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FreeBSD 5.0 RC3 Now Ready

Dan writes "Scott Long announces that FreeBSD 5.0 RC3 has been released and available at all mirrors sites. Release notes can be viewed here, you can download 5.0 RC3 from ftp.freebsd.org or from one of your favorite mirror sites. Many thanks to the FreeBSD Release Engineering team for their work efforts!"

12 of 291 comments (clear)

  1. Look it moved by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    So it can't be completely dead!

  2. No! Kill it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    Who cares if it says it's not dead yet? We have a quota to meet!

  3. You know... by sofo · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...saying *BSD is dead is dead.

  4. Watch out. SCO might sue you! by Newer+Guy · · Score: 5, Funny

    After all, you're an OS that runs on a computer. They have a patent for that you know!

  5. Darn! by leomekenkamp · · Score: 5, Funny

    My prediction is one day off...

    Can anyone recommend a display cleaner?

    --
    Wenn ist das Nunstueck git und Slotermeyer? Ja! Beiherhund das Oder die Flipperwaldt gersput.
    1. Re:Darn! by shlong · · Score: 3, Funny

      Hey, you look like a good candidate for the release engineering team!
      :-)

      --
      Cat, the other, tastier white meat.
  6. Stephan Hawking, dead at 58 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
    I just heard the sad news on the interweb superhighway, reviled parapalygic adulterer and gangsta rapper Stephen "M.C." Hawking was found dead in his Cambridge crib early this morning. Funkmaster Hawking apparently died due to multiple gunshots to the head. His assistant is being held by Scotland Yard for questioning.

    You may not have understood the deep cosmological significance of "A Brief History of Rhyme", but there is not denying his crucial role in the establishment of gangsta cosmology. Truly a geniusly depraved English pervert, he will be missed.

  7. Re:You can't fool us by Strog · · Score: 3, Funny

    This is the premature announcement. Please wait for the following before trying to download.

    "FreeBSD 5.0 RC3 NOT ready yet. Sorry."

    "I'm downloading FreeBSD 5.0 RC3 now, wait, this is really RC2"

    "FreeBSD 5.0 RC3 finally released"

  8. Re:Java integration just rocks! by jandrese · · Score: 5, Funny
    You forgot to include the second bullet point:
    • 1/10/2003: Dropped floppy based installer for CD only approach to accomodate the extra 55MB of compressed kernel needed for boot.
    • 1/10/2003: Upped minimum requirements from a 386 with 5MB of ram to a Pentium II-400 with 64MB of ram, 128MB of ram if you want to run X.
    • 1/10/2003: Upped minimum reccomended size of root partition to 1 GB to fit new kernel and associated files
    • 1/10/2003: Redirected FreeBSD download page to Sun's site. Users wishing to download FreeBSD will need to click through badly worded and or hidden links on 5 different pages, sign up twice, and click through at least three liceneses, then do it all again for the patch set.
    --

    I read the internet for the articles.
  9. Re:Java integration just rocks! by jayed_99 · · Score: 5, Funny
    Damn! I missed that commit message! Thanks for pointing it out!

    It must have come fast on the heels of the following commit message that so enthralled me:
    From the changelog:
    "1/10/2003: Replaced our TCP/IP stack with one licensed from Microsoft. Work continues on porting over the Linux virtual memory management system. "

    No wonder I missed it.

    *grumbles at the trolls -- even the funny ones*

  10. No One Expects the SCO Inquisition... oh nevermind by Nick+Driver · · Score: 4, Funny

    Well since SCO thinks that Linux infinges on their patents and is wanting to charge every Linux user almost $100/CPU fee it's a good thing that FreeBSD is the highly refined, free unix that it is. :-)

    (A die-hard FreeBSD user since 1996)

  11. Re:Excellent System by gyratedotorg · · Score: 3, Funny

    Well no offence but I hope you don't recommend it to newbies.

    i think freebsd is a better choice for newbies who actually want to learn about unix, and i say this from experience. when i started playing with *nix, i tried linux and freebsd, and i found freebsd to be much more consistant in general. in linux, things tend to vary drastically between distros and versions, but freebsd has pretty much stayed the same over the last few years that ive used it. i've also found the freebsd handbook to be very helpful, since it doesnt become obsolete with every new release (unlike a lot of linux documentation).

    --
    Gyrate Dot Org - "Where high-tech meets low-life"