. Right?
What I'd like WRS to do is this:
In short, if they are *not* interested in FreeBSD, which seems to be the case, they should just let it be. As others have pointed out, Wind River was mainly interested in BSD/OS, the closed-source BSD. They have got what they wanted, so firing people makes sense... Unfortunately.
The right to offend is far more important than the right not to be offended. (Rowan Atkinson)
Wind River: a fitting moniker for a company whose committment has dried up and blown away.
-- @rjamestaylor on Ello
Ok, a silly question from somebody who doesn't really follow *BSD:
Is there any chance of some consolidation in the *BSDs? I always thought it strange that there were three of them, but then I don't really know the history behind it.
I'm all in favour of competition, but four free Unix-like OSs (Linux + 3 * BSD) does some a little much to me.
It is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail. - Abraham Maslow
FreeBSD has met far greater challenges than this one (check out the history between 1.0 and 2.0 :)) and will continue to leverage a superior operating system.
:D
;)
As i look through the commits, it seems development is even going faster than ever
Cheer up guys, FreeBSD will overcome
- Company of bright people gets bought by larger company.
- Larger company fires everyone from smaller company.
- Smaller company no longer exists, nor does their product nor whatever research they were doing.
This just seems awfully wierd to me. It seems to me like you still have the same bunch of people open, aand they collectively have whatever money was used to buy them out; Why don't they just immediately reform back into the company they were? Sometimes there are intellectual property concerns, true, but not if the company subsisted primarily on research or if (like dynamix) they just got completely finished with a product and it was time to start on something else, or if their product is *cough* available under the BSD license. (Except it looks like what happened here was that there was a company that existed to create funding for FreeBSD, and a larger company bought it, took the bits that created funding, and stranded FreeBSD without either funding from them or funding from the funding mechanisms FreeBSD had created.. is this accurate?)I'm not sure what my question was. I'm just looking for comments on what seems like an odd issue to me, and wondering if anyone could try to show me why that if you're a small company with something actually sellable, it wouldn't at this point be a really foolish idea to trust another company enough to let them buy you. Given that you seem to have little proof that you're doing anything other than quietly signing your company out of existence after a three month grace period. I mean, if you just want to get rid of your products and logo, you could sell those things independently of the company itself.
Unless the reason these companies actually get bought is that some larger company wants to destroy a smaller company before they innovate themselves into being a competitor.
Unless the reason these companies get sold is that the CEO wants to quit, and he can get more money by steering the company into being sold than he can in a severance package.
Someone closer to the industry want to explain to me what is happening here?
So, WRS has divested the majority of its expenses related to FreeBSD, but will still sell merchandise and profit from it. Anyone know if they plan to contribute financially to the project based upon revenues/profits from the CD sales? Let's Hope...
100 or so unix gurus laid of at HP labs in NJ. X developers laid off from Wind River Systems. FreeBSD is dead and/or dying, HP/UX is dying, what is going to happen of the rest? Are these new employees skilled in unix-like OS programming going to move to other unix-likes? Windows? Mac (I guess technically a unix now)? Or will the the tumble merely continue, taking Solaris and linux, leaving Windows and the toy (Macintosh) standing?
As an unemployed unix C programmer, I'm worried.
ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
Comment removed based on user account deletion
This makes little sense to me. The whole beauty of FreeBSD vs. Linux (to me) was the simplicity. I didn't want distros and rpms and a gui install and all the other crap that came with Linux when I was installing a server. How hard would it be to just maintain the current tree and work only on the really important server features, bug fixes, and essential drivers?
I suggest the FreeBSD community forks FreeBSD, GPLs it (possibly with a modified GPL to support the advertising clause, where necessary), and then continues to maintain FreeBSD by porting new Linux drivers, fixing bugs, and if there's enough manpower, adding server-only features/performance enhancements. Yahoo used to run a lot of FreeBSD machines. I assume they still do. Yahoo combining efforts with the FreeBSD community (utilizing the GPL to try to coax a little more sharing) could do it.
I'm going to look into how realistic this (forking and GPLing) would be right after I finish hitting submit.
ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
Since FreeBSD is not hardware, it cannot become the new Amiga.
(Excuse me while I wait 20 seconds to post...)
There is another small BSD offshoot in the name of emBSD. It is a stripped down version of OpenBSD and its primary objective is to create a firewall and/or router using as little hardware as possible (ideally with not moving parts like a hard drive).
ZERO ZERO ONE ZERO ONE ZERO ONE ONE! Just brushing up for my next big invention: Ethernet over Voice (EoV)
suitable corporate sponsor but did not find any company with sufficient interest and financial capability in this challenging economy.
Ummm Isnt Apple's OSX built on FreeBSD?
Ahhh the trappings of the BSD license, you do the work - someone else makes money by stealing it.
Idiots and trolls, please post your 'FreeBSD is dying' messages here, so that they may be summarily ignored.
This has always confused me as well. If these are the real goals of the divergent branches, why not call them FastBSD, XBSD and SecureBSD respectively... or something to that effect. The current naming system seems like every other abusive overuse of popular catch words: they sound good but they lack meaning and in the end are generally confusing to the public.
Mod this guy up!
I wish I could say I was surprised by this turn of events, but having the misfortune of dealing with WRS professionally, I cannot. My experience with WRS has been pretty dismal - of the 10 severe problems I've had with their products, their FAEs have solved only 1 for me; all others I have either had to live with or have solved myself. The company I work for has been told "Y'know that version of VxWorks you have licensed? Well, we aren't going to support it anymore, but you still have to pay us for a service contract if you want to continue to ship. Oh, and you will STILL have to pay us a per-unit license fee on top of that. But don't call us with any problems."
When they bought BSD I really wondered what they were thinking, as I was at a loss to see how BSD fit into their corporate strategy. The BSD kernel is much more competent than the VxWorks kernel, but being Free Software there is little value added from WRS - I can just embed BSD and avoid dealing with WRS. If they had a good history of decent board support packages I might see where they would be of value to me, but given how poorly they've supported VxWorks with BSPs, I have little confidence they would really have a benefit for their support.
Now, had WRS been able to buy Cygnus before RedHat, that would have made sense - Tornado (Wind River's VxWorks development package) uses the GCC toolchain, so owning the primary developers for GCC would have made sense. But I cannot see where the advantage to owning BSD is to WRS.
However, this just goes to show the power of Free Software - while WRS may screw up BSD.COM, they can never kill BSD.
#include <std-disclaimer.h>
The views expressed here are mine, not my employer.
www.eFax.com are spammers
It is a bit of an exageration to claim that OSX is based on BSD, given its Mach core and its proprietary Apple superstructure.
wouldn't that be "FreeBSD is dead" now ?
Being a sysadmin, I've run servers on pretty much 3 platforms: Linux, FreeBSD, and BSDI. (Although, even as we speak, our BSDI machines are on their way to being FreeBSD.)
:) I haven't found too many differences between BSDI and it, and actually like FreeBSD better.
:)
:) (And, instead of using 80% CPU at peak times, MySQL now only uses about 20%)
Some of the advantages of BSDI were you could call them for support, they released security patches and fixes (although some required you to have an upgrade contract, and as soon as ours expired they quit even sending us notifications of such updates.) What I didn't like about BSDI is it's closed-source nature, which to me would make it more difficult for developers. Plus, they didn't seem to have very much RAID controller support (at lesat, along the lines of Dell.)
FreeBSD, on the other hand, may not have the "call this number for tech support" (although I am sure someone sells commercial support), but it IS open-sourced and it supports our RAID controller properly.
We have two servers running our major services (mail, web, ftp, dns, etc.) and both were running BSDI. We recently commissioned a Dell, onto which I installed FreeBSD, and are phasing out one of our BSDI machines. After that, said BSDI machine will be blown away, loaded w/FreeBSD, and will replace the P166 box that is our secondary RADIUS, secondary DNS, and backup MX. (Don't ask - the dual 166 kicked the bucket in June, and the single 166 is what was in the spare parts bucket. We knew it would handle the load, and didn't want to invest in a new box when we'd be getting one in a couple months anyway.) The 166 is running BSDI, and will put back into retirement soon.
But, back to the point. With FreeBSD being open-source, it's open nature is going to allow development to continue. As far as the trademark is concerned, IANAL but they probably only own the trademark to the *name* "FreeBSD" - thus, in a worst case scenario they could probably write a shell script to run sed on all of the files with s/FreeBSD/WhateverBSD/g
I will say that I'm much happier now, as on FreeBSD I don't have to have a goofy cron job that checks to see if MySQL is running, and if not, restart it.
Just my $0.04 (still adjusted for inflation)
Sure, like you have written enough code to have your say in how *our* projects should be called...
Become the new Amiga? If you want to be honest, there are more active Amiga users worldwide than there are FreeBSD users. If FreeBSD aspires to be the new Amiga, it has some catching up to do.
The current naming system seems like every other abusive overuse of popular catch words: they sound good but they lack meaning and in the end are generally confusing to the public.
:0)
I think the names were chosen long before anyone considered what the public might find confusing, and long before they were catchwords
This will probably be moderated as off-topic, but the biggest victim for me to the WRS buyout was that stickers were no longer available..
Does 4.4 come with stickers? Anywhere to buy them individually? My new car is badly in need of them.
Oh, well. It isn't healthy to get too wrapped up in operating systems anyway. Other recent events of larger, and more evil scope puts my misplaced sorrow in proper perspective
Yet another crippling bombshll hit the beleaguered *BSD community when last month IDC confirmed that *BSD accounts for less than a fraction of 1 percent of all servers. Coming on the heels of the latest Netcraft survey which plainly states that *BSD has lost more market share, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. *BSD is collapsing in complete disarray, as further exemplified by failing dead last [sysadminmag.com] in th recent Sys Admin comprehensive networking test.
You don't need to be a Kreskin [amdest.com] to predict *BSD's future. The hand writing is on the wall: *BSD faces a bleak future. In fact there won't be any future at all for *BSD because *BSD is dying. Things are looking very bad for *BSD. As many of us are already aware, *BSD continues to lose market share. Red ink flows like a river of blood. FreeBSD is the most endangered of them all.
Let's keep to the facts and look at the numbers.
OpenBSD leader Theo states that there are 7000 users of OpenBSD. How many users of NetBSD are there? Let's see. The number of OpenBSD versus NetBSD posts on Usenet is roughly in ratio of 5 to 1. Therefore there are about 7000/5 = 1400 NetBSD users. BSD/OS posts on Usenet are about half of the volume of NetBSD posts. Therefore there are about 700 users of BSD/OS. A recent article put FreeBSD at about 80 percent of the *BSD market. Therefore there are (7000+1400+700)*4 = 36400 FreeBSD users. This is consistent with the number of FreeBSD Usenet posts.
Due to the troubles of Walnut Creek, abysmal sales and so on, FreeBSD went out of business and was taken over by BSDI who sell another troubled OS. Now BSDI is also dead, its corpse turned over to yet another charnel house.
All major surveys show that *BSD has steadily declined in market share. *BSD is very sick and its long term survival prospects are very dim. If *BSD is to survive at all it will be among OS hobbyist dabblers. *BSD continues to decay. Nothing short of a miracle could save it at this point in time. For all practical purposes, *BSD is dead.
*BSD is dying
It is not trappings, it is real freedom. In opposite to strict GPL.
GPL MAKES you to be free. And it is very like to make all people happy (Communism is good example).
Do you like communism? Do you know about ``make all people happy'' attempts in USSR, North Korea and other such countires?
It's dead, Jim.
*BSD is dead.
How come a private company owns a free trademark ?! That's odd, if its like that they should switch to PayBSD :)
The last thing Apple needs is to try and butt heads with MS. MS will crush Apple. There is no way Apple should (at this time) release OS X for PC. This would be the death of Apple.
Apple makes their money on hardware, not software. Look at the 10.1 upgrade, it was FREE to all owners of 10.0 via a CD and pretty marketing stuff. That costs money.
A lot of people look at the technology, think it's cool and say "Just put it on PC" but no one looks at the business aspect. Yes they could put it on PC, but then they will be gone in 2 years with their 4 billion $$ all dried up.
Just my $0.02
Judging buy their FUDged face scans, these guys won't be able to remain fugitives from justice for much longer.
fud IS dead.
The record is clear on one thing: no operating system has ever come back from the grave. Efforts to resuscitate *BSD are one step away from spiritualists wishing to communicate with the dead. As the situation grows more desperate for the adherents of this doomed OS, the sorrow takes hold. An unremitting gloom hangs like a death shround over a once hopeful *BSD community. The hope is gone; a mournful nostalgia has settled in. Now is the end time for *BSD.
Without starting a this BSD is better war. Could somebody explain to me the differences between the three different BSD's?
What's that old saying, people never change, they just become more so?
It is going to be tough, even the (seemingly better funded) linux distributions are falling on hard times. I think FreeBSD's biggest issue may be getting mind share. They entered the open source/free software (or whatever the politically correct name for it is) arena AFTER Linux, although BSD had been around for a long time before Linus even started his work. However, the politics of the FreeBSD project had very high expectations of Unix knowledge of both users and developers. Although they disagree, I think the bar to entry is a bit high, and has hurt their penetration into undergrad culture (where the bulk of hobbiests with substantial free time are), and the learning curve has steered people to Linux. I hope that FreeBSD can find good ways to expand (OSX was a great thing for them), but I'm skeptical as Linux may be so dominant.
That's "QA" not "Q&A".
QA = Quality Assurance
Q&A = Questions and Answers
- Company of bright people gets bought by larger company.
- Larger company fires everyone from smaller company.
- Smaller company no longer exists, nor does their product nor whatever research they were doing.
This just seems awfully wierd to me.Sounds just like male felines who kill off all male kittens to prevent competition.
Weall know that *BSD is dying. It is common knowledge that *BSD is dying, that *BSD is mired in a mortifying tangle of fatal trouble. It is perhaps anybody's guess as to which *BSD is the worst off of an admittedly suffering *BSD community. The numbers continue to decline for *BSD but FreeBSD may be hurting the most. Look at the numbers. The loss of user base for FreeBSD continues in a head spinning downward spiral. Now that Wind River has dumped FreeBSD like a hot potato, we know we are seeing the end of FreeBSD as it disintegrates before our eyes.
What I'm wondering is how working on 4.x and 5.0 at the same time will affect FreeBSD. Is most of the work being done on 5.0 independent of the work involved in 4.x++ ? I'm just hoping that FreeBSD working on 2 different streams at the same time doesn't significantly slow down progress.
At least mafia-owned pizzarias make excellent pizza. Compare to Bill Gates.
Seems to me that they've already made a contribution by funding a money-losing FreeBSD project. If they eventually make a fortune from a small FreeBSD investment then your criticism would be valid, but I'm still skeptical about companies making huge amounts of money by selling free software.
I find this rather shocking and at the same time a wee bit disconcerting.
I am really suprised that Apple hasn't stepped forward to fund this, as IMHO it could be in their best interests.
Of course, given today's business world they could take the Rambus route and sue everyone that makes an OS. Hell, sue Microsoft, that seems to be the trendy thing to do nowadays anyway.
All the trouble to write that troll and not one response.. haha, you must be heartbroken.
Oh, whoops, I responded.
Made you look!
Haha, that was the lamest troll ever. And after you spent so long working on it too, I'll bet. You should just give up and stick to doing first posts.
A clueless AC wrote:
;)
> *BSD continues to decay. Nothing short of a
> miracle could save it at this point in time. For
> all practical purposes, *BSD is dead.
So the solar flare that happened the day of the announcement at Seybold of the release of OS X.1 wasn't enough of a miracle for you?
Sheesh, you just can't please some people. It's okay, Mothra, at least I appreciated it.
OS X: the Apple of Mothra's Aqua eye.
I think you summed it up exactly.
;)
The GPL license cares about the code first and foremost, even to the detriment of the developer(s) in some situations. At all costs the code must survive and remain free.
The BSD license cares about the developers and the users, even to the detriment of the code/project in some situations. At all costs must the people developing and using the code have all options available to them.
This is also why Linux has more mindshare, marketshare and corporate interest. The god damn project (that being Linux) is able to survive and thrive because the GPL won't allow it to be taken advantage of.
Seeing as how Unix is already decades old one would think the BSD guys would have gotten this by now. Programmers come and go. The projects, if they are good enough remain. What fucking good are the personal freedoms the BSD license provide if projects run under a BSD license are so frequently subject to being taken advantage of, used and then left to be forgotten with very little contribution in return?
Is *BSD dying? Hell no. Just a temporary and annoying setback. The BSD camp COULD do with a little more self-promotion though.
Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
I'm really interested to know why the FreeBSD Foundation doesn't own the trademark to FreeBSD!
You had me at "dicks fuck assholes".
damn the torpedoes, full steam ahead. I use *BSD not because some journal or corp suit or high school kid warezing mp3's says too, I use it because, sure, it's a great free unix, but it lacks the "cobbled together" feel of linux distros(having a central team is still better for devel IMHO). Not to mention, as I have stuck with OpenBSD, it has grown considerably into more than just a great firewall. I think that many people need to get over the "net works on most plats, free is faster and a better workstation, and oh yeah, Open is just a really secure firewall but nothing else" mentality...all of the *BSD's share (apparently, linux uses some of their code too ;)
and this helps ALL of them. To get back on topic....I love the direction OBSD has taken, very impressed, and anyone with half a brain would know that FBSD will barely feel this. All the whining doomsayers are gonna feel pretty stupid when this is all over with.
The minute WRS acquired FreeBSD my subscriptions stopped coming in but they KEPT CHARHING ME. All the numbers were disconnected or permanent hold patterns. Eventually I got through to someone who said they 'fixed it' when all they actually did was charge me AGAIN and never send me shit.
WRS has fucked up FBSD beyond belief. Its a sad thing.
I work in Yahoo's infrastructure group, and I've never even heard of iPlant. However, I do know that we use FreeBSD boxes by the thousands
Yahoo use FreeBSD as the OS and iPlanet (which is another name for Netscape Enterprise Server afaicr) as their web server.
The percentage may be small, but you neglected to report the fact that it's growing
Not according to the latest Netcraft survey. I personally I like FreeBSD but Linux has so many easy to use tools and so much support which for me is more important than raw performance.
Phillip.
Property for sale in Nice, France
Hello? You must not be aware that these projects have been around awhile, before the dotcom explosion or the mass arrival of Joe Sixpack. Are there really that few of us left that remember the "..it's always September on the Internet" phrase and how it came about? Oh yeah, you're obviously having difficulty with the naming conventions, well perhaps suits should have looked elsewhere for names, eh? Think PRIOR ART.
GPL GPL GPL GPL !!!!!
The BSD license is a license to steal
Facts.
1. Microsoft stole the BSD tcp/ip stack. Where would they be if they had to develop their own?
2. APPLE stole BSD for OS X. Where would they be without BSD?
3. Windriver buys freeBSD then fires the developers. FreeBSD is dead.
By stopping the use of the free as in beer BSD licensing in favor of the free as in freedom GPL license BSD developers will be protecting their IP property forever and ever instead of letting the megacorporations pick their minds.
Second, you really became an immature little troll after your final statement "have fun working..blah blah" man you are obviously dealing with issues. I'm sure that you will continue to leech off of the hard work of others, and spew your shallow rhetoric as it seems to make you feel important and aware. Sheesh
Waaaaa!!! Back it up. Show us your mailing list offers so we can see the proof. Did you even show example code, submit patches, etc. previous to your "offer" or did you just come out of nowhere and say "I can do it! Pick me, coach!"
You sound like a pathetic whiner that survives on others achievements. I bet you'd like to believe that you could do something good, but chances are you're just frustrated because other succeed where you have so obviously failed.
Hopefully they'll do the same thing that the Slackware team did after Windriver dropped them. Continue developing, and find someone else to press the cd's, keeping a greater percent of the profit for themselves.
Here are some life skills lessons for the newly unemployed *BSD developers.
- May I take your order, sir?
- Would you like fries with that?
- It's two whole-meat patties on a toasted sesame seed bun.
- Extra ketchup? No problem.
- The bathroom is around the corner.
Hope this helps.In that case, why not call Linux 'Unix clone' 8^)
--Jon
http://www.witchspace.com
How can volunteer work on a project such as this be killed by layoffs? If anything, it will increase development efforts as the people laid off now have more time on their hands. ;) The very nature of any such project is that people are doing this in their spare time, for the living hell of it or to scratch some itch, or "because it's there." Linux is the same way. Even if you shot all the developers, more people would come by and continue where they left off, just because they want to, and because the license lets them.
FreeBSD will live on, through thick and thin, even if it's just held together by a few guys on a weblog...
"No problem. I have the capacity to do infinite work so long as you don't mind that my quality approaches zero."-Dilbert
BSD is much more mature than Linux in years and codebase. It's capabilities and stability are well known and respected. BSD has had a very long time (in computer industry terms) to capture mindshare with coders and users alike. With all those advantages, why did Linux's growth rate outstrip *BSD's? To put it simply, it comes down to the license (and history).
The history part relegates BSD to the Clone Wars era, as it was a participant, and is now a victim of that period.
The license part is related to the Unix Clone Wars. The BSD license is weak and flacid in a very specific sense. It doesn't discourage selfishness. The BSD developers are probably at the height of altruism, where they are willing to literally give away their hard work without to others who are willing to take it, add to it, and refuse to share their additions. BSD developers don't care whether individuals or corporations take their code and make it proprietary.
The GNU license that Linux is under, protects Linux from a vicious Clone War. Even if the Linux codebase should split, either side will always be legally able to add innovations introduced by anyone who's taken the Linux code and attempted to make their own version. In fact, that happens quite often with Linux as different groups create different capabilities for specific purposes. This mechanism propogates innovation. But, everyone still understands that there is only one Linux, and those who change the code are careful to ensure compatibility. If they don't, anyone is capable of making sure that they do by changing the code themselves, since it is not hidden.
Younger people understand that as part of true participation, one needs to share. They've just come out of their 'teens, and growing lessons are fresh in their minds. *BSD has no rules in regards to sharing other than its almost non-existant license requires perpetuity.
Younger programmers distrust corporations, and prefer protection for their code. They don't see anyone as being a part of 'their' team if their hard work is taken and made proprietary. They see that as selfish. Basically, fairness in a game is strong encouragement to continue playing.
This is why Linux is currently fashionable in regards to mindshare and *BSD's mindshare steadily gets older. GNU/Linux is truly an OS for the people, by the people. BSD has a mixed history of altruism, elitism, and proprietism.
How's this for a new name for FreeBSD: The OSBSD OS (as in Open Source BSD Operating System).
Please don't forget that WRS has provided most of the code that has enabled the SMPng project, the main one to justify the 4.x to 5.x release change.
Something like this could never have happened to Linux.
You are right. Instead of loosing 12 employees, you can loose 100's of employees and need millions in cash to stay afloat. See SuSE or VS Linux as examples of how much better GNU/Linux is for the pocketbook.
Now, granted, I'm not always the world's most diplomatic person (Matt Jacobs suggests that I need some of David Miller's drugs), but the point is that in Linux-land, they don't apply an attitude test towards participants (as is evident by the fact that ReiserFS has made it into the stable kernel -- Hans Reiser is the post boy for Bad Attitude!). In FreeBSD land, it's not good enough to have technical chops -- you also have to pass the Attitude Test and if your attitude is bad (as evidenced by, e.g., a comment in one of my patches "WORK AROUND BRAIN DEAD STUPID MORONIC NONSENSE", which offended the author of that file), you end up having to practically beat them over the head to do anything about the problem for which you submitted a patch.
Note: This is posted anonymous because otherwise I'd have an even harder time of getting patches into the FreeBSD kernel :-}.
-Random
There are other such buy-outs that were virtually all-stock. With 1-year lock-ins so that the founders can't sell stock. With non-compete clauses in the contract. Etc. There's one word for those small company founders now that the stocks they were paid with are worthless: SCREWED.
Send mail here if you want to reach me.
From VA Linux or SuSE? (Each of these GNU/Linux firms have fired 100's of Linux workers, as opposed to the 12 from WRS)
Regardless, I like FBSD and plan to keep using it. I'm currently downloading all that I can (via a schedule so I don't overload or hog the network)from the FBSD ftp servers so I can at least save some of it for future use. I've got plenty of space on my server, and I'm adding another 60gig shortly, so I'll be able to hold a good chunk of the info for awhile. I don't believe FBSD will go away and disappear because to many of the people involed/working on it just simply like it and want it to live. So, I choose to believe that it will continue in a diminished state for some years to come, and may resurface one day as a good OS to install/use. I'll keep using it as I have no reason not to, and I also like it. I would advise others that feel as I do to consider downloading and saving a portion of the materials so that they do not every become lost or unavailable.
My mind, my thoughts.
Things you can say to your dog that you can't say to a girl: "How about a nice bone?"
Don't quote me on this, but I had some notion that the name OpenBSD came from after Theo broke away from NetBSD the new OpenBSD team wanted to make the dev process more 'open' and pioneered anonymous CVS for the entire codebase. The secure part came later, and the other BSDs have since used anonymous CVS as well.
Maybe those developers that got laid off can go work for apple. Right now I think BSD development should focus on improving the subsystems in the MAC OS x. The better the system the better chance that Microsoft XP will lose
It's party time!!!!!
Our lawyers will be in touch. Buh bye.
They are pitched aside and left for the vulture capitalists to pick over. In time their bleached bones turn to dust and even their memory fades into oblivion.
Ain't it cool???
So, OSX 10.01 is pronounced "Oh ess Ten Ten point oh one"?
IBM had PL/1, with syntax worse than JOSS,
And everywhere the language went, it was a total loss...
it shows in thas specific case that WallnutCreek was the wrong kind of organization/company for a non-Profit project, and that it did'nt interfere that well in the end.
Maybe a foundation would have been the better way to serve the needs wallnut Creek tried to fit?
Jesus H. Christ, why didn't you guys tell me that???
Now what am I going to do??
Minix is dead??? Are you sure?
Its been tried, and it failed. Now whether they could do things differently this time, or whether the market has changed and would be more receptive, is moot. Steve Jobs is in charge of Apple and since he was burned once, I doubt he'll try again.
You know what? I just saw the conspiracy!!
I've been pronouncing the company name as Windriver (Wind + River).
But, it's actually WinDriver (Win + Driver). They're a Puppet Company for Old Bill! He was scared of FreeBSD and wanted to fight back somehow.
I knew M$ was involved somehow, and this just proves it.
:-)
I think RTFM is entirely about ego and always has been. There are two kinds people: those who want to help other people learn and those that who want to feel superior by pretending to be too busy or important to answer a question. I suggest that anyone who is tempted to respond to a question with RTFM - don't bother to respond at all. A RTFM response is content-free anyway.
He's the reason I don't run OpenBSD. I've never met anyone who fell into the "arrogant jackass" category as neatly as he does. The only other person I've taken as immediate a dislike to is DJB.
Mod the Mod this guy up! guy up too! Karma for eveyone, yeah baby!
The Linux JDK can be installed using the java/linux-jdk13 port (or linux-ibm-jdk13 for the IBM JDK). While the IBM JDK did give me some problems, I have yet to see any trouble using Sun's Linux JDK under FreeBSD; it even works under native-compiled Konqueror for applets. Tomcat runs fine for servlets, too.
Loneliness is a power that we possess to give or take away forever
BAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
What a bunch of cocksuckers.
It's Jordan Hubbard's fault that FreeBSD no longer has control of its own trademark. Hubbard was the one responsible for giving Walnut Creek CDROM the trademark. We demanded that the trademark revert to the community for years. Hubbard made hollow empty promises. Years of foot dragging and still no trademark. It's doubtful it will ever revert to the FreeBSD community at this point. WRS is the third company to control this trademark. We were screwed. Hubbard has equivocated and stalled on this for years. Now he's gone and the so is the trademark.
Was Walnut Creek CDROM located in Walnut Creek, CA in the SF Bay Area? I grew up in Walnut Creek and I always thought it was funny/cool that a company would borrow the name.
cpeterso
FBSD is not going to die, not with the amount of love and sweat that the users and developers put into it. I primarily use GNU/Linux, bouncing between Progeny and SuSE, but I like having a FBSD box around as well. I am amazed at the war of words brewing between the respective "Communities" found herein though! Most Linux users I know (and I encourage them whenever and wherever possible) are happy to try FBSD, OpenBSD, even QNX. They may not stay with it, but at least they can learn to appreciate the differences along with the many similarities. The funny thing is, you can put all of these systems on a network together and they interoperate just fine. Too bad the same cannot be said for some of the representative factions below. Why does it seem that the assholes are so much louder than the more open minded users? Oh yeah, MS users count too! Some things are better utilized with something like Win2K, media applications spring to mind for myself. Though I am really hoping that this http://www.demudi.org/ can help resolve that defeciency.
Wanna get high?
Suse didn;t lay off any programmers and VA Linux only dumped 2 unproductive wank programmers ok cocknips.
I know some WindRiver folks...
I heard that Jordan would not agree to go to WindRiver with rest of the FreeBSD people because he wanted to work for Apple on Mac OS X instead. Jordan made WindRiver give him a PHAT $$$ to work for them... but he no longer believes in FreeBSD and he planned to go to Apple after he set up the FreeBSD team to fail at WindRiver.
Jordan put the FreeBSD team under a management chain that hates open source and FreeBSD -- knowing they would kill it off. Once Jordan knew the wheels of death were in motion, he jumped ship to Apple.
_THREE_ rounds of layoffs in 5 months. None of
the other "been in business 10 years" companies
have made had to do this many layoffs.
My friend that works there says there is talk of
a _4th_ round of layoffs, since the major
investors and Wall Street do not believe in
Wind River any more.
(And VxWorks is still vulnerable to that classic 1996 bug, Ping O' Death!)
Looking at the bad (humiliating) treatment of BSD (specially the way the FreeBSD team has been treated) at the hand of the commercial/for-profit world, may I humbly suggest that perhaps it's time to combine the talent pool of BSDs (Net- / Free- / Open-) and merge their effort to Linux, so that their effort will NOT be wasted, or be humiliated again.
I do understand the underlying philosophical differences existing between the BSD and Linux, but that was _before_ the BSD being so humiliated.
The spirit of BSD is such that they produce stuffs for the world and EXPECT NOTHING IN RETURN, so much so that they even ALLOW those for-profit entities to RAKE IN TRUCKLOADS OF MULLAH (read: Apple/Sun) but the irony is that the artruistic spirit of the BSD team (while now only confined to the FreeBSD team, it may spread to the Net- and Open- camp as well in the future, who know?) has not only being violated, they are being totally humiliated by being singled out, given pink slips, and shown the door.
The second irony is that the humiliation is happening EXACTLY at the 10th anniversary of Linux's first code appearing to the world - which took place at 5th, October, 1991.
And by the way, HAPPY 10th Birthday, Linux !
I think that it is time to throw away the philosophical differences between the BSD camp and Linux. Merging the talents from both camps would be a plus, since the Linux camp's adherence to the GPL spirit - you ain't gonna exploit my contribution to the world and MAKE MONEY FOR YOURSELF ONLY - may be the ticket to strike back at the humiliation by those hungry for-profit baddies.
But of course, my humble suggestion will forever remain a suggestion. It's up to y'all to decide what to do.
Thank y'all for reading.
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
Nope.
From my experience, many BSD users are aging yuppies on a nostalgia trip for their school days in the '70s and '80s - generation VAX, so to speak. Young people who grew up with their very own personal computers really don't give a darn about some geriatric's time-sharing nostalgia trip. What is even more interesting is that their are many design issues in the current BSD source code which are remnants of its VAX heritage, and which are completely invalid for modern computer systems. BSD advancement has actually been stunted to a certain degree by this nostalgia for "the good old days".
I'm not sure I necessarily agree with this statment. Although it could well be possible, I'd also have to say that laws and personal politics had something to do with it.
Remember, back in the early '90s AT&T threw a big legal fit over some of their code still being in the BSD Unix sources. This effectively put the 386BSD and FreeBSD camps on hold for a couple of years because no one wanted to be violating AT&T's copyrights and have a screaming dog lawyer breathing down their necks. This was subsequently cleared up, of course, but it left many BSD developers quite confused.
Fortunately (or not, depending on your viewpoints I suppose if you're a true BSD bigot! *grin*) around this time, a fun little kernel project was started by the now semi-legendary Linus Torvalds in Finland. He didn't know much about kernels at the time, but didn't care for DOS and Minix didn't appeal so he set out to write his own. Linus, being quite the affable personality, quickly had quite a few people willing to help him out. Since there were no questions about AT&T's copyrights, no one was hesitant to jump in, especially with such a nice guy at the helm.
Some might go so far as to say that the Linux development community for a very long time was really a lot like a cult of personality. It likely wouldn't have mattered that the Linux kernel was licensed under the GPL or the BSD licenses; Linux would still have remained popular because Linus made such a fine benevolent dictator.
I could be wrong about all of this. Are there any early Linux developers around who would be willing to tell me that they contributed to Linux specifically because it was licensed under the GPL?
Also, I'm not convinced that the BSD license is a liability in, as you said, that it can "allow [the code] to be taken advantage of." Any code that is licensed under the BSD license never suddenly become non-free after all. There is nothing that says that if some proprietary company comes along and uses that BSD code base and then extends it to add new features and gizmos, that someone else can't do the same from the same code base and then release those changes under the BSD license as well.
This can lead to a lot of re-inventing the wheel, but in reality it doesn't usually happen THAT often. It can also greatly help with compatibility. There is a reason that BSD sockets are the defacto digital networking paradigm in the world and that is because anyone who wanted to was allowed to just yank out the BSD code from the kernel and adapt it into their OS. Heck, even Linux did this.
The same can be said for X because of it's less restrictive (as compared to the GPL) MIT license on the base source distribution from the X/Open gang. Sure, there are plenty of X implementations, and not all of them are released with source code, but all of them are generally highly interoperable.
Then again, I could just be highly delusional about all of this. ;-)
I do agree that the *BSD projects could do with a bit more self-promotion. Personally, I'd like to see OpenBSD wriggle it's way out of the security community and become more generally used. There are some very good things happening there, and some of their utilities (especially the PPP tools and the ease-of-use of most of the encryption related tools) are par excellence.
> Are you convinced yet?
No, I'm not.
Can you give any proof?
Not at all.
In fact, Apple, who markets 'easy to use' has FreeBSD as the core to Mac OS X.
Because of all the shreaking harpies of markting of all the various linux companies, it only seems linux has importance.
You can be quoted on this. You are correct.
The only embelishment I can add is that Theo wanted access to the NetBSD CVS repository. NetBSD would not give it to him. From that denal he felt everyone's desire for access and gave it.
According to Debian, the official name is "Debian/GNU."