Yearly FreeBSD Foundation Fundraising Campaign Is On
An anonymous reader writes "The FreeBSD Foundation's annual year-end fundraising drive is currently running. Their goal this year is US$ 1M, and they're currently at US$ 427K. In 2013, the efforts that were funded were from the last drive were: Native iSCSI kernel stack, Updated Intel graphics chipset support, Integration of Newcons, UTF-8 console support, Superpages for ARM architecture, and Layer 2 networking updates. Also various conferences and summit sponsorships, as well as hardware purchases for the Project. The Foundation is a US 501(c)3 non-profit, so your donations (if in the US) are tax-deductible. Some of the larger 2013 (corporate?) sponsors so far are NetApp, LineRate, WhatsApp, and Tarsnap."
This is the year of the FreeBSD desktop! Huzzah!
I need to start my fundraising to make an open source clone of OS/2 Warp :)
Donations? Sorry, I need the money to buy toilet paper, because then the money I flush down the toilet will be well spent.
As I recall, FreeBSD provided some of the key underpinnings to Mac OS X and iOS. Surely Apple can spare some of its $90B back to the effort. $1M is a rounding error compared to $90B...
Program Intellivision!
FreeBSD probably isn't useful to you every day. Maybe some of your net traffic will go through a FreeBSD box, but that box could be replaced by just about anything really. However, I'm not trying to say that FreeBSD is useless or irrelevant - what I want to say is that FreeBSD has some excellent out-of-band uses.
I think people should consider the value of the educational, developmental, experimental and competitive opportunities that FreeBSD provides. We need projects and communities which have low hanging fruit for beginners and we need projects that are ready to give different approaches to problems a go - so that the rest of us on whatever OS can learn from it regardless of the success of the implementation.
The same goes for my favourite alternative OS - Haiku which also contains some bits and pieces from FreeBSD for networking/wireless IIRC. (BTW, it has package management now and a lot of improvements to the native browser, and more.)
Someone could make a fortune with something like this!
Many people mistakenly think that freedom is all roses and rainbows. It's not. Freedom can be cruel. Freedom can feel unjust. Freedom can be ugly. Freedom can make you want to cry. But if you truly stand for freedom, then you will accept this. In fact, you won't just accept it, but you will embrace it.
Apple's behavior very clearly shows where true freedom lies when it comes to open source software licensing. It is not in the GPL. Contrary to the claims of its advocates, the GPL does not encourage freedom. It clearly does the opposite; it puts some very dictatorial restrictions upon how the software may be used, modified and redistributed. That is not freedom in any sense of the word.
The BSD license is clearly much the opposite. It is about true freedom. It is about allowing people the freedom to not contribute back changes. This may not be the kind of freedom that makes everybody happy, but freedom isn't about happiness. Freedom is about the ability to act independently, as one wishes, without undue interference or restrictions.
Anyone who truly loves freedom won't have a problem with Apple, or anyone else, benefiting from the generosity of the FreeBSD developers. In fact, they'll be happy that the FreeBSD developers have put out such amazing software with so few restrictions on how it may be used, modified and distributed. They'll be happy that a company like Apple is able to use that software as they see fit, in a way that maximizes Apple's freedom.
Freedom is about minimizing restrictions, as the BSD license shows. Freedom is absolutely not about applying restrictions, like the GPL family of licenses attempts to do.
Which side of your ass are you talking out of?
The GPL in no way restricts how you USE software. I can write viruses through GCC, if I want to. Another appl€ apologist. Keep buying your shiny things every year. Corpse Jobs needs the money.
On the contrary, the GPL does impose restrictions upon how GPL'ed software is used. Remember, "use" also includes the incorporation of unmodified GPL'ed source code into another library or application. It is not permissible to statically link such GPL'ed code into a non-GPL'ed, closed source product that is then distributed. That's a big part of the reason why the LGPL had to be created, for crying out loud! And enough with the "Apple apologist" crap. The GP explicitly mentioned that this extends well beyond Apple. The comment clearly says "Anyone who truly loves freedom won't have a problem with Apple, or anyone else, benefiting from the generosity of the FreeBSD developers."
Forget about the parent A.C. He's swallowed the Kool-Aid, poor devil...
I can't say that I'm terribly impressed with the pledge interface. You end up with a "transaction completed" page that doesn't detail the transaction nor does it refer you back to the original URL.
When I clicked "back" I hit an autoforward URL, so I'm hoping it was at least smart enough to put in a transaction ID and not attempt the transaction multiple times.
http://www.gnu.org/distros/common-distros.html#BSD
FreeBSD is used by very important software projects such as Apple stuff, Juniper routers and Sony PlayStation 4. Can't those companies really whip a dime or two to the project? One would think that keeping the base OS flourishing would be a good business case for them.
http://www.gnu.org/fun/fun.html#Guidelines
So what exactly is the status of IPv6 support on pFsense?
Look up http://www.osfree.org/ Such a project is already under development.
Couldn't Haiku be forked @ the point they diverged? As for OS/2 Warp, I like the osFree model of taking a microkernel - the L4 - and then putting different 'personalities' on it. It was a bit like IBM's late Workplace OS, or OS/2-PPC, which got aborted since it was based on Mach 3, which compared to L4 was horribly slow.
Total non-sequitur. Apple does contribute to FreeBSD, both in terms of employing some FreeBSD devs, as well as donating certain software to be merged upstream w/ the project. LLVM/Clang being one major example.
Apple is stripping out GPL3 based components, due to certain clauses in the license that make it pretty hostile to business - like the one granting patent rights to everybody in case a certain component uses a certain patent which the contributor holds. But FreeBSD is doing the same - LLVM/Clang has been deprecated in v10, and I believe Samba too might not be included due to its going GPL3 as well.
FREEbsd has sat around like shit (NATALIE PORTMAN) with little to no improvements and fell behind pretty much every other OS out there, save for (MASTURBATING BABOON) OpenBSD, which is universally lauded among fat greasy (GNAA) fapping sysadmins (e.g. most of you who are reading this). Netcraft (HOT GRITS) confirms that FreeBSD is entirely down the shitter at this point, having a paltry 1.6% of market share (e.g. north KORea). Put this one on the shelf right behind ReactOS.
I'd have to disagree. I'm using FreeBSD on my laptop right now. I think it makes a great desktop. Linux supports more hardware. But if (and it's a big IF) your hardware is supported by FreeBSD, then you're better off running it.
AGPL covers usage. The others - GPL, LGPL - do not.