Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sat 19th Apr 2008 23:39 UTC, submitted by TheNerd
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RE[3]: Distributions...
by Gunderwo on Mon 21st Apr 2008 04:56
in reply to "RE[2]: Distributions..."
Unlike "Linux", BSD, Solaris and Haiku have their own applications.. they're not a kernel that needs bundling with GNU crap.
Down with distributions, they're unnecessary and stupid.
This comment implies that you see the BSD's as complete software stacks that need not add any additional, non-BSD applications into a "Distribution".
Only the "distributions", like PCBSD or DesktopBSD include such things, both are distributions - which I made a point of opposing.
Yet in your very next quote you reference BSD distributions. So if you are aware of these BSD distributions why would you make a blanket statement about BSD not using distributions.
I'm not lacking any research, what I was saying is that for a BSD to be useful as a Desktop OS or distribution if you may. Is you will likely will end up adding additional non BSD licensed software to make it useful. This is the case whether it is a distribution or a base system added to through ports or packages or whatever.
I should mention also that we are now seeing Solaris based distributions too.
So your initial statement was along the lines of Linux bad, BSD, Solaris, Haiku good. Even though BSD's and Solaris's are packaged as distributions too.
RE[3]: Distributions...
by Gunderwo on Mon 21st Apr 2008 16:17
in reply to "RE[2]: Distributions..."
Xorg is an "optional" bundle, MIT licenced.
Yet Xorg is installable from the FreeBSD installer and referenced in the FreeBSD handbook.
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/install-c...
You should read the title at the top of the page I linked to. It says "2.7.1 Select the Distribution Set".
I think maybe you should do a little more research.




Member since:
2007-03-14
...no they don't, none of them include gnome/kde or even the toolkits (gtk/qt).
They're available in the ports/packages tree, but not distributed.
Only the "distributions", like PCBSD or DesktopBSD include such things, both are distributions - which I made a point of opposing.
Xorg is an "optional" bundle, MIT licenced.
Please do some research in the future.
Edited 2008-04-21 03:33 UTC