NetBSD 7.0.1 Released (netbsd.org)
New submitter fisted writes: The NetBSD Project is pleased to announce NetBSD 7.0.1, the first security/bugfix update of the NetBSD 7.0 release branch. It represents a selected subset of fixes deemed important for security or stability reasons... For more details, please see the release notes at netbsd.org/releases. Complete source and binaries for NetBSD are available for download at many sites around the world. A list of download sites providing FTP, AnonCVS, SUP, and other services may be found at netbsd.org/mirrors/
This release addresses three security advisories, and includes six more security fixes -- all courtesy of a non-profit organization with no commercial backing.
I would say at least FreeBSD is not a toy and is definitely in use. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik...
Sorry Linus. It's your OS that sucks.
Linux has better hardware support if you're talking about a Pee Cee and what odd peripherals you can buy at a department store to plug into it. Plus it's only a kernel.
NetBSD has far better hardware support, in that with each version release all the processor architectures it will run on is supported, with the whole kernel and base userland under that version tag. You can check the same source tree out of the repository and build it for every architecture. The whole system and a full base userland.
With Linux the userland is whatever dogs breakfast a 'distro' producer chose to toss into the mix. With NetBSD it is all consistent.
Can anyone explains why *BSD matters? It sucks. Nobody uses it. Linux is better for servers, has better hardware support, has more software, and is far better supported. Why would anyone care about any BSD system? It sure looks like *BSD is dead.
Here's a list of products that use FreeBSD or modified versions of FreeBSD:
Here's why Netflix uses FreeBSD:
FreeBSD was selected for its balance of stability and features, a strong development community and staff expertise. All code improvements, feature additions, and bug fixes are contributed directly back to the open source community via the FreeBSD committers on our team. We also strive to stay at the front of the FreeBSD development process, allowing us to have a tight feedback loop with other community and partner developers. The result has been a positive open source ecosystem that lowers our development costs and multiplies the effectiveness of our efforts.
Regardless of the FreeBSD is dead meme, it's very much actively used and companies that use it contribute to its code. NetBSD, however, is a completely different thing altogether when it comes to people using it.