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FreeBSD Project Falls Short of Year End Funding Target By Nearly 50%

TrueSatan writes "Perhaps a sign of our troubled times or a sign that FreeBSD is becoming less relevant to modern computing needs: the FreeBSD project has sought $500,000 by year end to allow it to continue to offer to fund and manage projects, sponsor FreeBSD events, Developer Summits and provide travel grants to FreeBSD developers. But with the end of this year fast approaching, it has raised just over $280,000, far short of its target."

245 comments

  1. Obligatory by SwabTheDeck · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    a sign that BSD is becoming less relevant to modern computing needs

    Obligatory remark about how Mac OS X and iOS are BSD and are used by tens of millions of people everyday, blah, blah, blah.

    1. Re:Obligatory by cheesybagel · · Score: 5, Funny

      Perhaps they should ask Apple to fund them. Good luck.

    2. Re:Obligatory by OzPeter · · Score: 1, Funny

      a sign that BSD is becoming less relevant to modern computing needs

      Obligatory remark about how Mac OS X and iOS are BSD and are used by tens of millions of people everyday, blah, blah, blah.

      With the obligatory remark about how they never give back to the community.

      (Next post please add the link to the source code that Apple releases in order to refute my anti-fanboish trope)

      (With any luck we will trap all the anti- and pro- Apple rants in this one thread!)

      --
      I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
    3. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      With less and less support of BSD all along.

      That is the power of the GPL - support means support. BSD means "take it and give nothing back".

    4. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Swap BSD with FreeBSD and the statement stands.

    5. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More code in OS X comes from NetBSD.

    6. Re:Obligatory by ernest.cunningham · · Score: 1

      Whether its a dead OS or not, in an attempt to make me feel better about using Mac OS X and iOS I donated :P

    7. Re:Obligatory by _Stryker · · Score: 4, Informative
    8. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why can't you just check apples web site for your self? Moron?
      http://www.opensource.apple.com/release/mac-os-x-1082/

    9. Re:Obligatory by OzPeter · · Score: 3, Funny

      *whoooosh*

      Why can't you just check apples web site for your self? Moron?

      --
      I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
    10. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The BSD community must offer more assistance. As soon as BSD gets something similar to KVM I'll switch in a second. If Ubuntu represents the future of Linux i want none of it, I'll go back to BSD.

    11. Re:Obligatory by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 4, Funny

      Perhaps they should ask Apple to fund them. Good luck.

      Perhaps they should ask Apple to sue them.

      It might get them some sympathy donations . . . ?

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    12. Re:Obligatory by chronokitsune3233 · · Score: 1

      a sign that BSD is becoming less relevant to modern computing needs

      Obligatory remark about how Mac OS X and iOS are BSD and are used by tens of millions of people everyday, blah, blah, blah.

      Obligatory rebuttal about how even many technical people don't really care much about the fact that an old version of FreeBSD serves as the foundation for OS X as long as they know how to administer the system and/or develop for it, blah, blah, blah.

      --
      I have been a captive in America my entire life. Everybody and everything uses customary units instead of metric.
    13. Re:Obligatory by peppepz · · Score: 1

      OS X 'is' not BSD, it's NeXTSTEP with code derived from BSD.

    14. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Either it is Opposite Day in whatever land you come from, or you are a total idiot who doesn't know up from down.

      The overwhelmingly obvious trend in the last 12 years has been the decline of restrictively licensed ("copyLEFT") projects in favor of genuinely free ("copyFREE") software. There's a sole noteworthy exception to this rule trend, which is the software component that produces the greatest lock-in: the Linux kernel. (I suggest you read that last linked thread in full - it has many links to details.)

      GNU (1984) and Linux (1991) arrived many years before BSD became permissively licensed (1999). During that gap, Linux attracted a lot of attention, attained technological superiority, and, by the end of the century, it was considered the obvious choice in open source UNIX. Linux managed to capitalize on the collapse of proprietary UNIX and attract a lot of corporate support. It beats the BSD's on almost every performance benchmark. Kudos to Linus T - he got there first, made a thousand good decisions, and beat us fair and square!

      But that doesn't mean Linux will remain the king of the mountain forever. Linux is being written by the very people who its license was designed to hurt! It is a loose alliance of corps mostly trying to undermine Microsoft, and this contradiction cannot last. Linus T made the right choice by not switching to the newer more-restrictive versions of GPL, which should buy it some more time. And its jack-of-all-trades approach, trying to be the ideal kernel for everything from nano to desktops to supercomputers, will catch up to it eventually.

      See, sometime in the last few years, people actually started to pay attention to licensing, as the disadvantages of GPL started to become obvious. This resulted in a shift away from copyLEFT all across the board. Many projects switched licenses (ex. Ruby) and got a new lease on life, while in many software categories new copyFREE projects started to gradually suck away GPL's market share. At the turn of the millennium there were no decent copyFREE compilers, desktop environments, or Web browsers. Today we have Clang/LLVM, E17, and Chromium (well, almost - that's why I'd rather use Opera for now). In the most competitive categories, like scripting languages and Web servers, GPL is almost entirely dead. PostgreSQL, SQLite, Redis, etc are gradually squeezing MySQL. The HTML5 stack's gains are the loss of GTK/Qt/wx/etc, as well as of FFMPEG. FreeBSD is just about finished scraping off the last remnants of copyLEFT, which would have seemed unthinkable just a few years ago - now finally I can run a complete UNIX system without any GNU!

      This trend is going to continue - gradually, patiently, at times with a few steps back and sideways, but moving forward in aggregate nonetheless. History takes time to play out. Maybe it will be Haiku on portable devices, and/or DragonFly BSD on large servers, and/or a completely new copyFREE OS that's yet to be initiated. Maybe the copyFREE champion Google will pull something out of its sleeve. But, sooner or later, the Penguin Empire will fall!

      --libman

    15. Re:Obligatory by BrokenHalo · · Score: 2

      If Ubuntu represents the future of Linux i want none of it, I'll go back to BSD.

      Who says Ubuntu is the future of Linux? It is merely one distribution among dozens. The fact that it is the most popular at the moment is neither here nor there; during the years I have been using Linux, the previous most popular distributions have been Slackware, RedHat, Debian (and possibly Mandrake). In a year's time, the crown could pass on to some other distribution I've never heard of. (For the record, my preference is now for Arch.)

      But if BSD fits your requirements, then by all means use it.

    16. Re:Obligatory by 1s44c · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The BSD community must offer more assistance. As soon as BSD gets something similar to KVM I'll switch in a second. If Ubuntu represents the future of Linux i want none of it, I'll go back to BSD.

      FreeBSD has native ZFS which is the one reason I'm using it at home. I thought FreeBSD could act as a xen dom0 but it seems You are right, it can't.

      FreeBSD is a very nice OS and much more consistent as a whole system than any Linux distribution.

    17. Re:Obligatory by 1s44c · · Score: 2, Funny

      Whether its a dead OS or not, in an attempt to make me feel better about using Mac OS X and iOS I donated :P

      isaac@xen:~$ ping -c 2 10.0.0.107
      PING 10.0.0.107 (10.0.0.107) 56(84) bytes of data.
      64 bytes from 10.0.0.107: icmp_req=1 ttl=64 time=0.595 ms
      64 bytes from 10.0.0.107: icmp_req=2 ttl=64 time=0.959 ms

      It's certainly not a dead OS, it's running perfectly well.

    18. Re:Obligatory by kthreadd · · Score: 1

      Perhaps they should ask Apple to fund them. Good luck.

      Apple already funds developers working on projects that are contributed to FreeBSD. Just a few examples are LLVM, OpenBSD and Libdispatch.

    19. Re:Obligatory by kthreadd · · Score: 4, Interesting

      As soon as BSD gets something similar to KVM I'll switch in a second.

      It's already on its way. http://bhyve.org/

    20. Re:Obligatory by kthreadd · · Score: 1

      It's a combination of a lot of things, including various parts of BSD.

    21. Re: Obligatory by peppepz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It has a completely different kernel design and a vastly different userspace. If OS X counts as a measure of the relevance of BSD because it contains BSD-derived code, then even most Linux installations 'are BSD'.

    22. Re:Obligatory by Johnny+Loves+Linux · · Score: 2
      libman, I just don't see the problem with the GPL license. The BSD license permits people to take free source code and lock it way and not share back, the big example here is Apple, and Microsoft's TCP/IP stack from 90's. The way I see it, GPL is an immunization for the user community against the jerks who want to take source code and not share back their changes.

      I understand that some people don't see why it's important to immunize the community against for want of a better analogy I call antisocials. Certainly I understand why corporations like Apple and Microsoft don't want the community to be protected from people who take without giving back, but you haven't given me a good explanation yet for why you believe GPL is restrictive.

      Yes, in terms of antisocial exploitation of software I suppose you could say it's restrictive. In terms of being able to make use of the software and modify it at will, I think it's awesomely free. The issue I personally have with the BSD license is not the terms of the license, but that it makes no provision to stop exploitation by corporations like Apple and Microsoft who do not have a history of share and share alike, but instead, a history of aggressively attempting to exterminate any competition.

      Personally, I'm looking for a software license that makes the world a better place, not some Darwinian winner-exterminates-all-other-competitors where the only survivors are the companies with lots of $$$ whose priority #1 is to make more $$$ by any means necessary such as suing competitors with BS patents.

    23. Re:Obligatory by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 4, Informative

      GNU (1984) and Linux (1991) arrived many years before BSD became permissively licensed (1999).

      The previous license, just above the paragraph in the Wikipedia link you provided, is basically the same and pre-dates 1988 - BSD was initially released in 1977. As a user of 4.3BSD (yes, I'm old) I remember that BSD was available to pretty much anyone with a few buck for a tape and postage. My university used it while I was there from 1981-87.

      The main objection to the older license was the "advertising clause" (below), which does NOT actually restrict use of the software:

      3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software must display the following acknowledgement:
      This product includes software developed by the .

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    24. Re:Obligatory by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

      The GPL is about the freedom of the end-user not the developer. The GPL removes the dependency of the end-user on the developer to release fixes to the code. GPL code can't be closed. BSD code can.

    25. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't know what you are talking about.
      All GPL code is made public by Apple : opensource.apple.com
      The OSX kernel however is based on BSD code. Not GPL.

      MS TCP/IP stack is the BSD stack, no GPL code.

      >I just don't see the problem with the GPL license.

      THAT's the problem.

      >The issue I personally have with the BSD license is not the terms of the license, but that it makes no provision to stop exploitation

      Why should it do that? BSD was designed to enable that. Nothing is lost if someone uses BSD code. It doesn't affect the BSD mother code to the slightest bit.

    26. Re:Obligatory by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      and BSD is not Net BSD, nor is it Free BSD

      its like saying IBM uses linux, but yellowdog is a dead linux OS, so therefore its IBM's fault

    27. Re:Obligatory by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 0

      Yeah, haiku and *BSD will displace Linux, and Ayn Rand will grow fairy-wings, flying from Mt Olympus with a funnel-cake for good children, everywhere.

      GPL is a social-contract, of sorts. If you don't like the constraints imposed by civility and reciprocation, you needn't join such a community where such obligations are codified.

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    28. Re:Obligatory by dudpixel · · Score: 1

      I can see the argument for why one might choose either license, but at the end of the day of the author of the code wishes that their code always remain free, and so chooses the GPL, I believe that is their right and it should be respected.

      Complaining that a third party licensed their code under a particular license is just stupid. It is the same as saying that the original developer should not have had the choice to license their work however they wanted to.

      If you use someone else's code then you should respect the wishes of that developer. It doesn't go further than that.

      Sure, you can trumpet the benefits if X, Y, or Z license until the cows come home, but if a developer still chooses to license their work under the GPL, that's their right to do so.

      You called it "lock-in". I call it "respecting the rights of the author(s)".

      --
      This seemed like a reasonable sig at the time.
    29. Re:Obligatory by smash · · Score: 1

      Obligatory remark about how Mac OS X and iOS are BSD and are used by tens of millions of people everyday, blah, blah, blah.

      Hundreds of millions, you mean.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    30. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm, I wonder if the reincarnated Ayn Rand would go low-carb...

      Anyway, what both you and Ayn Rand would need to understand is that there's no magical implicit "positive right" for you to control people just because they happen to reflect on your ideas. Their mirrors / hard drives / eyes / minds belong to them. You cannot justly force them to respect you, to accept your philosophical values, or to pay you money. You did not homestead a scarce resource by bringing it into the economy, as is the case with real Property Rights; your intellectual accomplishment may deserve credit, but not an exclusive monopoly backed by government force!

      You are responsible for keeping your secrets secret, and for getting people to sign an explicit contract not to disclose the secrets you are selling. Likewise, if you want to force other people to share their modifications, you need a real contract, constituting evidence of a mutual agreement - a threat in a source code comment simply doesn't cut it! What if I take a marker and write "by seeing me you agree to show me your boobies" on my forehead and go out where lots of hot ladies would see me - does that constitute a contract?!

      And, needless to say, such threats are very much contrary to the spirit of free software, which is a natural and inevitable free market phenomenon. People contribute to free software not because Richard Stalinman is pointing a legalistic AK-47 in their face, but because doing so is to their advantage when benefits of increased openness and utility are greater than the sales potential of a restricted product. If someone can build on top of those ideas and turn it into a product, fine - what they're selling is their own innovations, which their customers are grateful to have, and which they might be without if the upstream components had been GPL'ed. Then, as competition drives the price down to zero, the developer of the closed innovation finds it in his/her best interest to open source it in order to gain patches, attention, and goodwill. Those are the market forces that push software innovation forward.

      Linux is GPL's last remaining success story. It is not the most copyLEFT UNIX kernel out there (remember GNU Hurd?), but it managed to achieve great technological merit and success by appearing at the right time and gaining the mindshare of the best developers. By the time BSD finally got rid of its legal FUD, Linux was already ahead by a mile. Linus T and other top Linux devs deserve a huge amount of credit for their accomplishment, including in small part for staying with GPL v2 rather than the newer more restrictive versions. But, nonetheless - they are swimming against the current.

      More and more bright new projects are choosing a copyFREE license. You may laugh at me now, but, sooner or later, paradigms will shift. It probably won't be "Haiku and *BSD", but it might be their children or (great*X) grandchildren (possibly with some temporarily-closed-source branches in their family tree). Or, more likely still: I think there's a very good chance that 20 years from now most operating systems won't still be written in C, but in a language that provides the same performance with a five-fold increase in developer productivity (which also benefits code readability, security, etc). I don't have a crystal ball to say what licenses those new kernels / OS stacks will choose, but most successful recent projects that start with a clean slate (as well as many candidate languages: Go, Rust, Haskell, etc) tend to be permissively licensed.

      --libman

    31. Re:Obligatory by Watts+Martin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      While I agree with the last two sentences, it's worth noting two points which undercut your first two sentences rather dramatically:

      (1) Taking BSD-licensed code and making a proprietary fork doesn't make the previous release magically go away; it makes a new fork. If I love the open source editor FooEdit and FooEdit has a vibrant community around it, then somebody else comes along and starts selling BarEdit based on their proprietary, closed source fork, I can either choose to switch to BarEdit and accept the risks, or keep using FooEdit. (And arguably that's not a binary proposition in the first place: I can switch to BarEdit and then switch back to FooEdit.) The worst case hypothetical is that somehow BarEdit's creation kills the FooEdit community, but in reality that seems very unlikely; in practice, I can't think of a single BSD-licensed project that this has happened to. Can you? Yes, it's possible that in my scenario BarEdit would get cool new features denied to FooEdit users, but if you're deliberately choosing your software based on its "openness" then you've already decided to forgo cool features that are only in proprietary software. Furthermore, you can hardly point to BarEdit and say, "those cool BarEdit-only features would be in FooEdit if only it had been under the GPL"; the more likely case is that BarEdit would simply never have existed.

      (2) While the anonymous coward who responded with "ROFL" was perhaps unduly acerbic, his point is correct: an end user who can't debug and patch code is dependent on the developers to fix bugs regardless of the license the software she's using is under. As much as people don't like to hear this around these parts, I know an awful lot of end users who look for free software because it's free as in beer.

    32. Re:Obligatory by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Indeed, currently my bet would be on Mint as the next popular distribution.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    33. Re:Obligatory by SnatMandu · · Score: 1

      I think he's suggesting that *some* people like the *option* of fixing the software they use themselves. It's always nicer to get a fix for something from "upstream" somewhere, but that's not always possible. It's nice (a GPL-cheerleader might say "essential") to be able to fall back on your own elbow grease.

      The relative quality of the code in question doesn't enter in to it. After all, what good is beautifully written and documented code if you'll never see it?

    34. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      now finally I can run a complete UNIX system without any GNU!

      Tipped your hand here: UNIX predates GNU, moron. Any # of the commercial BSDs are GNU-clean. Here's another option: write your own fucking software.

      The only people that have a problem with GPL are those trying to profit off the work or others or trying to cater to those that are trying to profit off the work of others. I know you guys like to post this stuff to get the sdot neckbeards frothing, but it's sad because I think you partially believe it.

      You're afraid of the GPL because it creates a free ecosystem and a stream of paid bugfixes from corporations that need to ship the code. The copyfree movement's only arguments against copyleft is that it confuses merged works (they erroneously imply that they are derived works) and that, OH NOES, the company must distribute the source if they distribute binaries.

      It's pathetic and intellectually dishonest; grow the fuck up and write your own software if you want to 'do with it what you please'. I love when people like you post here because it's like blood in the water, you're weak and exposed. Free software is a threat to you because you don't create; you "leverage" and you make your money by co-opting the work of others. The 'empire' will continue as long as there are people out there that want to share and cooperate while simultaneously fucking people like you that want to shit on the shoulders of giants.

    35. Re:Obligatory by petval · · Score: 1

      KVM is level 1 hypervisor (like ESX, XenServer, Hyper-V), BHyVe is level 2 (like VMware Workstation or VirtualBox)

    36. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice ad hominem attack, but you are wrong. :-)

      But unlike GPL fanboys I know the reality. People touching the source code of ANYTHING are rarer than unicorns.
      In fact there are unbelievable many people out there who even don't know how to install software, install hardware or even how to use a mail program properly.
      Hell, I have met people who even didn't know how to write a text file and print it.

      The majority of computer end-users are illiterates regarding anything related to computer stuff.

    37. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gosh, GPL fanboys are annoying. REALLY ANNOYING.

      > author of the code wishes that their code always remain free, and so chooses the GPL,

      And that is different from BSD exactly how???
      BSD code remains always free, too. Copying parts of the BSD licensed code doesn't make the original mother code to disappear or become closed.

      GPL warriors haven't understood the meaning of freedom. Real freedom.

    38. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moron.

      >The only people that have a problem with GPL are those trying to profit off the work or others or trying to cater to those that are trying to profit off the work of others.

      Wrong. And that's the problem.

    39. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How does OpenBSD become a project that is "contributed to FreeBSD", whatever that means?

    40. Re:Obligatory by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2

      It's probably a typo. OpenBSM is the MAC framework used by FreeBSD and Darwin. Apple funded a lot of its development, but it was originally written for FreeBSD (it's now the basis for the sandboxing system on iOS and OS X).

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    41. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple already sued. This way FreeBSD lost its autofs port, which would have been nice in heterogenous networks. The old automount doesn't read the same tables.

    42. Re:Obligatory by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2

      That hasn't been true since OS X was called Rhapsody DR2. All of the userland utilities, all of the libc, and much of the kernel either come from FreeBSD or were developed in-house by Apple.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    43. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      now finally I can run a complete UNIX system without any Gnu!

      Tipped your hand here: UNIX predates GNU, moron. Any # of the commercial BSDs are GNU-clean. Here's another option: write your own fucking software.

      The only people that have a problem with GPL are those trying to profit off the work or others or trying to cater to those that are trying to profit off the work of others. I know you guys like to post this stuff to get the sdot neckbeards frothing, but it's sad because I think you partially believe it.

      You're afraid of the GPL because it creates a free ecosystem and a stream of paid bugfixes from corporations that need to ship the code. The copyfree movement's only arguments against copyleft is that it confuses merged works (they erroneously imply that they are derived works) and that, OH NOES, the company must distribute the source if they distribute binaries.

      It's pathetic and intellectually dishonest; grow the fuck up and write your own software if you want to 'do with it what you please'. I love when people like you post here because it's like blood in the water, you're weak and exposed. Free software is a threat to you because you don't create; you "leverage" and you make your money by co-opting the work of others. The 'empire' will continue as long as there are people out there that want to share and cooperate while simultaneously fucking people like you that want to shit on the shoulders of giants.

      Gnus predates UNIX UNIX predates GNU.

    44. Re:Obligatory by biojayc · · Score: 2

      If there are only BSD like licenses, what is the incentive of any corporation to give back? The thinking will be "look here's this awesome tool that we can take, modify and use for ourselves. Let's do that" and giving back won't even be a part of the thought. Energy behind the free version will wane and Open source will disappear. The GPL like licenses helps us know that there WILL be current open source software out there because anyone who wants to use it as a starting point has to give back.

      You could argue that some that work on BSD software DO give back, but I think the presence of the GPL has helped the culture form and I'm just not sure that without it's presence that the pattern would continue to long.

      I could be wrong, and maybe I am, but I am glad for the GPL and fear the rise of BSD. Perhaps it's best to have both and allow them to co exist, but BSD only I'm afraid will slowly lead to only proprietary software. If someone could help me see the other side, I would certainly listen.

    45. Re:Obligatory by ilguido · · Score: 3, Informative

      No, that's a link to all the open source software included in MacOSX, or are you telling me that Apple developed OpenAL, zlib and SQLite (among many others)? Not to mention that all that APSL software is GPL incompatible, DFSG incompatible and, ironically enough, BSD incompatible. Nice try though.

    46. Re:Obligatory by Hatta · · Score: 2

      Indeed. The general trend has been away from freedom. The same has occured in the free software community, as more and more development is primarily driven by for profit corporations. The move from GPL to BSD licenses is a blow for freedom, like we've seen in every other realm over the past decade.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    47. Re: Obligatory by Brian+Feldman · · Score: 0

      You are clueless. OS X contains a LOT of BSD code. Linux contains a lot of code that was rewritten because it was "not invented here" -- maintaining architectural similarity with Unix. OS X is not BSD-derived. OS X is a BSD. Linux is Unix-derived, though, because it was not meant to be original.

      --
      Brian Fundakowski Feldman
    48. Re: Obligatory by peppepz · · Score: 1

      The point is that Apple (and NeXT) took BSD code to make a different operating system. Running a different kernel, with a different binary format, designed to support a graphics environment which is completely alien from BSD's native X11. You can't run BSD binaries on OS X without an emulation layer. You can't run OS X binaries on BSD without an emulation layer. I have the surname of my father, I am not my father.

    49. Re:Obligatory by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      I thought they just threatened to sue, but didn't when the project met their demands.

    50. Re:Obligatory by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      The advertising clause made it impossible to combine the BSD programs with GNU ones in some ways. It's fair to say it's not directly the fault of the BSD license, because it results from license terms that interact very badly. That is effectively a strong restriction though, given the state of open source software at the time. Several of the only feasible choices for critical parts of an open source stack then--gcc comes to mind--were only available via the GNU license.

    51. Re:Obligatory by Skadet · · Score: 1

      LLVM, OpenBSD, Libdispatch.

    52. Re:Obligatory by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      I don't know that it made it impossible more than extremely tedious. The ad clause didn't prevent anything, just mandated that credit be mentioned in any ads and notices. But, if someone didn't want anyone else to know their software was, in part or whole, based on or used BSD code, then, ya, it prevented them from using it.

      I actually knew people that wanted to use BSD code - as the license permitted - but not mention or note it in ads, docs, notices because they wanted customers and competitors to think it was all locally-developed code and I had to tell them that would violate other parts of the BSD license, as well as being unethical. I believe credit should always be given.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    53. Re:Obligatory by greg1104 · · Score: 2

      It really is impossible to legally combine GPL and original BSD licensed software. See Why is the original BSD license incompatible with the GPL?.

    54. Re:Obligatory by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      So actually, the GPL is incompatible with the BSD as the GPL is too restrictive. All the BSD license says is that you must include source credit in your advertising - which isn't really a restriction, but, rather, a requirement, while the GPL says you can't imposes any further restrictions, by which they mean requirements.

      How is ensuring that proper source credit is given a problem? The people at Berkeley (and CA taxpayers) were trying to ensure they got their due credit and I don't think providing it is/was an undue burden on those using the BSD software. The GPL itself imposes many requirements on software, like delivering a copy of the GPL license with the software (Section 4) and displaying "Appropriate Legal Notices" [how vague] (Section 5)...

      The BSD license is one of the most permissive licenses on the planet - do whatever you want with the software, no charge or restrictions, just give us a little credit where due.

      I don't agree that they're incompatible, except in the mind of the fanatical or pedantic... oh wait... Right. this is the FSF and GPL we're talking about...

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    55. Re:Obligatory by Kremmy · · Score: 1

      ZFS support on all platforms is significantly lacking in the specified featureset. Every time I've come across a post talking up some awesome thing about ZFS, I've taken a moment to do some research and found that (with the exception of a few things in the Solaris implementation) the major features that everyone is hailing it for are not actually implemented.
      That means it doesn't have those features.
      That means it doesn't have the benefits that people are using it for.
      That means it's garbage.

      And that saddens my soul.

    56. Re:Obligatory by Lakitu · · Score: 1

      The worst case hypothetical is that somehow BarEdit's creation kills the FooEdit community, but in reality that seems very unlikely; in practice, I can't think of a single BSD-licensed project that this has happened to. Can you? Yes, it's possible that in my scenario BarEdit would get cool new features denied to FooEdit users, but if you're deliberately choosing your software based on its "openness" then you've already decided to forgo cool features that are only in proprietary software.

      while I agree with you, the worry here would be that this is already beginning to happen to FreeBSD itself.

    57. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FreeBSD supports up to ZFS v28, which is most anything that is useful except encryption.

    58. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Linux kernel is great, it actually has good engineering and design. The problem with GPL is the kind of crap user-mode code that is out there. It seem more like a culture of programmers trying to designs systems.

      BSD culture seems to be more about engineers designing systems than "programmers".

      Again, this isn't a FreeBSD vs Linux, but a BSD culture vs GPL culture.

      If GPL helped form the "culture", then you can keep it. Yes, better than closed source, but that's about it.

      If I was to sum up GPL, it would be "PHP". Right next to Brainfuck and the GPL hurd mentality makes everyone want to use it.

      If we had more Linux Torvalds in the GPL culture, we'd probably have better quality systems.

    59. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the end user is fixing code, then they're a developer. The ones who do the most work get the least freedom.

    60. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      With all due respect to your unixbeardedness, your statement has very little to do with the point I was making. We are comparing open source UNIX to open source UNIX, and what factors influenced the relative success of one OS over an other. The roots of the early success of Linux were the i386 "home users" with some blank floppies, who were far more numerous than people with access to corporate mainframes or university labs. I am explaining why those early adopters of Linux didn't go for BSD instead - BSD simply wasn't on their radar. Linux got there first, and when you've got one kernel you don't need another. (GNU's favoritism of Linux over BSD due to licensing bias is a separate issue.)

      GNU was open-source (though restrictively-licensed) since its inception in 1983/4, and Linux from 1991. BSD was entangled in legal FUD until January 1994 , by which time we had not only Linux but also Slackware, Debian, etc. (To some people BSD's "obnoxious advertising clause" was even more of a turn-off than Linux's copyLEFT, and BSD didn't become fully compliant with copyFREE standards until 1999, but that's a side-issue.) So it was in January of 1994 when BSD became a contender, while Linux "went viral" among the home geek crowd in 1993.

      Linus himself had said that if 386BSD had been available (i.e. free of AT&T legal uncertainty) at the time, he probably would not have created Linux. (And it didn't become fully free of legal FUD until a few months after that interview was published.) In that same interview, Linus also mentions other reasons that worked against BSD: higher hardware requirements, "lack of co-ordination", bad approach to release engineering, etc.

      Switching kernels (which also meant switching file-systems, kernel-dependent system components, etc) has always been very difficult. Switching Web browsers is much easier, and its (mostly) BSD license didn't keep Chromium from leapfrogging over Firefox. Apache httpd wasn't the least bit handicapped by its non-copyLEFT (though not entirely copyFREE) license (in fact the "got there first" advantage of Apache has kept out decent GPL'ed Web servers like Cherokee), and it's now gradually yielding ground to the fully-copyFREE nginx. Among scripting languages, lisp (the most popular scripting language of the 80s, also Stallman's favorite) was overshadowed by weaker-copyLEFT perl, which in turn was leapfrogged by even-less-uncopyFREE python / php, and which are now being leapfrogged by fully-copyFREE node.js / ruby / etc. Apple's recent choices leave no doubt that GPL has handicapped the popularity of mysql and gcc.

      Conclusion: The conjecture that FreeBSD was hurt by its license is baseless, buried under a mountain of more plausible handicaps in the history of FreeBSD's development, and is utterly contradicted in most other software categories!

      --libman

    61. Re:Obligatory by dudpixel · · Score: 1

      Huh? The only annoying part is that you don't like the fact that someone else has told you what you can do with their code (well, when it comes to distribution at least).

      I'm not saying either is right or wrong. I generally use the BSD license for my own projects, so I fail to see how that makes me a GPL fanboy.
      I even started my post by saying: "I can see the argument for why one might choose either license"...

      I guess where we differ is that you think a developer should not have the rights granted by the GPL. I disagree - I think the GPL is a valid license and the linux kernel is an excellent example of when it is the right choice (in my opinion).

      I don't think the GPL fits in all cases, and neither do I think the BSD license fits in all cases.

      Let's think about where the GPL hurts most. It hurts because you have to release your own code under the GPL if you use GPL'd code in your project. And why does it hurt to release your own code? well, obviously because you didn't want that code to be "open" (or you didn't want later developers' code to have to be, and so on).

      Let's make this really interesting and say that if there was no such thing as closed-source code, then the BSD license would not offer any advantage over the GPL.

      Still, my own personal view is that closed source is not evil, and a developer should be able to choose how to license their code/product. True freedom to me means allowing the developer the right to any license he/she chooses. But the only way that works is if other developers respect that choice.

      --
      This seemed like a reasonable sig at the time.
    62. Re:Obligatory by helix2301 · · Score: 1

      Apple needs BSD to survive they will bale them out lol. I do think that BSD is struggling with funding cause of Linux popularity boom over last few years. Linux has taken great strides to be come more commercial and get more support on server backed end with Dell, HP and IBM. I do not see BSD having big leaps like that plus they need a better PR rep. Every customer I go to ask for Linux because we are a Linux shop on our commercial side I very rarely see anyone ask for BSD support.

    63. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just don't see the problem with the GPL license.

      It is a deeply-rooted disagreement between the more libertarian (i.e. free market capitalist) approach to software philosophy vs the more socialist approach of Richard Stallman. Politics (and, to a lesser degree, other philosophical issues, like design aesthetics) have been crucial to Stallman and other founders of the GNU movement, and the (mostly accidental) popularity of their license has legitimized and empowered their ideas. There are some things we'd agree on, but the differences between our visions can neither be reconciled nor ignored.

      The philosophical core behind copyLEFT believes that "money is the root of all evil", that corporations need to be destroyed, and that government force is OK just as long as it serves their desired aims. I believe in individual self-ownership, free markets, voluntary cooperation, and owning the fruits of your labor. My epistemology is grounded in rationalism, empiricism, and logical deduction of a Theory of Natural Rights; theirs is based on existentialism / emotionalism, demagoguery, and the thirst for political power. They believe that government force is legitimate when it suits them (copyLEFT enforcement, "net neutrality", funding of their pet projects, etc) and evil when it doesn't (patents, SOPA, vice prohibitionism, etc); I believe that violations of (individual, negative) Rights are always wrong.

      CopyFREE and proprietary software exist in a natural symbiotic relationship. People can innovate and are free to decide how they release their innovations, including in a way that profits them the most, but free market competition eventually drives prices to zero and recognizes openness / source availability / copyFREE-ness as a competitive advantage. You eventually get the best of both worlds - the developer's rent gets paid through the next cycle of innovation, and the source is eventually released. There's no definite need for state-sponsored "intellectual property" monopolies in this process, because development can be funded through explicit contracts, SaaS (which, BTW, is the direction that Microsoft is moving in), hardware bundling (which Apple did from day one), support bundling, education / certification-bundled contractual agreements, an open reputation-based donation system, etc, etc, etc.

      CopyLEFT software, on the other hand, exists in a perpetual state of uncertainty and antagonism with everything around it. The Linux kernel has avoided some of this uncertainty by pledging to stay with GPL v2, but many of Linux distros' essential components will follow the latest version, and there's no telling whether (A)GPL v4 or v9 will begin to include quotations from Chairman Mao... Businesses embracing copyLEFT as a PR-friendly add-on to copyright is not what RMS had originally intended, and fear of losing more market share is the only thing that's limiting their push for ever-more-restrictive licenses. They ultimately believe that businesses are evil and should be taxed into non-existence, and government monopolies should fund all software development and control everything - with them in charge.

      The BSD license permits people to take free source code and lock it way and not share back [... below ...]. The way I see it, GPL is an immunization for the user community against the jerks who want to take source code and not share back their changes.

      Copying is not a crime, and it is wrong do deal with "jerks" (who have not initiated physical aggression) through violence - lest you forgot that the power of GPL enforcement ultimately derives from the guns of state!

      The BSD and other

    64. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If there are only BSD like licenses, what is the incentive of any corporation to give back?

      See my other post here for many examples of companies contributing to copyFREE projects, and a summary of the market forces that encourage it.

      "Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent" [Asimov], and it has dangerous side-effects. Copyright/left is not a legitimate Property Right over a scarce economic good, but a contrived monopoly granted by the state and defended through the initiation of force - a physical response to an intellectual act. Copyright has existed for a long time, and could be successfully combated through various means, but the advent of copyleft has constituted a new expansion of government powers - which, in all historical likelihood, will be hijacked and used in contradiction of their original intent. CopyFREE software / content could have been well on their way to making copyright look like a ridiculous anachronism - until copyLEFT arrived to cover copyright's butt!

      The thinking will be "look here's this awesome tool that we can take, modify and use for ourselves. Let's do that" and giving back won't even be a part of the thought.

      That's why it's called FREE software. GPL, on the other hand, isn't free - it is a worm on a hook.

      Energy behind the free version will wane and Open source will disappear. [...]

      Except that copyFREE projects are growing faster than copyLEFT ones!

      You could argue that some that work on BSD software DO give back, but I think the presence of the GPL has helped the culture form and I'm just not sure that without it's presence that the pattern would continue to long.

      Objective evidence demonstrates that copyLEFT does more harm than good.

      As explained in the aforelinked post, copyFREE and proprietary software exist in a symbiotic mutually-beneficial relationship, while copyLEFT is just a communist bully looking to destroy the private sector and then take credit for the sun rising every morning!

      I could be wrong, and maybe I am, but I am glad for the GPL and fear the rise of BSD. Perhaps it's best to have both and allow them to co exist, but BSD only I'm afraid will slowly lead to only proprietary software. If someone could help me see the other side, I would certainly listen.

      Proponents of copyLEFT don't seem to understand the concept of copying - it doesn't make the original disappear! Proprietary software can utilize copyFREE software, but (assuming consumer self-interest) it cannot make a penny without adding value on top of what they've copied. They are not stealing - they're innovating! If they want to keep their code to themselves for a while, that is their right. Sooner or later, competition drives the price of any standing set of features down to zero, and it becomes more profitable for the developer to release the code in order to attract more egoboo / patches / links / attention / potential job offers / etc. The balance between competition for individual benefit and mutually-beneficial cooperation is essential even in microbiology, and it's a great shame that so many people fail to properly understand its role in the marketplace today.

      Shakespeare didn't invent most of the words he used, and even many of his plots were unoriginal - but he put the pieces together and created something great. Writers who were influenced by Shakespeare (which is pretty much everybody, directly or indirectly) were less original still. A programmer puts together snippets of code, many of which are not unique in human history. If those snippets are poisoned by a restrictive license, then this programmer's freedom is limited. This isn't much of a problem with proprietary software

    65. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Linux kernel is great, it actually has good engineering and design.

      I acknowledge that the Linux kernel has many virtues, but I wouldn't go as far as to call it a masterpiece. It must be remembered that most of it is merely a knockoff of numerous ideas that came from proprietary UNIX. True innovation is a very rare thing, and it is far more likely to happen in proprietary software first. Smart people who devote their lives to learning and then improving something full-time usually like to get paid...

      This is why we need a more symbiotic relationship between proprietary and free software - and, if Linux has achieved this to some degree, then it has done so while swimming against the current due to GPL! If, instead of Linux, there was an agreement that the top UNIX vendors would release their code as copyFREE say 4 years after each release, this would result in an ecosystem of code-sharing forks the best of which would be considerably better than Linux, with all the effort that has gone to reinventing the wheel (proprietary / copyLEFT / copyFREE) going toward more innovative ends instead.

      The problem with GPL is the kind of crap user-mode code that is out there. It seem more like a culture of programmers trying to designs systems. [...]

      I agree, and this is exactly why the quantity of the various GPL-licensed "gnome4-scratch-my-back" packages is irrelevant. CopyFREE software just needs to win the "commanding heights" of the new client stack, and it is well on its way thanks to Chromium and HTML5.

      Again, this isn't a FreeBSD vs Linux, but a BSD culture vs GPL culture.

      I'd prefer to frame the debate as copyLEFT vs copyFREE. FreeBSD (or any BSD) isn't my favorite copyFREE project by far, but it is the most competent source of lower-level system components that we have for now. True innovation is happening elsewhere: HTML5, Node.JS, Redis, PostgreSQL / SQLite, NaCl, Go, Haskell, etc, etc, etc.

      --libman

    66. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People touching the source code of ANYTHING are rarer than unicorns.

      Does that include furry unicorns? They're everywhere!

      Seriously, I read code all the time. A good coder will do a lot more reading than writing, which is especially true of C and other non-obvious lower-level programming... OpenBSD code is a great epic read (skip the perl).

      The majority of computer end-users are illiterates regarding anything related to computer stuff.

      They still benefit from using open source components in various ways.

      Even if only 0.1% of users will review the code, in most cases that's enough people to blow the whistle if there's a backdoor, etc. Of course proprietary software can be disassembled / virtualized / memory-dumped / and analyzed in a variety of ways, and I'm sure that most Microsoft software has had more eyeballs on it than most FLOSS software, but with equal popularity open source has the advantage.

      Non-devs also benefit from being able to rent a coder from a freelancer site (usually in Outsourcistan, India) to conduct a security audit or make a change for them. Again, modding proprietary software is possible, and in many cases is easier than most people think (and even than its developers would have wanted), but still a bit more ugly and expensive.

      With a "time-limited hybrid source" arrangement, you get the best of both worlds. The proprietary developer would hand over the code to a reputable third party, which would build the binaries for distribution while keeping the code safe till its due date. The dev would be able to sell it like any other piece of proprietary software and possibly profit from his innovations while they're fresh, but with the added advantage that the users would eventually get the code. The dev wouldn't be able to hide any surprises (excluding in BLOBs or brilliant feats of obfuscation), and the users would know that they would eventually be unencumbered in making any modifications they wanted.

      Perhaps this is how intellectual monopolies should be phased out...

      --libman

    67. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      KVM is level 1 hypervisor (like ESX, XenServer, Hyper-V), BHyVe is level 2 (like VMware Workstation or VirtualBox)

      No, you are mistaken, BHyVe is a bare-metal hypervisor just like xen or kvm.

    68. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      now finally I can run a complete UNIX system without any GNU!

      Tipped your hand here: UNIX predates GNU, moron. Any # of the commercial BSDs are GNU-clean. Here's another option: write your own fucking software.

      In context it is obvious that I meant a complete copyFREE UNIX system, but my statement remains logically correct even if you allow proprietary systems, predicated on the words "I can". I cannot live with a costly or ancient system, as GNU components have penetrated all UNIX flavors that I know of by mid-1990s. (And if "I" don't know about it, then how "can" I run it?) And if I have to write my own software or Frankenstein together pieces of separate OS'es to avoid GPL, then how is the UNIX system "complete"?

      Looking through a list of "commercial BSDs", all of them are either "historical" and/or require vendor-specific hardware. (The fact that all of them went out of business instead of endlessly "stealing" copyFREE *BSD code is further evidence in my favor.) Tru64 now even has a GPL filesystem! Even Microsoft's Interix includes GCC! FreeBSD 10 is indeed the closest thing to usable gnushit-free UNIX, with no second place contender in sight.

      The only people that have a problem with GPL are those trying to profit off the work or others or trying to cater to those that are trying to profit off the work of others.

      ... or agree with the philosophical points I've made throughout this thread. Such people exist (you're welcome to stop by on ##copyfree on FreeNode and meet a few), therefore your claim is false.

      If you don't want other people (who might, "OH NOES", make a profit from their own innovations downstream from you) to use your software, then keep your own secrets (without Mommy Government's help) and don't call it "free".

      Not all people who are opposed to slavery are slaves!

      I know you guys like to post this stuff to get the sdot neckbeards frothing, but it's sad because I think you partially believe it.

      It is impossible to prove or disprove someone's intentions, but one piece of anecdotal evidence you'll find after enough Googling is that I've spent no less time promoting copyFREE software in libertarian circles than I have criticizing GPL among Linux users.

      Of course I entirely believe everything I say, and have been consistently saying for many years (excluding obvious satire, and the few things I have explicitly retracted in light of new information and personal growth). What reason do you have to claim otherwise?

      You're afraid of the GPL because it creates a free ecosystem and a stream of paid bugfixes from corporations that need to ship the code. The copyfree movement's only arguments against copyleft is that it confuses merged works (they erroneously imply that they are derived works) and that, OH NOES, the company must distribute the source if they distribute binaries.

      You will find many other arguments here throughout.

      Prepending a comical "OH NOES" to describing an illegitimate act of government force does not negate its illegitimacy.

      It's pathetic and intellectually dishonest;

      Pathetic - maybe. I'm here to promote ideas that I believe are crucial to preserving and promoting freedom in the "digital millennium", to the best of my ability, with reason as well as passion. Looking "cool" is a much lesser value for me than fighting for the Truth!

      As for the accusation of intellectual dishonesty - I would be very concerned if I saw any evidence behind it.

      grow the fuck up and write your own software if you want to 'do with it what yo

    69. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      re "(1)" - I agree entirely. I would even go further to say that the existence of BarEdit (closed fork) is good for FooEdit's community. First of all, it means that at last one person from that community has taken the time to learn the software enough to extend it. If profit was his/her sole motivation, then this attention wouldn't have been received if FooEdit hadn't been copyFREE. It is likely that this person has contributed to the FooEdit's community in the process - and the likelihood of that is increased if everyone evolves a healthy respect for developers, rather than just thanklessly wanting to mooch all their code. If the developer of BarEdit makes money (which is highly unlikely unless s\he adds considerable value to their fork), this means their time investment in knowledge of FooEdit was justified, so more time is likely to be invested in the future. There is a good chance that some of BarEdit's income and eventually code would be donated to FooEdit, but what is inevitably donated is attribution and ideas for innovative new features that, as BarEdit's experiment has shown, users want badly enough to pay for. Everybody wins.

      re "(2)" - I think we need to stop looking at "open source" and "closed source" as binary attributes. It is possible to generate source code so obfuscated that it actually tells you less about the program than a normal compiled binary! What we should be trying to estimate are specific costs, either in paid (dollars) or unpaid (time * stress?) developer effort. This is another thing that would improve from a symbiosis of proprietary and copyFREE software: it would lead to more competition, and proprietary devs would advertise the quality of their code (as vetted by third party auditors) as a feature. Let's say two coders wrote an identical add-on for a project, but one has a reputation for beautiful code and the other for code that is so ugly it would make Larry Wall cry - knowing that both are contractually obligated to publish their code in X months, which would you rather patronize?

      Quality is much easier to quantify when there are actual dollars and cents involved... (And perhaps sometimes, in order to have a fair essay contest, you need to prevent the competitors from seeing each-other's work while they write...) Some of this is still possible with GPL, but it does limit your options, and there's no telling what new restrictions future versions of GPL will bring...

      --libman

    70. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the worry here would be that this is already beginning to happen to FreeBSD itself.

      FreeBSD isn't losing market share to MacOS X (whose FreeBSD parentage is small and shrinking), but mainly to Linux. For now.

      What I have clearly demonstrated over the last few posts here is that its current license is not FreeBSD's handicap. I must freely admit that learning RedHat / CentOS would be better for your career, PuppyLinux would squeeze more out of your old computer, and, technically, Gentoo Linux makes for a better FreeBSD than FreeBSD... If licensing wasn't an issue, I'd dump *BSD for Linux in a nanosecond!

      CopyFREE software has been slowly gaining ground, and one of the BSD's could make a popularity leap as soon as it becomes clearly better than Linux at something. Even if it was merely even with Linux, companies like Google would be very likely to make the switch. Or a new paradigm-shifting OS could come along, and, given recent licensing trends among such projects, it is more likely to be copyFREE.

      --libman

    71. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only annoying part is that you don't like the fact that someone else has told you what you can do with their code

      It's not annoying in any direct instinctive sense that is unexamined by higher reasoning. I never closed-source-forked anything in my life, and probably never will. Most people just ignore licensing as irrelevant voodoo - I sure wish I could... But GPL is a political weapon, and it needs to be treated accordingly.

      [...] I generally use the BSD license for my own projects [...]

      Thank you very much! 8-)

      I think the GPL is a valid license

      If GPL is a valid (in ivory-tower philosophy of law), then so is every other "intellectual property" law and every "implicit contract", including the Post-It note on my forehead saying that by seeing my face girls agree to kiss me.

      the linux kernel is an excellent example of when it is the right choice (in my opinion).

      You're obviously entitled (have a negative Right) to your opinion, but I don't think this position would withhold much logical scrutiny.

      Linux being GPL has hurt the software industry overall, GPL being a speed-bump on the road to greater symbiosis between proprietary and free code. If Linux had been copyFREE, the time that was wasted rewriting code to liberate it from GPL (by authors of both proprietary and copyFREE projects) would have gone to more beneficial endeavors instead. Microsoft would have had far, far more competition, since Linux would level the playing field and give small start-ups a major boost. Lower barrier to entry means more developers (who are not immaterial beings and have bills to pay) are stimulated to jump in and offer their enhancements, bringing money into the industry if they're successful. More competition means more innovation, flexibility, and higher standards.

      The pragmatic "ethics be damned, I just wanna mooch code!" argument for GPL has lost all validity. In pretty much every category other than the kernel (the most complex piece that has the greatest lock-in) we are gradually seeing copyFREE projects exhibiting a competitive advantage. Even among online encyclopedias, the dominant project's content is not copyLEFT! You cannot just keep coming back to the Linux vs FreeBSD example - look at the total body of evidence.

      Even more important than the pragmatic argument against GPL is the moral argument. Civilization is handicapped when it tries to operate on subjective laws, like GPL to satisfy one interest group or SOPA to satisfy another, with the groups always fighting each-other to get their hands on the guns of legislation. Law must be objective and grounded in reason. The idea of "implicit contracts" is nonsensical when you try to apply it consistently. When people claiming to act toward the goal of freedom act through irrational loopholes, they only empower the tyrants to use those same irrational loopholes to their advantage.

      When you solve a problem through government-backed violence, which is what GPL ultimately rests on, you fail to solve this problem through reason. Without copyLEFT, the free software culture would have evolved differently, with much smarter ways of persuading developers to share their code. And, without copyLEFT, more people would question copyright as well.

      Let's think about where the GPL hurts most. [...]

      GPL hurts the most when people arguing against "intellectual property" (or any other irrational abuse of government power) are rightfully called hypocrites for using the same weapon in their favor!

      --libman

    72. Re:Obligatory by Galactic+Dominator · · Score: 1

      KVM is level 1 hypervisor

      Pure gibberish faith. KVM looks a kernel module, it operates exclusively within the kernel making it a Type 2. However the distinction itself is meaningless now days except for those who like to pontificate on Old Wives Tales like "Type 1 gives a better security profile" or "Type 2 doesn't have feature X".

      It's all bullshit.

      --
      brandelf -t FreeBSD /brain
  2. Finally.... by identity0 · · Score: 2, Funny

    After many long years on Slashdot, can I be the first one to actually confirm that FreeBSD is dead?

    1. Re:Finally.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      No. Only Netcraft is allowed to do that.

    2. Re:Finally.... by Kergan · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's. Not. Dead. Yet.

      It'll return as a zombie... process?

    3. Re:Finally.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's just pining for the fjords

    4. Re:Finally.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You better tell NetApp, EMC, Juniper, and Cisco.

    5. Re:Finally.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How much of that $240,000 did those guys donate, out of interest?

    6. Re:Finally.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But what if Netcraft dies first?

    7. Re:Finally.... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2

      See the donors page for some of the big donors. NetApp gave $100,000 this year (they had to invent a new category of sponsor for them. Juniper gave somewhere in the $10-25K region, but they've also started pushing a lot of code upstream and employing people to work full-time on FreeBSD, which is more valuable (in terms of code, Juniper has contributed more than all of the Foundation-funded developers in the past year, the advantage of the Foundation is that it can fund work that doesn't give anyone enough a short-term commercial advantage for companies to do it).

      To put this in perspective, last year's fund raising total was $400K and they raised about $480K. For the past two years, about half of the fund raising has been in the last week as US companies realise that it's the end of the tax year and they want to offset some tax, so they're pretty well on target.

      Actually, the biggest problem for the Foundation currently is the opposite of what you elude to. They need to have a certain (somewhat flexible) percentage of donations from individuals to satisfy the 'broad public support' requirement for their tax-free status. This means that they need small donations from individuals as well as the big corporate donations.

      P.S. The Foundation has received over 400 donations in between this story appearing and when I started writing this post. More, of course, are welcome. If you're having trouble figuring out how (apparently some people are), then go to the Foundation's donations page (reachable by clicking on Donations from the Foundation's front page, but depressingly hard to find from FreeBSD.org).

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    8. Re:Finally.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After many long years on Slashdot, can I be the first one to actually confirm that FreeBSD is dead?

      The FreeBSD Foundation is *not* the FreeBSD Project - it exists to support the project, but is not a significant funding source for development and maintenance of the OS.

    9. Re:Finally.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope. It's alive but not doing so well when it really should be. Consider it a parent of *BSDs but it's used at a lot of places:

      FreeNAS
      Apple
      Good stuff: ZFS, dtrace # Sun stuff rocks
      Citrix
      Force10 (netbsd) (i.e. quite a few hardware networking companies)
      Juniper
      NetApp

      Oh and here's the biggest kicker most Linux people forget, BSD -> OpenBSD -> OpenSSH.

      In one way or another, for many crucial gotchas, *BSDs are core. FreeBSD is the largest of the *BSDs.

  3. Never met anyone who uses it. by jfdavis668 · · Score: 2

    I have never met anyone in person who uses it. I know some must.

    1. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by Melkman · · Score: 3, Informative

      Well, I know people who use FreeNAS which is based on FreeBSD. I think the thought behind the BSD license is telling. It basically says you can take the code and nothing in return is expected, which is exactly what they get.

    2. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like linux maybe. You/they use it without knowing.

      I use it *without* knowing on my router http://www.pfsense.org and my NAS http://www.freenas.org

    3. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by Cinder6 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Obviously you've never met me (well, most likely you haven't), but I used to use FreeBSD in the early-to-mid-2000s, back before I went to OS X. I always liked it a lot--more than any of the *nixes I used, with the possible exception of Arch.

      --
      If you can't convince them, convict them.
    4. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by jfdavis668 · · Score: 3, Funny

      No, I don't think I ever met you. Nice to meet you.

    5. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I have never met anyone in person who uses it. I know some must.

      I have I am sad to say... and unfortunately someone keeps deploying new instances on my network. And then leaves. With my team holding the bloody bag.

      2 BSD servers, and 2 bloody Debian servers, installled by some admin that professes a hatred for Redhat.

      (Despite Redhat being our organization's standard)

      That's the only place I see FreeBSD these days -- unauthorized installs by some diehard.

    6. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by epine · · Score: 1, Troll

      Well, I know people who use FreeNAS which is based on FreeBSD. I think the thought behind the BSD license is telling. It basically says you can take the code and nothing in return is expected, which is exactly what they get.

      You must be a math major. An economist might have stopped to ask whether Clang/LLVM fell off a turnip wagon.

      Anyone who is using FreeBSD properly soon reaches the point where they are thinking about other things they need to accomplish. You probably haven't met too many people having long conversations about their wonderfully reliable plumbing, either.

      Linux seems to regard rewriting their firewall facility from scratch as a desirable social activity. Of course if you meet someone who enjoys replacing their deck every second year, you'll hear a lot more about advances in deck paint.

    7. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I may not hear others refer to their reliable plumbing that will probably outlast their home but I do hear from plenty of people that have bad plumbing, overflow issues and need their pipes cleaned.

    8. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by Billly+Gates · · Score: 2

      FreeBSD was very popular 10 years ago. In my opinion those were its golden days.

      BSD Unix golden days were 4.2 - 4.4 where TCP/IP was developed back in the early 1980s and Sun's Gossling worked on the kernel. Its freeBSD counterpart golden days were 4.0 - 4.12 before it went to shit and Linux/Ubuntu took over.

      10 years ago FreeBSD was ahead of Linux and it drove me nuts to see slashdot down all the time (not so common now) as Linux couldn't scale for more than 2 cpus and crashed or halted when it had a shitload of network connections. FreeBSD could run smoothly on that old 486 just fine for thousands of connections!

      FreeBSD was more user friendly (4.x and earlier) as you could go to /usr/ports/examples/cvsup and /etc and edit .sh files to do all sorts of crazy things like check your main update servers at 3am every night and sync to the ports ... just uncomment this line! FYI I last used it in 2004/2005 so I might have got that directory wrong. Linux .RC scripts are more like programs iwth if/else code than .ini files :-(

      You can't really hack them as they are programs. Not things to turn on and off as easily.

      Unix geeks used Linux and FreeBSD and if you bought it at any college bookstore it had a nice manual too which is my favorite unix book. It discusses how to use emacs and vi and other things much better than the crappy linux manpages. Infact, FreeBSD has /etc/share/doc with much more detailed things and its man pages were more detailed. Example man /etc would talk about that directory where no such entry was in Linux.

      FreeBSD 4.0 - 4.12 will always have a place in my heart right there with the Windows fan boys loving XP as its golden age.

      Today Linux has suceeded it and can now scale to 64 processors. Linux has a journaling file system now. It can do async i/o and other things that only FreeBSD could as FreeBSD became bloated and buggy. Rest in peace.

    9. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Netflix

      http://www.zdnet.com/blog/datacenter/netflix-delivers-using-commodity-hardware-and-open-source-software/1409

    10. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      I had to programming jobs that used freebsd. and one that used netbsd. but that was many years ago. these days, all I'm seeing are linux this and linux that.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    11. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by BrokenHalo · · Score: 2

      Example man /etc would talk about that directory where no such entry was in Linux.

      Maybe it just isn't necessary. Even BSDs get some things completely wrong:

      $ man woman
      No manual entry for woman
      $

    12. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      I have never met anyone in person who uses it. I know some must.

      Dammit. I use it, I was using it 10 minutes ago. I can't be alone.

      I store lots of data on FreeBSD 9.0 using ZFS because I really like ZFS. I also run BackupPC for my personal stuff on it.

      I also really like the handbook. One simple accessible document for most of everything is so much easier than the Linux distros.

    13. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by Beetjebrak · · Score: 3, Interesting

      FreeBSD? Right here on my laptop, my media center, my personal web and mail servers, and a hell of a lot of servers (est. 400 or so) at work. But we probably haven't met. If we have, I generally don't use my preference for FreeBSD as a conversation starter.

      --
      Learn from the mistakes of others. There isn't enough time to make them all yourself.
    14. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by Beetjebrak · · Score: 1

      (Despite Redhat being our organization's standard) The point in time when this was decided was also the point in time your organization stopped thinking about stuff like this, right? Seriously, I'm usually not one for breaking the mold but the threat of tunnel vision is definitely there if you stop looking from side to side.

      --
      Learn from the mistakes of others. There isn't enough time to make them all yourself.
    15. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by 1s44c · · Score: 4, Informative

      Well, I know people who use FreeNAS which is based on FreeBSD. I think the thought behind the BSD license is telling. It basically says you can take the code and nothing in return is expected, which is exactly what they get.

      I know from personal experience that at least some big mega-corps do give stuff back to the BSD's.

      I worked at a place that spent loads of money improving one of the BSDs. They gave back everything for the purely selfish reason that they could either keep maintaining their changes at a high cost or send the changes to the project and get maintance for free. The improvements to the BSD were publicly known but who funded them never was.

    16. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by rtaylor · · Score: 1

      I strongly prefer to have a different operating systems on my front-end (Apache) and database/storage (PostgreSQL) layers just to make it a touch more difficult to pull a copy of the DB.

      --
      Rod Taylor
    17. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by 1s44c · · Score: 2

      I use it *without* knowing on my router http://www.pfsense.org/ and my NAS http://www.freenas.org/

      Pendantic mode - How do you know you use it without knowing? Besides the boot messages are a dead giveaway.

      I used to use pfsense. It worked fine but it did seem annoyingly limited in some respects and everytime I asked how to do a thing I was told I should pay for a bounty to add some feature in the next release. It annoyed me so much I changed to OpenBSD and now write pf rules in vi. Now I know exactly what my firewall is doing, it runs a more recent version of pf, I have way more flexibility to do other things on my firewall if I choose, and pfsense can't compete with OpenBSD's security history.

    18. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      CentOS is my organization's standard, but sometimes there are compelling reasons to use something else.

      I have no knowledge of your situation. Maybe it was just someone using what they knew best in your case.

    19. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by Vanders · · Score: 1

      I use FreeBSD on NTP servers as it keeps time better than Linux, but damn it makes me wretch every time I have to use the utterly hateful FreeBSD installer.

      I couldn't get FreeBSD 9.0 to boot via. iLO virtual media either.

    20. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by donaldm · · Score: 1

      FreeBSD 4.0 - 4.12 will always have a place in my heart right there with the Windows fan boys loving XP as its golden age.

      Yes I do remember installing MS Windows XP when it first came out and getting a virus when I forgot I was connected to the Corporate network although I never had any issues when installing a distribution of Linux. :)

      Today Linux has suceeded it and can now scale to 64 processors.

      With the 3 kernel Linux can scale to 512 processors.

      Linux has a journaling file system now

      Linux has had a journaling file-system for many years now such as ext3 (approx 2001). Of course I should also mention ext4, JFS, XFS and even BtrFS to name a few.

      --
      There ain't no such thing as proprietary standards only proprietary formats. Standards are by definition open.
    21. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by m6tt · · Score: 2

      I use it all the time. I also use Linux variants.

      FreeBSD is really a powerful, well-documented system that brings a lot of stuff to the table that's not possible, not production ready, or simply broken in Linux.

      Off the top of my head: standardized networking commands, ZFS (in kernel), GEOM framework, devd, pf firewall is huge, RAID trim support, lagg (link aggregation/hot failover) and CARP (common address redundancy protocol...share IP for multiple servers).

    22. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by toejam13 · · Score: 1

      Not only have I used BSD, but I'd say that it shaped my adult life.

      As a teen, I signed up for a UNIX timeshare service that utilized a Sun SPARCstation running SunOS 4 (4.3BSD based). You got a Csh and a T1 to the 'Net. When they started offering SLIP service, I installed AmiTCP, an Amiga port of the NetBSD network stack which also included many /bin commands and /etc conf files.

      I eventually took the plunge and installed NetBSD 0.9 on my Amiga 3000. Later, it was FreeBSD 2.x on my 486/66. While most people in my university programming classes were using Turbo C, I was using GCC. Classmates took MFC/C++ as an elective, I took Perl. Friends were using IPX on their home network, I was using TCP/IP with a FreeBSD box acting as a dial-on-demand gateway.

      Having so much networking experience, I drifted from the programming side of computers into networking. My experience with BSD eventually landed me a job with a networking startup that used an embedded *BSD OS as the base for their product. Since then, I've used BSD based gear from Citrix (Netscaler), F5 (BIG-IP, EDGE-FX and 3DNS), Nokia (IPSO Firewall) and Secure Computing (Sidewinder firewall) as part of my job. I've been at it for over 15 years.

      I still use FreeBSD for development here at home. DragonFlyBSD is also nice, though I prefer Ports over Pkgsrc, which is why I stuck with FreeBSD.

    23. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by KiloByte · · Score: 1

      Today Linux has suceeded it and can now scale to 64 processors.

      With the 3 kernel Linux can scale to 512 processors.

      Try bumping the setting and recompiling, m'kay?

      Linux has had a journaling file-system [...]and even BtrFS to name a few.

      Actually, btrfs doesn't use band-aids like a journal (except for the fsync log): copy on write means you don't need to write the same thing many times. Take a look at log-structured filesystems for an even cooler solution.

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
    24. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by imp · · Score: 4, Informative

      Having worked on FreeNAS and its commercial counterpart, I can tell you that iX Systems, the folks behind FreeNAS, give quite a lot back to FreeBSD. There is much code flowing back into the project from them, they sponsor many FreeBSD developers to attend various events, they leverage their buying power to get cheap/free servers for the project.

      Juniper Networks did a port of FreeBSD to mips, and contributed it back, as well as substantial support for different arm and PowerPC platforms.

      Yahoo has contributed many things back to the project over the years.

      And the lest goes on and on. There is a mutually beneficial relationship between the community, the corporations that use it and the project. To speak otherwise shows a woeful ignorance of reality.

    25. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      Well, most large ISPs use it for multiple things. It's the base used for most firewalls and load balencers. It is the fastest TCP/IP implementation on the planet.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    26. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by rycamor · · Score: 1

      Currently using FreeBSD (in the form of PCBSD) on my home workstation. It works quite well with the latest KDE, Firefox, Thunderbird, LibreOffice, etc... Nvidia card gets perfect 3D acceleration via the FreeBSD driver, audio works great (I much prefer FreeBSD audio to Linux audio).

      Also using FreeBSD on my cloud hosted webserver: one main instance of FreeBSD hosted via KVM, running several jails, so I essentially get VMs inside my VM. Performance is great, and I sleep much better at night managing a FreeBSD server than any standard Linux distro.

    27. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 0

      I suppose the question then becomes, between all those corporations, how come they couldn't foot a $500k yearly bill? It should be chump change for either Juniper or Yahoo.

    28. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by hawkinspeter · · Score: 1

      Why don't you replace the BSD and Debian boxes with RedHat ones? If they're using up your time to admin them, then it'd be worth converting them to make it easier to manage.

      --
      You're a temporary arrangement of matter sliding towards oblivion in a cold, uncaring universe
    29. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by Trilkk · · Score: 1

      I used to use FreeBSD in the early-to-mid-2000s, back before I went to OS X

      I'm the inverse. Tried out OSX back in the day, but couldn't get along with it. Tried FreeBSD later, and have been using it since '06.

      Actually, I realized I have never donated to the FreeBSD foundation, so did that now.

    30. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by madmayr · · Score: 1

      i'm not the AC OP, but organization standatrds are there for a reason - and they don't imply tunnel vision, just easier management of a whole system

    31. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      The big corporations often donate in a much more direct way: they pay people to work full-time on the project. There's no real incentive for them to indirectly fund someone via the Foundation when they could just hire them and pay them directly. Given that Juniper, Yahoo! and so on all pay significantly more for developers than the Foundation, it works out for them too. It also doesn't help the Foundation maintain its non-profit status if all (or even almost-all) of its money comes from a few big sponsors: the IRS starts to look on it as a corporate tax dodge and it must work harder to prove that it has 'broad public support'.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    32. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      I find it really hard to believe that you don't know anyone who has used Netflix, Yahoo!, or a Juniper router.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    33. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by Brian+Feldman · · Score: 1

      Pretty sure you got told you should either add it yourself or pay a bounty if you're too lazy.

      --
      Brian Fundakowski Feldman
    34. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by Brian+Feldman · · Score: 1

      I work at NASA. All bureaucracies are the same. Trust me. The standards are for tunnel vision.

      --
      Brian Fundakowski Feldman
    35. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how much have you donated, you freeloading bastard?

    36. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by 2DGamer · · Score: 1

      Nope, not alone. I use it as my primary development box and have since 2006. I also have my NAT running FreeBSD. I do have a few Linux boxes around, but those are for testing only (and yes various flavors of Windows for old games - no DRM thank you).

      I prefer FreeBSD. There is something very peaceful and calming about the stability of the system. I don't feel compelled to upgrade to the latest release every 6 - 12 months, and userland ports are mostly independent of the base kernel. I still can update my ports tree and grab the latest for *most* things even though I am still running 7.1.

      I also like knowing that I own the system, though and through. No fuss, no muss, no rough stuff.

      *(For example, WINE is not upgradeable at this point; a kernel change has necessitated upgrading to 8.x)

    37. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by imp · · Score: 1

      Some companies give to the 503(c)3 as their donations, while others donate code and/or developer time. The latter can add up to a quite substantial amount if you look at the total cost it takes to develop something, rather than just the relatively small cost to integrate the patches upstream. The larger companies make modest cash donations to the foundation, records show, but make even larger donations in code to the project. Many of these donations don't necessarily show up in the commit log as being from $LARGE_COMPANY, but instead show up as individual FreeBSD committers that are paid to put the code into FreeBSD, or small consulting houses that large companies sometimes outsource work to.

      Warner

    38. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Netflix does. So do I (10 servers, 8 desktops)

    39. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by ogdenk · · Score: 1

      I'm actually with you. Was a BSD (FreeBSD and NetBSD/mac68k) user most of the 90's. I had a mac around as well but the FreeBSD box was my daily driver.

      When OSX came out, I couldn't afford a recent enough mac to run it but I was always impressed by NeXTstep. I didn't get an OSX capable machine until around 2005 or so.

      My primary reasons for being a rabid OSX user on the desktop vs. FreeBSD are:

      - Native productivity apps that don't suck or are artificially limited due to patent concerns (i.e. Scribus)
      - A kickass windowing system that isn't X11. Xquartz works well for X11 apps I just gotta have.
      - Once configured and destupified, a UI layer that is second to none.

      It takes some tweaking to get OSX tolerable.... The OSX UI is actually quite configurable if you bother digging. You just can't change the window or toolkit decorations.

      There's nothing wrong with commercial *NIX OS's. Nor is there anything wrong with FreeBSD. My job required software that wasn't available natively for BSD and I'm not going to try to struggle with a VM or WINE for software I need daily. OSX had all the UNIXy goodness under the hood that's real easy to get at. OSS software through Fink or Macports. It also has a great library of familiar off-the-shelf commercial software.

      Yes, OSX is different in a lot of ways.... things like changing your login shell or adding users from the command line might require a google query.... people get over it or go back to canned Linux distros they don't understand either.

      Server-side I still prefer FreeBSD.

    40. Re:Never met anyone who uses it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I actually still use it. Prefer it to Apple (Apple wants too much money for stealing, polishing and reselling the genius of others).

      I put a message above and there are more below about how many companies actually use it. I also went into other *BSDs but that's neither here nor there.

      However, I know what you mean. FreeBSD doesn't have the visibility that Linux does but it's there, it's good and it's important as are all the *BSDs.

      My first router was a 486 with 4MB or RAM and a floppy drive. Literally. I dumpster dove to get it and the hard drive was bad. Being broke, I didn't want to spend the funds for another drive. There was a Linux kernel out there but it didn't handle my ISA NICs correctly. I then used a FreeBSD mini router distro and it worked like a charm.

      Eventually Linux fixed the driver bug but it wasn't stable so I had to revert back to FreeBSD.

      The *only* reason I used Linux as a router was because there wasn't support for my printer in FreeBSD.

      I actually started in Linux, went to the *BSDs and am now as a user and worker mostly Linux but as an admin of my SOHO, rock *BSDs. Especially since I got a network printer and don't care that much for drivers :-)

      We may meet one day, but I say give it a shot and check out freebsddiary.org if you want. 8.3 / 9.0 have ZFSv28 support. ZFS BTW, puts all other FS' to shame IMHO :-)

  4. $500,00 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    $500,00

      is that 50k or 500k?

    1. Re:$500,00 by alexhs · · Score: 1

      Isn't that $500, ¢0 ?
      Slashcode is eating the cent symbol, and a comma for decimal mark followed by two decimals is common in the whole continental Europe.

      --
      I have discovered a truly marvelous proof of killer sig, which this margin is too narrow to contain.
    2. Re:$500,00 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      500 usd and 0 cents. its a comma, not a decimal point.

    3. Re:$500,00 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the US (and maybe other places, not sure) the decimal is the separator between dollars and cents (or more generally the whole numbers and decimal places)
      US: $500,000.00
      Euro: $500.000,00

  5. Just miss a few zeroes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    or misplace the thousands separator

  6. Obligatry Response with slight disgust by tuppe666 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    a sign that BSD is becoming less relevant to modern computing needs

    Obligatory remark about how Mac OS X and iOS are BSD and are used by tens of millions of people everyday, blah, blah, blah.

    ...and that does not refute the point. Mac OS took code one way; the main developers...and gave out free laptops to the others. Its an example how the spirit of sharing from BSD is not as strong as having a license enforce it. When a company gets involved with Linux the ecosystem gets stronger...not sort of meander into obscurity [and no throwing money it at in a PR stunt is not the answer]. The only sick thing is the amount of Apple users promoting BSD.

    1. Re:Obligatry Response with slight disgust by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is not a problem. I am sure the BSD folks are 100% ok with this. They willingly decided to release their code under a BSD license instead of a GPL license. And they are not stupid so I assume they are fully aware of the consequences of that decision. It is not as if this has never been discussed.

    2. Re:Obligatry Response with slight disgust by Pieroxy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      a sign that BSD is becoming less relevant to modern computing needs

      Obligatory remark about how Mac OS X and iOS are BSD and are used by tens of millions of people everyday, blah, blah, blah.

      ...and that does not refute the point. Mac OS took code one way; the main developers...and gave out free laptops to the others. Its an example how the spirit of sharing from BSD is not as strong as having a license enforce it. When a company gets involved with Linux the ecosystem gets stronger...not sort of meander into obscurity [and no throwing money it at in a PR stunt is not the answer]. The only sick thing is the amount of Apple users promoting BSD.

      Emphasis mine. That's only your definition of strong. Have you considered the fact that maybe, just maybe, some people might not have the same definition as yours?

    3. Re:Obligatry Response with slight disgust by PhamNguyen · · Score: 2

      You are missing an important point, which is that the main developers willingly went to work for Apple. Since they though this was advantageious, this implies that when they started out the project, the possibility of this happening would also have counted as a plus in their eyes. So this possibility presumably helped motivate people to become the main developers for BSD in the first place. tl;dr you can't say "contribute to open source - it might get you a lucrative job" and "don't steal open source developers" at the same time.

    4. Re:Obligatry Response with slight disgust by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      BSD like linux is in flavors, FreeBSD is not the same as NetBSD, which is what OSX uses as a base, nor are there any stories saying NetBSD is circling the shitter financially

    5. Re:Obligatry Response with slight disgust by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      OSX has user land components from FreeBSD, not Net

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    6. Re:Obligatry Response with slight disgust by cold+fjord · · Score: 0

      Its an example how the spirit of sharing from BSD is not as strong as having a license enforce it.

      There are multiple BSD kernels that share ideas and code all the time, not to mention user space. There is one Linux kernel handed down from Linus for everyone to use and customize. Code goes to Linus for approval. BSD involves sharing, Linux involves tribute.

      The only sick thing is the amount of Apple users promoting BSD.

      When it comes to *nix, Linux may own the server farm, but the BSD based Mac owns the *nix desktop. And yes, Apple has given back.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    7. Re:Obligatry Response with slight disgust by LizardKing · · Score: 1

      OS X has user land components and code from both Net and Free. The initial updates to the creaky old OpenStep code base relied on NetBSD as the primary source, but this gradually changed as key FreeBSD developers were recruited by Apple.

    8. Re:Obligatry Response with slight disgust by hobarrera · · Score: 1

      Indeed. I remember recently reading that marc (an OpenBSD dev) recently said that he wants people to re-shared their modified code, but he wants them to do so because they want to, not because the license forces them to.

    9. Re:Obligatry Response with slight disgust by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't even wipe my ass with an Apple product.

      Well yeah, with how slick and shiny they are, you'd be there all damn day. I think this is one of the few points Apple fans and haters alike can agree on - an Apple device is not the right tool for this job.

      Of course, when Apple decides to reinvent the clean arse market with their intuitive and obvious 'three seashells', Apple fans will claim their arse has never been clean before, and the haters will say Apple thinks they invented toilet paper.

  7. user by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I used freebsd at an isp since it's 2.x release upto 6. I'm not sure if it's still used there but it served me very well for over ten years. That said I dislike the way things are being done these days. Now I'm not sure if I should donate. I've done so for every profitable year upto 2010 in quite large ammounts.

  8. Is this newsworthy? by butlerm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My first instinct is to think so what? Shouldn't non-profit foundations have ambitious fund raising targets that they fall short of most of the time? Is FreeBSD in danger of ceasing to be a viable operating system because the target wasn't met?

    1. Re:Is this newsworthy? by Kjella · · Score: 4, Interesting

      My first instinct is to think so what? Shouldn't non-profit foundations have ambitious fund raising targets that they fall short of most of the time? Is FreeBSD in danger of ceasing to be a viable operating system because the target wasn't met?

      Last year their target was $400k and they reached $426k so they're not intentionally making too ambitious targets. That this is an annual campaign and they're $146k short of matching last year indicates interest has dropped significantly. Looking at their donors it's now practically run by Netapp that's moved up to double platinum ($100k+), accounting for more than a third of their total donations. The more disturbing part for them should be that the donor list is much, much shorter than last year.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    2. Re:Is this newsworthy? by stephanruby · · Score: 4, Informative

      Also considering that the year is not over yet, and that a third of the money usually gets raised during the last month of the year, I'd say their fundraising effort is still going pretty smoothly.

      For 2011, we set a fundraising goal of $400,000 with a spending budget of $350,000. As of this publication we have raised $210,000. By this time last year, we had raised $195,000, but ended the year raising a total of $325,000. We are hoping that you, the FreeBSD community, will help us finish the year strong by making a donation this month. http://www.freebsdfoundation.org/press/2011Dec-newsletter.shtml#Fundraising

      Who wants to bet that this year, they'll have fundraised $400,000 by the deadline, and that for next year -- they'll raise the target to $650,000.

    3. Re:Is this newsworthy? by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      FreeBSD... actually BSD is very newsworthy as it holds an integral part of computer history. Like other important pieces of history such as VMS, IBM 360, and other gone technologies BSD will be part of it that we owe a gratitude for.

      We have the internet thanks to it. TCP/IP v. 4 came to be on BSD Unix 4.2 in the early 1980s. It is so bizaare how Linux overtook it and shocking as it took 10 years before Linux became a somewhat decent server OS that can play with the big boys from a toy. FreeBSD was already there. BSD was opensource before GNU was even around and had an academic following before linux was twinkle in Linuses eye.

      In the 1990s I have heard of BSDI to run BBS and a few webservers. But not Linux. That was years later

    4. Re:Is this newsworthy? by Onymous+Coward · · Score: 1

      The question wasn't whether BSD was itself newsworthy.

      And don't refer to it like it's only historical.

    5. Re:Is this newsworthy? by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      no, but less bsd nerds will get to travel on that dime.

      I'm thinking maybe freebsd should add a huge banner to appear! think wikipedia.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    6. Re:Is this newsworthy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also SMTP, FTP, Pop3, Sendmail and frankly email itself. Unlike Linux BSD is more than just a kernel.

      I dont know where we would be without it.

    7. Re:Is this newsworthy? by Guy+Harris · · Score: 1

      FreeBSD... actually BSD is very newsworthy as it holds an integral part of computer history. Like other important pieces of history such as VMS, IBM 360, and other gone technologies BSD will be part of it that we owe a gratitude for.

      Actually, neither BSD nor VMS are gone - OS X is a BSD-flavored OS at the UNIX layer, and DEC^WCompaq^WHP are still selling VMS IBM haven't made S/360's for a while, but they are making their (64-bit) descendants, which still run a descendant of OS/360, a descendant of DOS/360, a descendant of CP/CMS, and even a descendant of the Airlines Control Program. And, yes, it runs Linux, although I don't know of any BSD ports.

    8. Re:Is this newsworthy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      VMS and CP/M have nothing to with BSD. FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD and DragonFlyBSD are all actively developed operating systems sharing the BSD heritage. It's by no means simply a historical operating system, and to posit that it is indicates a severe lack of awareness!

    9. Re:Is this newsworthy? by Guy+Harris · · Score: 1

      VMS and CP/M have nothing to with BSD.

      Neither does CP/CMS, which, for that matter, has nothing to do with CP/M, either.

    10. Re:Is this newsworthy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... or the economy is down.

    11. Re:Is this newsworthy? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2

      My first instinct is to think so what? Shouldn't non-profit foundations have ambitious fund raising targets that they fall short of most of the time?

      Actually, the FreeBSD Foundation has never missed a funding target and, given late donations in previous years and unannounced pledges by a few companies looks like it should meet it this year too (which is nice, as it's 25% higher than the goal for last year).

      Is FreeBSD in danger of ceasing to be a viable operating system because the target wasn't met?

      No. The project lasted for a long time without the Foundation and could continue to do so. The Foundation does a number of useful things for the project, however. They have a lawyer, who can field tedious questions. They sponsor travel for unfunded developers to BSD conferences (and sometimes sponsor the conferences). Perhaps most importantly, they also fund work that everyone wants done but no one wants to do. For example, they funded the Intel GPU / GEM / KMS work, which is tedious work that no one wants to do, not in the commercial interests of any big FreeBSD users, but very useful for a lot of end users.

      They also do an increasing amount of matched-funding work, where a commercial user pays for half of the work and the Foundation matches it. In a few cases, they also provide a matchmaking service, where two or more companies can each part-fund the work, but between them completely fund it. This is arguably the most useful thing that they do, because it's the core idea behind open source: that it's cheaper to cooperate than to work independently.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  9. Read the Link by tuppe666 · · Score: 1

    is that 50k or 500k?

    Perhaps you should look at the graphic in the middle of the linked article.

  10. Some of my most reliable servers are FreeBSD... by urbanriot · · Score: 5, Informative

    Since we made the switch to FreeBSD in 2004, providing various services such as proxying web usage or web access logging for corporations, we've never even considered another OS as it's been a rock solid performer. Thousands of users in various locations are relying on our systems and despite inept people accidentally unplugging some of them, failed UPS', failed hard drives, they ruggedly truck on without issue.

    Hopefully the front page posting will encourage other FreeBSD users to donate. There's certainly more servers in production, especially some of the more reliable ones, that are using FreeBSD according to Netcraft.

    1. Re:Some of my most reliable servers are FreeBSD... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SOME of the most reliable are indeed FreeBSD. Most of the most reliable, however, are either Linux or yes even Windows.

    2. Re:Some of my most reliable servers are FreeBSD... by Great+Big+Bird · · Score: 1

      I currently use FreeBSD on a student run server, but will be switching back to Linux because a lot of the ports are getting a little long in the tooth. I have otherwise enjoyed the stability of the system, but for our needs having an up to date php and apache are very useful things.

    3. Re:Some of my most reliable servers are FreeBSD... by adri · · Score: 1

      .. FreeBSD person here.

      Which ports in question? I was under the impression that PHP/apache ports are kept up to date in the ports tree.

    4. Re:Some of my most reliable servers are FreeBSD... by urbanriot · · Score: 0

      Whoops, I typically forget to capslock my words. Good thing you're here for that helpful casing correction!

    5. Re:Some of my most reliable servers are FreeBSD... by urbanriot · · Score: 1

      He may be referring to Apache HTTP Server 2.4.x, discussion concerning what he's referring to can be found on forums.freebsd.org - http://forums.freebsd.org/showthread.php?t=34310

      ... of course, at the end of the day he can always compile from source or follow blog postings which provide a considerable amount of detail to complete this simple task. We've compiled from source many of our applications so we can customize the compiled experience to a finer degree. I may have made some ports contributions along the way as well.

    6. Re:Some of my most reliable servers are FreeBSD... by illaqueate · · Score: 1

      he may also just be referring to how easier it is to install on Ubuntu just small things like installing a server will have it properly configured already meanwhile I'll install some things from a port then need to edit for what seems like forever to get things up and running assuming I can find the conf files as they aren't necessarily put in a logical place like in ubuntu

    7. Re:Some of my most reliable servers are FreeBSD... by rgbrenner · · Score: 1

      Care to give an example of conf files being placed illogically in FBSD?

      the directory structure is explained here:
      http://www5.us.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/dirstructure.html
      and every port is required to follow that structure.

    8. Re:Some of my most reliable servers are FreeBSD... by urbanriot · · Score: 1

      If you're finding it difficult to find .conf files in /etc and properly constructing a sentence, then it's possible that Ubuntu Server is perfect for him or you. Especially you.

    9. Re:Some of my most reliable servers are FreeBSD... by Billly+Gates · · Score: 2

      I never recommend compiling from source in 2012!

      SOmething complex with lots of dependencies are just going to cause problems as who the hell knows what .config files will change and crap being spewed all over the file system.

      The official ports patch everything and it has to pass the FreeBSD QA and integrates with it well into the system. .deb files are similiar

    10. Re:Some of my most reliable servers are FreeBSD... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apache is an example of where the conf files are weird in Ubuntu, actually.

    11. Re:Some of my most reliable servers are FreeBSD... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not the poster you're replying to, but that remark is just showing how touchy, bitter and petty the *BSD community really is.

      I'm quite sure the poster did capitalize it for emphasis, since it's a common way to do it if you don't want to use html. (The other common one would be to use s p a c i n g, but that tends to look weird.)

      I'm also pretty sure you know this damned well, just like you know you spiced up the wording to make your claims sound more impressive. You can feign innocence as much as you want, but it's pretty transparent.

      I actually like *BSD but the people associated with it, constantly trying to inflate its importance and performance beyond whats warranted keeps putting me off. You fall squarely into the same category as the "OSX is FreeBSD, so FreeBSD is the most used UNIX on earth"-crowd, which means you're pathetic beyond the pale.

    12. Re:Some of my most reliable servers are FreeBSD... by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      ..but for our needs having an up to date php and apache are very useful things.

      You might want to lookup nginx. Apache is so 2000-late.

    13. Re:Some of my most reliable servers are FreeBSD... by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      The conf files are in absolutely logical and consistent places, they are merely not in the place where you expect them nor in the same place they would be on ubuntu.

      Like someone else said, read the handbook.

    14. Re:Some of my most reliable servers are FreeBSD... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is 'anonymous flamer is ironic' a meme? If so I believe, with my help, you've completed a tetris.

    15. Re:Some of my most reliable servers are FreeBSD... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't use Ubuntu for a server, just don't. They don't maintain compatibility through even minor updates. They don't back port fixed. And I hope your MySQL isn't busy when you reboot and upstart kills it.

      I know it's easy, but just say no.

    16. Re:Some of my most reliable servers are FreeBSD... by m6tt · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure what you're talking about...I'm a FreeBSD user, I compile everything, and it doesn't spew things all over the file system. Unlike linux, man hier is essentially enforced.

    17. Re:Some of my most reliable servers are FreeBSD... by m6tt · · Score: 1

      There's always the option of fixing the port and learning about the software you're working with too...That's one of my favorite parts about FreeBSD, there are few barriers to getting into the code or makefiles if your install is source based.

  11. Not to late by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You know it is not too late to chip in. Fortunately 2012 isn't over yet.

  12. Everybody has left by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    for OpenBSD!

    1. Re:Everybody has left by dan325 · · Score: 1

      I sure have. My first exposure to BSD was NetBSD and then I switched to OpenBSD several years ago and haven't looked back.

  13. Reallocate and re-prioritize. by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...the FreeBSD project has sought $500,000 by year end to allow it to continue to offer to fund and manage projects, sponsor FreeBSD events, Developer Summits and provide travel grants to FreeBSD developers.

    Hmm...

    • manage projects: YES
    • sponsor FreeBSD events: NO
    • sponsor Developer Summits: NO
    • provide travel grants to FreeBSD developers: NO

    Problem solved.

    --
    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    1. Re:Reallocate and re-prioritize. by darthdavid · · Score: 1

      Oh certainly, that can probably solve things for a year or two, depending on just how they were gonna allocate that 500k, but long term you have to remember that FreeBSD is a community project and, in the long term, sponsoring those things is part of how you make the community grow and thrive.

    2. Re:Reallocate and re-prioritize. by water-and-sewer · · Score: 1

      Agreed, this is management 101. I'm not sure the funding gap reflects a loss in relevance for the platform. I chose it specifically as a platform and its suited my needs and even met them. I've never managed a better put-together *nix system. Nice when the man pages all match the software and are up to date, and the ports system is lovely. I'm not sure I'll build another Linux server again after the good experience I had with BSD (It's dictatorshandbook.net by the way, a VPS run by rockvps.com - also highly recommended, offering FreeBSD 9 images, somewhat of a rarity).

      But maybe they should just funding/supporting less side activities and focus on the code.

      In the meantime I'm going to write them a check. Happy Xmas!

      --
      If this were Usenet, I'd killfile the lot of you.
    3. Re:Reallocate and re-prioritize. by Gothmolly · · Score: 1

      Good point. Infrastructure and some office supplies for the project managers yes, hookers and blow in exotic locations, no.

      --
      I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
    4. Re:Reallocate and re-prioritize. by TrueSatan · · Score: 1

      I can understand this in terms of setting a top priority but wouldn't each element being removed affect the short and long term viability of the project? If funding can't be provided what would be the short term and long term effects of less/no events/summits be and even if some were to be held what would be the effect of developers whose personal situation, or company support, wouldn't otherwise allow them to go then not getting a grant and, thus, not attending?

    5. Re:Reallocate and re-prioritize. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All of that sponsorship is part of managing a globally distributed project. At some points it's hard to move forward without getting everyone in the same room.

    6. Re:Reallocate and re-prioritize. by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      Oh certainly, that can probably solve things for a year or two, depending on just how they were gonna allocate that 500k, but long term you have to remember that FreeBSD is a community project and, in the long term, sponsoring those things is part of how you make the community grow and thrive.

      just spend the money on beer for the summits.
      people will come if you promise them free hats and beer.

      have them in the summer, so you'll save on rent on a warm place(outdoor drinking in the arctic in the winter sucks, even if the beer is cold).

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    7. Re:Reallocate and re-prioritize. by iggymanz · · Score: 1

      get real, no need for travel. summit can be held online. meetings and forums can be done online. development can be done online.

      I just saved FreeBSD a cool half million.

    8. Re:Reallocate and re-prioritize. by Brian+Feldman · · Score: 1

      You've never attended a conference, apparently.

      --
      Brian Fundakowski Feldman
  14. If raising $ 1/4 million is "failure" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    then perhaps there's a problem with the business model and with expectations?

    $250k is quite a large sum of money for many open source businesses. Perhaps the people concerned think that they're bigger than they really are?

    1. Re:If raising $ 1/4 million is "failure" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not a "failure" by any stretch of imagination. A lot of fundraising projects set an ambitious goal, and the year is far from over. The current tally is $304,844 - perfectly "on target"!

      I think this story and some of its comments exhibit vindictive pro-copyLEFT bias that is prevalent among the GNU commies...

      It should also be noted that the "FreeBSD Foundation Inc" is not FreeBSD - just one supporting pillar. FreeBSD is its code and developer / user community, with most contributors being unpaid volunteers. The ecosystem extends further, with code being shared with many other copyFREE projects in both directions, from other BSD OS'es to Haiku to Golang to Redis to Chromium. Centralization and bureaucracy are not necessary. Even if the Foundation suddenly disappeared tomorrow, the gradual advance of copyFREE software would continue unhindered!

      --libman

  15. FBSD opportunities by unixisc · · Score: 2

    Technically, FBSD seems to have done a fine job, but they need to be more proactive in proliferating the market. For one, they could partner w/ server manufacturers of various platforms. One that comes straight to mind is HP w/ the Itanium, and here, FBSD's only competition would be Debian and HP/UX. Given all the OSs that have abandoned the platform, this is one golden opportunity for FBSD. Others would be to get into the AVL of major server manufacturers, be it HP, Dell, IBM and so on.

    The other thing FBSD can do is try selling itself against Linux. Here, they can adapt a 2 pronged strategy - offer FBSD to any server vendor considering Linux as a server, and offer other alternatives, based on the target applications. If it requires good SMP support or a special file system, consider DragonFly BSD. If it's for routers and firewalls, promote pFsense or m0n0wall. If it's for desktop or laptop use, promote PC-BSD. If it is for embedded applications, consider Minix, or maybe one of the other BSDs. The main marketing strategies should focus on all technical advantages of FBSD and FBSD based distros over Linux based distros. Things like backwards compatibility, stable APIs and ABIs, and so on. Use the licensing advantage only as icing on the cake. While some Linux shops may be dug in, others may be more open to such alternatives.

    One thing I wonder - if FBSD, heaven forbid, goes under, what would be the effect on all the other projects - pFsense, m0n0wall, PC-BSD, et al? Will they automatically fold, or will they just be forks from 9.1? I do think a less onerous alternative to GPL is needed, which is why I'd hate to see BSD go under.

    1. Re:FBSD opportunities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Itanium doesn't work well without a superior compiler.

      Not sure either of llvm or gcc are good enough compared to e.g Mipspro (Whatever the name of the SGI compiler is) / icc / HP's compiler etc etc).

      Freebsd has never has never been any trouble for me (Other than early releases in the 5.x series).

    2. Re:FBSD opportunities by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Isn't the compiler for HP/UX GCC? Even if it's not, various Linuxes, such as Debian, RHEL, Ubuntu did at one time exist on Itanium, so GCC support for that had to have existed, and for that to exist, GCC would have had to have had Itanium's optimizations. Now, that was w/ Itanium I & II. With Itanium III coming out, I dunno whether HP has been making that an HP/UX only platform. It would be a shame if they did.

      That was a part of what I was suggesting - that HP/UX provide all the EPIC compiler optimizations to LLVM/Clang, so that FreeBSD has no problems compiling and running. Since the future of the Itanium is in question, a good move would be to pitch it to houses that have Itaniums, so that w/ the source code, they'd be able to provide their own long term support independent of HP. Of course, same could also be done w/ Debian.

  16. Accepting Donations: They're doing it wrong by Zenin · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://www.freebsd.org/donations/

    Great start! The home page has a Donate link at the top, it takes you to a clear, simple URL.

    Then it all falls apart...

    95% of the page is about everything other then cash donations. The simple PayPal Donate button? No where to be found. The Network For Good Donate link? Again, AWOL. In fact there is only one small paragraph buried 2/3rds of the way down the page about cash donations...and it just tells you to visit the FreeBSD Foundation page. Even worse, it doesn't link you to the Foundation's Donation page...it links you to the home page where you again, need to dig down and find the real donations page.

    Stick the PayPal Donate box (found here) on the top of the main FreeBSD.org page and I guarantee they'll easily quadruple their donations without doing anything else whatsoever.

    I love, love, LOVE FreeBSD, but yah...they've never been particularly good at tooting their own horn. :-/

    --
    My /. uid is better then your /. uid
  17. not that great for home servers anymore by illaqueate · · Score: 1

    I've been using FreeBSD on my home servers since 2.1 until recently when I tried Ubuntu on the new server I was building. It's just drastically better at initial configuration. Most of the servers I would want to use are either installed by default or are very easy to install or configure with little intervention. There are too many hoops to jump through on FreeBSD.

    1. Re:not that great for home servers anymore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have had pretty much this same reaction. Both Linux and FreeBSD are rock solid and great to work with. The big difference is with Ubuntu everything works out of the box and it supports a wider range of hardware. With FreeBSD you have to manually set up everything, including compiling your AMP server from scratch (if you want PHP support). FreeBSD really needs to smooth out the initial configuration process and improve their hardware support before I'd go back to them.

    2. Re:not that great for home servers anymore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm doing that exact thing this very second -- installing FreeBSD as a home server.

      Of course I'm actually using PC-BSD, where a lot of things are pre-setup. I've heard that PC-BSD is to FreeBSD as Ubuntu is to Debian.

    3. Re:not that great for home servers anymore by Alex+Zepeda · · Score: 1

      Agreed. I've been using FreeBSD off and on since 2.2.2. Despite some really eye watering bugs with Ubuntu (especially their ec2 instances), FreeBSD is just more tedious and more frustrating to use. But... FreeBSD has the one killer feature for me: ZFS. It's portable in a pinch and ensure a decent amount of data integrity. Hammer, BTRFS, etc don't offer that kind of flexibility.

      For the upgrade from 7.x to 8.x I used "freebsd-update". I forgot to disable the cron task, so after falling asleep the machine proceeded to lunch itself. Fine. User error. Again I tried "freebsd-update" to apply security patches. Guess what? "freebsd-update" doesn't handle new files gracefully, and again it lunched itself. Sure, there was an easy fix (download the single missing file that threw a wrench into the works), but the maintainer of "freebsd-update" knew of the problem and, as far as I can tell, just ignored it. Too much manual intervention is required to keep a FreeBSD system running compared to Linux.

      I decided to tempt fate again with the upgrade from 8.x to 9.x (to see if the much promised support for Intel graphics chips was usable -- lesson learned, despite being in the release notes it's pre-alpha at best). Well, this time "freebsd-update" didn't mess anything up, the new kernel did. Turns out what FreeBSD 9.x and FreeBSD < 9.x consider BSD disk labels are two very separate things. My ZFS pools vanished. All sorts of fun ensued (there's that pesky data integrity thing). While FreeBSD 8.x would recognize the pool, 9.1 both missed and corrupted the ZFS magic bits. UGH.

      Then there's the ports system. A clusterfuck if I've ever seen one. I've been using 'portupgrade' to ease some of the pain. And it works. Until it doesn't. It's definitely not particularly compatible with ruby 1.9. It's utterly confused by the versioning on the ruby 1.9 port. Upgrading (as of this week) to the latest version of the "pciids" port breaks "portupgrade" with no clean way to back these things out. When mucking about with all the updated XOrg stuff (see above about trying to get Intel graphics to work) I discovered that if you're not using "portupgrade" it's super easy to install duplicate, conflicting versions of a package with no clean way of backing this out. Compare this to Debian based distros where dpkg -i will neatly handle upgrades without lunching your system. While compiling is something of a pain, there are out of date binary packages that are sorta available. The real pain is just that the ports toolchain sucks rocks.

      Oh, and watching trivial bugs languish for years got frustrating too. Ah well.

      --
      The revolution will be mocked
    4. Re:not that great for home servers anymore by clonehappy · · Score: 1

      Most of the servers I would want to use are either installed by default or are very easy to install or configure with little intervention.

      From a security standpoint, I prefer the FreeBSD model. Nothing extra running, and very secure by default. Anything that's running is there because I made it to do so, and nothing more. The hoops are generally there to make sure the system stays secured.

    5. Re:not that great for home servers anymore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FreeBSD has the one killer feature for me: ZFS. It's portable in a pinch and ensure a decent amount of data integrity.

      In theory.

      Turns out what FreeBSD 9.x and FreeBSD < 9.x consider BSD disk labels are two very separate things. My ZFS pools vanished. All sorts of fun ensued (there's that pesky data integrity thing). While FreeBSD 8.x would recognize the pool, 9.1 both missed and corrupted the ZFS magic bits

      In practice, a normal RAID10/RAID1 array is more reliable than bleeding edge software. ZFS on FreeBSD is bleeding edge as proven by your bleeding.

      I avoid killer features like that when it comes to data integrity.

    6. Re:not that great for home servers anymore by kobaz · · Score: 1

      FreeBSD has the one killer feature for me: ZFS. It's portable in a pinch and ensure a decent amount of data integrity.

      In theory.

      In practice, a normal RAID10/RAID1 array is more reliable ...

      I went through the same thing. I waited until freebsd 8 to try zfs after watching some videos about how awesome it was. I had been running multi TB storage arrays on lvm + raid1 on linux for years and decided to try and switch to ZFS. The lack of an fsck really shows when you get data corruption issues while resizing a pool. ZFS also lacks the capability of downsizing a pool, so when the upsize fails half way, you're fairly fscked. The recovery tools are just immature compared to even things like ext3. Trying to recover from the failed ZFS upsize involved raw disk editing to change uuids to try and move back to using an old drive that had good data.

      I got the ZFS array working enough to pull off the new data and move back to an lvm append + raid1 setup. I've had failed lvm moves and failed lvm upsizes but the recovery is so easy because all the metadata about the array (and plenty of automatic backups) are stored in plain conf files. Ah the beauty of simplicity.

      And speaking of bleeding edge, I've been playing with btrfs for some non-critical stuff and I've been very impressed. Much moreso than with ZFS.

      --

      The goal of computer science is to build something that will last at least until we've finished building it.
    7. Re:not that great for home servers anymore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh...btrfs has no fsck, ZFS has zpool scrub. Please learn to use technologies before you poke at them and decide they don't work. Your post reads like an Oracle shill, so what do I know...I don't think you've used ZFS at all, I literally have a development machine that kernel crashed once a day for 8 months which has 0 filesystem corruption.

  18. Not relevant? You wish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Netscalers load balance the highest traffic sites you care about and Netflix's new CDN is FreeBSD based.

    At this rate more data goes through FreeBSD than Linux

    1. Re:Not relevant? You wish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah yeah. For every appliance running FreeBSD, we can all name three that run Linux.

    2. Re:Not relevant? You wish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny how he named one and you named zero.

  19. Misleading Story by Zamphatta · · Score: 5, Informative

    A quick Google reveals that FreeBSD's "Year-End Fundraising Campaign" was only recently announced, on December 5th. So, naturally, they won't be all that close to their goal by December 9th.

    1. Re:Misleading Story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I use FreeBSD and OpenBSD for years and am a huge fan. Donated as well, and do so every year. Maybe people forget that we are in a recession and not everybody has the money to spend right now. Also, many "donation worthy" projects ask for money every year now, so perhaps the individual just simply cannot give to each one.

    2. Re:Misleading Story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Completely agree, slashdot is always in the habit of bashing FreeBSD left and right yet their editors cannot even tell whether a single line of code written in BASIC is a loop or not. I still continue to read Slashdot and recommend it to others but if this behavior doesn't come to an end I will be promoting other sites that are technically much more savvy. This is just some more flamebait and admittedly I fell for it. Other news agencies do this and they are called TABLOIDS. Just so everyone knows the FreeBSD foundation and FreeBSD the operating system themselves are not as locked together as in the Linux world- development will not cease because of this because they are not Canonical or Redhat. Your Netflix will continue to flow because all of that traffic is now FreeBSD traffic and will not stop because of the "Foundation". I use FreeBSD and have been using it personally and professionally since 1998. There is NO other operating system which makes it so easy to develop or create something right out of the gate than FreeBSD it is a real developer's operating system and one that can be relied upon as well. The two horns 'till I die bitchez!

    3. Re:Misleading Story by BitingChaos · · Score: 1

      I don't think the amount is from the past 5 days. http://www.freebsdfoundation.org/press/2012Jul-newsletter.shtml#Fundraising As of July 31st, 2012, they had $180,000 raised. So from July 31st to December 10th, they raised $80,000 or so.

    4. Re:Misleading Story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so you are saying "title should read: FBSD manages to get 1/2 of it's year end fundraising goal in 4 days"

    5. Re:Misleading Story by Zamphatta · · Score: 1

      Oh, interesting! I couldn't find anything about this year-end fundraiser being an extention of an older fundraiser from months ago. I guess it was FreeBSD that was misleading then? That is, if this is just making extending an older campaign to make it sound like a new one.

  20. $5/$10 minimum donation?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't use FreeBSD, but I clicked through to donate $2 anyway. The minimum donation amount is $10 through DonateNow or $5 through PayPal.

    THERE IS YOUR FIRST PROBLEM

    1. Re:$5/$10 minimum donation?? by ArcadeNut · · Score: 2

      Every time you make a donation via credit card or PayPal the organization gets dinged with fees. Typically it's a percentage and a per transaction fee. So with such a small donation, the fees might wind up costing them too much for the size of the donation.

      --
      Visit the Arcade Restoration Workshop @ http://www.arcaderestoration.com
    2. Re:$5/$10 minimum donation?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The preferred donation method isn't PayPal; the other provided method only adds 3% overhead according to the page when you donate and you can donate $5 (plus cover administrative costs), instead of $5 (minus administrative costs), for example.

  21. Netcraft confirms it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    FreeBSD is dying.

  22. Managing Expectations by srobert · · Score: 1

    Apparently the FreeBSD developers have seldom met their own schedule estimates. They don't really think it's important to do so. They estimate October, by December if you ask them when it will be released, they answer, "when it's ready". Their setting of fund raising goals may be similar to their scheduling. They're not good at managing expectations. I don't think FreeBSD will be going away any time soon. How many Linux distributions have failed to meet their fund raising goals from time to time and yet are still very active?

  23. FUD by laffer1 · · Score: 1

    FreeBSD tends to do a funding push for short iterations. I don't think this one has been going long. I've only seen posts on it recently. Often, they get many donations from a few select companies that use it. For example, ixsystems, cisco, and juniper.

    As someone that runs a very small project, I think they're lucky to have the funding support that they get. Several of the regulars have gotten day jobs or contract work out of their involvement too. I think FreeBSD is a great example of a successful open source project.

    I'm running MidnightBSD on about $300 of advertising revenue this year. That doesn't even cover hardware and internet connectivity costs for the year.

    The real problem is many folks don't donate to open source projects. I've donated to OpenSSH via OpenBSD in the past as I use it all the time. If everyone donated even a few dollars to their favorite projects, it would make a huge difference. The reality is that large projects can afford to have a few folks full time on the project, but we need money and developers to succeed. The money covers all the downloads, advertising and infrastructure necessary to compete with commercial solutions. Imagine if Linux never would have had the support of Redhat, IBM, or Novell. Imagine if Mozilla wouldn't have had the AOL and Google handouts. Critical mass takes a push and a good product.

    1. Re:FUD by inglorion_on_the_net · · Score: 1

      The real problem is many folks don't donate to open source projects. I've donated to OpenSSH via OpenBSD in the past as I use it all the time. If everyone donated even a few dollars to their favorite projects, it would make a huge difference.

      I don't know if that's a real problem. There are a lot of ways you can help a project. Contributing code. Using it and filing bug reports and feature requests. Even just talking about it can be helpful.

      As for donations, I think there have been cases where getting more money into the project has hurt rather than helped (sorry, I don't have links and don't remember the specifics). At the very least, that means it's not clear that donating money is the best way to help a project. Of course, some things cost money, so please don't take that as dismissing donations altogether. I'm just saying that donations aren't the only way and aren't necessarily the best way to help a project.

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
  24. Still relevant by gallondr00nk · · Score: 1

    I split my Unix derivative loyalties between Arch and FreeBSD, usually with the lNeverputt runs smoother on it than it did on my Arch install.

    atter for servers on really old hardware. Recently, I've found Arch upgrading has become more and more of a pain in the ass, especially on rigs with ATI cards. I carried on with it, but the recent removal of the awesome little installation program (I'm lazy when it comes to installers) made me think twice about switching.

    So I went with FreeBSD on an old ThinkPad A31. It's absolutely solid, and runs linux binaries happily if I need it to (such as Flash). I dare say that it has a slight performance advantage as well.

    Hardly dead.

    1. Re:Still relevant by gallondr00nk · · Score: 1

      I split my Unix derivative loyalties between Arch and FreeBSD, usually with the lNeverputt runs smoother on it than it did on my Arch install.

      God, I fucked that up.

  25. Confirmed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is now official. Netcraft has confirmed: *BSD is dying

            One more crippling bombshell hit the already beleaguered *BSD community when IDC confirmed that *BSD market share has dropped yet again, now down to less than a fraction of 1 percent of all servers. Coming on the heels of a recent 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 fittingly exemplified by failing dead last [samag.com] in the recent Sys Admin comprehensive networking test.

            You don't need to be the Amazing Kreskin [amazingkreskin.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, having lost 93% of its core developers. The sudden and unpleasant departures of long time FreeBSD developers Jordan Hubbard and Mike Smith only serve to underscore the point more clearly. There can no longer be any doubt: FreeBSD is dying.

            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 dilettante 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.

  26. More relevant than ever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would suggest that with Linux actively destroying its relationships with corporates (http://www.wired.com/wiredenterprise/2012/06/torvalds-nvidia-linux/) and RMS on the warpath again (http://www.zdnet.com/free-software-father-declared-ubuntu-linux-to-contain-spyware-7000008516/), an open-sources GPL free operating system is more relevant than ever.

    The donate button should be easier to find though.

  27. Trolling Title by ghelmer · · Score: 1

    Title should be something like "FreeBSD Foundation push to raise $500,000 goal". Usually a lot of the money each year is raised in the last month or so.

  28. FreeBSD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Apple Corporaton should sponsor BSDs & Free BSD. Oracle's Solaris is a derivative of BSD. FreeBSD should get their monies from Apple Corporation, IBM, Oracle, Universities, BSD Certificate programs, BSD teaching programs, etc. The main focus is to increase taxes. If Corporations, Billionaires, & Millionaires pays 35% tax up tp 45% tax then Organizations like BSDs, FreeBSD, Linux Distros, etc would get their funding to continue the progress in American Technologies.

    1. Re:FreeBSD by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Oracle's Solaris is a derivative of former Unix System Labs' SVR4. SunOS was a derivative of BSD. SunOS changed to Solaris when Sun switched from BSD to USL's SVR4.

      I agree that Apple should pay them, but IBM? IBM can get by fine w/ AIX, so doesn't sound like they need something above and beyond what others are getting on the x64 platform. Unless one is talking about POWER or Z-series ports of FreeBSD.

      Other things - like Universities, certificate programs, agreed. Those who use FBSD should financially support it. I just don't see Oracle or IBM amongst those.

  29. FreeBSD and Debian by dgharmon · · Score: 1, Interesting

    How about merging with Debian?

    --
    AccountKiller
    1. Re:FreeBSD and Debian by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Debian already has a project called kFreeBSD, where they combine Debian userland w/ a FreeBSD kernel. They also have a new Clang project. Long term, given Debian's strained relations w/ the FSF, it may not be such a bad idea. It would enable Debian to de-emphasize Linux and push their FBSD instead, and make all their software, such as apt, available for FBSD as well.

    2. Re:FreeBSD and Debian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BSD(FreeBSD in this case) IS NOT LINUX

    3. Re:FreeBSD and Debian by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Who said it is?

  30. I am glad /. did post this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Donated $20 right away, sweet memories installing it once and never to touch it again!

    I used FreeBSD for a fair amount of time before being forced to use Linux :|

  31. OK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just sent them $10. Always liked FreeBSD. Hell I'll probably install it on the server I'm about to co-lo.

  32. Year End Donations are the Norm... by Alcoholic+Synonymous · · Score: 1

    Last year they aimed at $300k and got over $400k. This year, they asked for $500k and got $250k thus far...

    Except that every year, sponsors hold out until the end of the year. Seeing 50% of goal before the major corporate donations is great. Last year they were far from their goal at this time.

    Sorry, but this is a bit of doom saying by a Linux fanboi. There isn't even an article attached, just the donation link (thanks for spreading the word) and a some conjecture about what being only half way implies.

    The reality is that even if FreeBSD fails to meet the $500k goal, it simply fails to grow that 66% increase from last year's goal. That's pretty much all it means. All jokes aside, FreeBSD is growing faster than their current infrastructure can keep up with. Hence the request for even more funding.

  33. Reality check needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There will be $20k~$30k coming from my company, in addition to me personally funding $600/year out of pocket. This is standard for companies to donate before the end-of-the-year (as well as donate versus various conferences that take place during the year).

    The fact that FreeBSD does so much with so little is actually quite admirable, compared to many Linux distributions which usually have direct corporate funding in the scope of millions of dollars (Gentoo back in the day, Redhat, SuSe, etc come to mind). Many companies should also donate to Linux who aren't either (Cisco, Dell, HP, etc), and I don't see anyone really complaining about them grabbing code from FOSS and running.

  34. lackluster donation page by phorm · · Score: 1

    I donated, and shortly after got an email from the spam filter/greylist of the address their paypal account.
    In addition to the auto-generated message bouncing back at me, it appears do have some funky encoding so the message makes it look like I paid 240x what my actual donation was. Kinda scary until I confirmed that I hadn't typo'ed my payment amount.

  35. Off to fund! Netbesd too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not to late - yet. Please support them now and donate your coffemoney. Netbsd has the same problems, so chip in dollar there too. Thanks!

    1. Re:Off to fund! Netbesd too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for reminding me of my first BSD crush! Also donated $20 :)

  36. Ignoring the relevance of the website by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has anyone even looked at the FreeBSD website? You wouldn't even know they were accepting donations if you didn't look under the "Foundation -> Donate" Menu item and sub item on the far right.
    It's not even under the support section. Now compare this to wikipedia, where every page you're on during donation time has a HUGE FREAKING DONATE NOW BANNER ACROSS THE TOP.
    Maybe BSD are just taking the less annoying and stupid approach, and maybe that's not the approach that pays the big buck$.

  37. Kickstarter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, kickstarter project then?
    $1 - Note of thanks in the next major release
    $5 - Get a DvD of the next release mailed to you ...

  38. test by Ptolemarch · · Score: 1

    this is a test comment; please ignore

  39. ignorant by GentooBob · · Score: 1

    this post is just ridiculous. someone is bored and trying to stir up the pot. get out from behind your computer you anti social unfriendly know it all computer geek and go take a walk and find a life.

  40. not a fail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nearly 50% when the campaign started at Dec 4th

    I'll not rate this as a "fail"...

  41. UPDATE: $319,614 - from 1082 donors! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not a "failure" by any stretch of imagination. A lot of fundraising projects set an ambitious goal, and the year is far from over. The current tally is $304,844 - perfectly "on target"!

    UPDATE: $319,614 - from 1082 donors!

    Maybe the December issue of the BSD Magazine, which just came out yesterday, will remind more people to donate...

    Maybe some are waiting for 9.1 release...

    And maybe, as feedback for the recent security screw-up, some people have decided to donate to other projects (hopefully copyfree ones) instead...

    --libman

  42. UPDATE: $325,359 - from 1102 donors! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Marshall Kirk says: "Check back on the FreeBSD Foundation web site in the last few days of the year or January of next year to see the final result." (End quote.) But to me it's like a spectator sport!

    It's not a "failure" by any stretch of imagination. A lot of fundraising projects set an ambitious goal, and the year is far from over. The current tally is $304,844 - perfectly "on target"!

    UPDATE: $319,614 - from 1082 donors!

    Maybe the December issue of the BSD Magazine, which just came out yesterday, will remind more people to donate...

    Maybe some are waiting for 9.1 release...

    And maybe, as feedback for the recent security screw-up, some people have decided to donate to other projects (hopefully copyfree ones) instead...

    --libman

    UPDATE: $325,359 - from 1102 donors!

    Please donate today!

    --libman

  43. UPDATE: $361,199 - from 1123 donors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    UPDATE: $361,199 - from 1123 donors!

    That's 21 new donors and $35,840 added since last time - somebody gave big!

    Won't you please add even $5 more?

    Twelve days left (inclusively) till New Year...

    --libman

  44. Re:UPDATE: $461,199 - from 1556 donors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    UPDATE: $461,199 - from 1556 donors!

    (How did the FreeBSD Foundation donation counter jump by exactly $100,000 (and 433 donors, avg donation $231) since the last time?! That's a precise caricature of what inept "number fudging" would look like, but please don't jump to this conclusion. Things were ticking much more smoothly when I was involved with Ron Paul fund-raising, but even then there were occasional jitters in the official numbers: checks had to be cleared in batches, credit card confirmations, etc. It makes sense to estimate the running total until you can recalculate it more accurately. I'm sure the numbers glitch on the donation page is just some intern goof, and every penny will be accounted for in subsequent financial reports.)

    From the FreeBSD Foundation Newsletter, December 20, 2012 -- Fundraising Update --

    Wow. I've been thoroughly overwhelmed by the outpouring of donations over the last few weeks! As of this publication we have raised $460,000 towards our goal of $500,000.

    I want to thank you for everything you do to make this the best operating system around. There wouldn't be a FreeBSD if we didn't have you writing code, writing documentation, working on ports and releases, and educating current and future FreeBSD users.

    We haven't met our target yet, but we are getting close. Historically, each year, we have been half way to our fundraising goal at the start of December. Going forward, this is something that we plan on changing.

    We unintentionally received some interesting press that disturbed a lot of FreeBSD users. This encouraged over 950 donations to come in, this past week. All I can say, is that it was incredible to see this support. One donor commented, "I don't use FreeBSD yet, but I've heard good things about the project, so that's why I wanted to support you." How cool is that?

    Your donations help us fund projects to improve FreeBSD, sponsor conferences and summits, purchase equipment to build infrastructure, promote FreeBSD, and provide legal counsel for the Project. In short, it helps us to provide the funding to make this the best OS available.

    We've received some great lessons during this campaign. One thing we learned is that we need to advertise our fundraising needs outside of our FaceBook page, blog, and the FreeBSD Announce mailing list.

    I hope that as you read through some of our accomplishments this year, you will consider making a donation to the Foundation. We can't do it without you!

    I can think of no better major project to donate to than FreeBSD. It is a mighty pillar that feeds many other projects, and any project can borrow code from it for any purpose they want. When you donate to Linux you only benefit Linux, but when you donate to FreeBSD you're benefiting everyone, Linux as well; as well as chipping away at the threat of stagnant monoculture, and making the software industry much more competitive, innovative, and free!

    It now looks probable that the $500,000 target will be reached and surpassed, but people need to donate as much as they can spare, even if just $5. How about you?

    --libman