New Releases From FreeBSD and NetBSD
tearmeapart writes "The teams at FreeBSD have reached another great achievement with FreeBSD 9.1, with improvements to the already fantastic zfs features, more VM improvements (helping bringing FreeBSD to the next generation of VMs), and improvements in speed to many parts of the network system. Support FreeBSD via the FreeBSD mall or download/upgrade FreeBSD from a mirror. Unfortunately, the torrent server is still down due to the previous security incident."
And new submitter northar writes "The other day the NetBSD project released their first update to the 6.x series, 6.0.1. They also (rather discreetly) announced a fund drive targeting 60.000 USD before the end of 2012 in the release notes. They better get going if their donation page is anything like recently updated."
Now that is cost efficiency!
I work at a multinational corporation with 30,000 employees worldwide.
Accessing netbsd.org from our corporate network gives permission denied
The explaination for the site access ban is netbsd=hobby site by the ranking of the net filtering service my company uses
Netcraft has confirmed: BSD is a living dead.
Great news! I've been waiting for this release so long, it's like a second christmas to me!
Thanks!
"They better get going if their donation page is anything like recently updated."
Well, since the date on the image is Dec 30, 2009, I don't think you need to be in any sort of hurry.
Ezekiel 23:20
It should be an easy upgrade for anyone running 9.0, and it does add some neat stuff. These dot releases are usually logical improvements and fixes, but important new features do get introduced with regularity when they've been tested extensively in the the development branches.
9.1 is adding KMS for intel (Unless that was already MFC'd back to 9), I think the new code for LSI cards including IBM M1015, support for newer Ralink wireless cards, lots of bug fixes and improvements.
http://www.freebsd.org/releases/9.1R/relnotes.html
I've got FreeBSD 9.1 running on my machine now and it is absolute Unix heaven.
The NVidia drivers work perfectly with my 580 card. The rest of my hardware was recognized and works properly.
All my gaming is done on my PS3 and Wii and a little bit on my Android devices. So my FreeBSD is primarily used for development and some webbrowsing. Working on a system that is stable and free from the crazy and random crap that plagues the various Linux distros is wonderful. The only negative I've found so far is the desktop's ports aren't as fully setup as you get as with something like Ubunut or Mint since the major focus of most of the FreeBSD devs is on server use.
I would like to thank all the lame people who have so diligently been posting their lame 'is dying' posts. I would never have checked out BSD if it wasn't for them. And it looks like the latest attempt at BSD FUD about funding massively backfired and led to a huge surge in project donations.
I usually hate these type of cute little sayings but after having switched from Linux to FreeBSD it really rings true:
Linux is for people who hate Microsoft
BSD is for people who love Unix
It never left, and FYI it's FreeBSD, not "Free BSD".
the netbsd donations pages look like some SEO figured out it was worth donating money to get a link!
http://www.netbsd.org/donations/2012.html
With the performance and technology in BSD, why the hell does anyone run Linux again?
I'm just reading an article on LWN.net
http://lwn.net/Articles/524606/
Where it's claimed that BSD is losing a lot of support due to Linux related tools and development processes only cares for Linux and not BSD.
So basicly because of GNOME adopting things like PulseAudio, systemd and so on makes this desktop to disappear from BSD one day because these underlaying technologies doesn't exist on their systems.
The BSD developers are certainly concerned about this issue.
Please read above article for further informations.
Judging by your comments I would say that BSD is for people who hate Linux. :(
rene descartes - is that you?
Now we know for sure: *BSD is alive and well.
The FreeBSD main page links to this story at Phoronix :
http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=MTExNDM
Note the comment "Netflix represents 30% of all North American internet traffic during peak hours"
I'd rather have a foxhole hobby than be foxy humble.
I've been using 9.1-RELEASE since SVN was tagged 2012-12-04 on both my home and work desktop. ZFS root is awesome, and userland is pretty much the latest bleeding edge upstream, I've had absolutely no issues running a full-fledged XFCE-4.10, Firefox ESR 10.x with Flash, 3D accel, everything desktop.
I've used freebsd-update to go from both 9.1-RC3 and 9.0-RELEASE to 9.1-RELEASE also switching to pkgng.
I'd recommend folks to look at the following guides if they want to use ZFS root or create a nice, full-featured desktop OS.
http://forums.freebsd.org/showthread.php?t=31662 (ZFS ROOT)
https://cooltrainer.org/2012/01/02/a-freebsd-9-desktop-how-to (good desktop guide)
Great job BSD devs, keep it up.
Have a squat over at the hobo house.
Zombie process?
Noting that restrictively-licensed copyleft is not free software.
--libman
Yes! That's why I choose FOSS like BSD and Linux!
So I can install a proprietary driver like NVidia's 'blob' for BSD or Linux, which has had at least 2-3 remote exploits which were patched and we don't know if there's more because we cannot audit the code.
Between NVidia's proprietary driver(s) and proprietary Flash, you guys make me laugh.
Would you install a rootkit too, if it jacked you off?
Long live BSD!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g7tvI6JCXD0
I hope that 2013 will finally be the year of the *BSD desktop! :-)
I understand you were joking, but...
What is more likely to happen is "a year of web apps", as they become viable and replace many desktop widget-based apps, from autocad to miro to zsnes. I know that web apps currently have a reputation for closedness and bad usability, but that can change in the coming year(s). Advancements that will make it possible include HTML5+ (beyond what's already available), related audio/video standards, client-side DB API, Web-specific GPU acceleration, faster and better client-side scripting languages, and perhaps something like NaCl for fast sandboxed binaries.
Since there are standardized (mostly)copyfree multi-platform browser implementations, this would benefit everyone, from UNIX to Windows to AmigaOS to HaikuOS users. And it will particularly benefit "genuinely free software" puritans like myself, as GTK / Qt / SWT / wx / etc (and most projects based on top of them) are not copyfree.
Of course relying on remote apps has its downsides, but specific free software standards can be developed: copyfree server-side code, copyfree unobfuscated client-side code, copyfree databases, and tools to simplify copying / syncing an app from a remote server to your local PC / network. There can be free'n'open common UI and usability guidelines for Web Apps as well.
--libman
After entering protected mode and going to _main with the far jump simply return EOL; or something similar. That's all there is for a new BSD release. Nothing else.
alternative interpretation:
Woohoo! FreeBSD 9.1-RELEASE comes with support for new Intel HD graphics. Hot damn. I finally get to get rid of the non-deterministic, obese, constantly agonizing experience of dicking around with half-baked bullshit in the Linux world on this laptop.
I mean, really . . . who wouldn't want to get out from under the horrid experiences Lennart Poettering, the GNU Project, and Canonical have foisted onto the Linux world in recent years?
Unfetter your ideas. Copyfree your mind.
No, it is GPL that is dying. Linux got a head start and went viral in 1993, a year before FreeBSD was available... but just look at the most recent trends!
--libman
Most recent trends? A million new devices a day running Linux.
What a rambling and pathetic post.
Assine juvinille posts like this one on Slashdot are the best advertisement for BSD you could possibly have over the clusterfuck that is Linux and the viral GPL.
The Linux kernel isn't the only piece of copyleft software. I've already explained why it has been so successful - in spite of its license. In every other software category, copyleft projects are gradually losing market share to copyfree ones.
Google has many reasons to regret going with Linux for Android / ChromeOS instead of investing into something like FreeBSD or NetBSD, which needed more polishing on mobile platforms, but they needed a kernel quickly. It's only a matter of time until a specialized genuinely free alternative to Linux becomes good enough, and the industry will very easily switch. Most Android / ChromeOS users won't know the difference.
--libman