Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 23rd Mar 2008 23:04 UTC
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Member since:
2005-08-11
[p]There aren't multiple versions of Solaris, BSD or Linux for that matter, unless you're changing processor platforms. [/p]
Uhm, there are at least 3 different codebases for BSD, NetBSD, FreeBSD, and OpenBSD. There are multiple codebases for GNU/Linux, depending on the number of distributions in existence. Each Distro may only have one codebase per release, but each release has it's own codebase.
Many Distributions have Free and for pay versions of their software, such as Mandriva. Others support incubator distros like Fedora. Ubuntu has multiple editions, Ubuntu (Gnome), Kubuntu (KDE) Xubuntu (XFCE)
So you see, even with OSS, it's not all cut and dried