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danieldk,
Please don't take my comments as negative. Since when do one see much about NetBSD? The fact is, you don't. They don't have a large user base like FreeBSD, media darling derivative distributions like PC-BSD and DesktopBSD, nor do they have an outspoken lead developer (Theo de Raadt). All of the good things that NetBSD have done in the past have flown under the radar. The one major story was the disgruntled developer. I don't think there is anything wrong with the NetBSD team (or their loyal users) getting the word out about their product. It is hardly hype when you report what has actually happened (the bugathon, package management upgrade, etc.). As for the bugathon, Debian has bug squashing parties, OpenBSD has hackathons, the fact is that gatherings such as these are quite common and no doubt useful. It only makes sense that the NetBSD team would make this a practice of the development process. Sorry for any problems my earlier post might have caused.




Member since:
2005-11-18
No, it is not damage control. The idea for an event has been boiling for a longer time, but the downside is that the NetBSD project is geographically diverse with developers from all over the world. So, the idea of a net-hosted bugathon came up spontaneously as a reaction to that problem. Elad contributed a lot of time and enthousiasm to get this started, and it has snowballed.
Please remember that, although one developer gave his critique of the NetBSD Project, that this is just one developer out of more than three hundred. Friction happens in large projects.
Besides that we have always tried to avoid hyping, we are only interested in publishing news when something newsworthy has happened (as you can see on our changes pages[1]).
NetBSD is not dying, it is alive and kicking, as it always was.
[1] http://www.netbsd.org/Changes/
Edited 2006-10-09 21:26