The July-September, 2011 Status Report is now available with 28 entries.
New committer: Ruslan Mahmatkhanov (ports)
July-September, 2011 Status Report
New committer: Justin Hibbits (src)
Andrew Tanenbaum On Minix, Linux, BSD, and Licensing
An anonymous reader points out an interesting, detailed interview with Andrew Tanenbaum at Linuxfr.org; Tanenbaum holds forth on the current state of MINIX, licensing decisions, and the real reason he believes that Linux caught on just when he “thought BSD was going to take over the world.” (“I think Linux succeeded against BSD, which was a stable mature system at the time simply because BSDI got stuck in a lawsuit and was effectively stopped for several years.”)
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FreeBSD 9.0-RC2 Available
The second RC build for the FreeBSD-9.0 release cycle is now available. ISO images for the architectures amd64, i386, ia64, powerpc, powerpc64, and sparc64 are available on most of our FreeBSD mirror sites. One of the many new features in 9.0 we would like to be tested is the new installer, so we encourage our users to do fresh installation on test systems. Alternatively, users upgrading existing systems may now do so using the freebsd-update(8) utility.
New committer: Michael Scheidell (ports)
New committer: David Chisnall (src)
New committer: Ruslan Mahmatkhanov (ports)
In Favor of FreeBSD On the Desktop
snydeq writes “Deep End’s Paul Venezia wonders why more folks aren’t using FreeBSD on the desktop. ‘There used to be a saying — at least I’ve said it many times — that my workstations run Linux, my servers run FreeBSD. Sure, it’s quicker to build a Linux box, do a “yum install x y z” and toss it out into the wild as a fully functional server, but the extra time required to really get a FreeBSD box tuned will come back in spades through performance and stability metrics. You’ll get more out of the hardware, be that virtual or physical, than you will on a generic Linux binary installation.'”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.