BSD Usage Survey
hubertf writes "The BSD Certification Group announced the BSD Usage Survey today (non-English version also available). 'This survey aims to collect detailed statistics on how and where BSD systems are used around the world. The survey is short- only 19 questions- and should only take a few minutes to complete. The survey covers usage of the four main BSD projects - FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD and DragonFly BSD.'"
The survey doesn't address personal use, which I would assume is a larger, more important part of the various BSD projects because with larger consumer market share, there is more of a push to develop drivers to support devices, and more reason for appliation developers to port apps.
I think that developing an operating system intended for business is a fine thing, but developing an operating system that can handle different markets in the event of a collapse of a market is better.
But don't forget that the core DFBSD developers were a few years back amongst the core FreeBSD developers. They include guys like Matt Dillon, who basically was FreeBSD before the split. It's no wonder that DragonFlyBSD is now becoming the premiere production BSD: all of the developers who once made FreeBSD great are now working on it! Meanwhile we see FreeBSD still struggling to produce a stable branch. It was only with the latest FreeBSD 5.4 release that many people actually considered switching over.
Like it or not, DragonFlyBSD is bound to take the role FreeBSD has. DragonFlyBSD will soon be the BSD you use on your production server or workstation. Its revolutionary rearchitecturing will no doubt be quite beneficial when it comes to the multicore and multiprocessor systems which will soon become widespread. Meanwhile, systems like FreeBSD which have failed to make the transition to a far more threaded kernel design will lose the performance race.
Cyric Zndovzny at your service.
Also, OS X contains BSD code, it is not based on BSD - it is based on OpenStep, which contained BSD code as well. Google's your friend.