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I'm not criticising _you_ (I hate how everything has to be explicitly stated because people infer whatever they want on the Internet), but if UNIX tools are your primary interest, what's the main draw over setting up a BSD?
Specialty third party applications?
I've been on Linux/BSD for a few years now, and I don't think I've installed anything from outside the archives in 2 years. (Well, some old video games, but that's just data files in my home directory, using engines from the archives...)
Again, I just get curious when someone who's seriously into *nix tools and programming uses OS X as their primary OS. It's really common in the Common Lisp world, but that's largely a historical oddity (there were/are a number of very good commercial/free implementations for Mac OS/OS X).
The answer is simple: I use Gentoo and NetBSD in my boxes at home (at work everything is Windows), but my laptop is a mac: And the beauty of the mac is that while you still have a unix box, you also have a nice UI on top of it (though KDE is also beautiful) and, the most important thing: every device, monitor, printer, etc. etc. that gets connected to your mac, simply works out of the box and installing/configuring it is quite simpler than in a Linux or BSD box.
Edited 2011-02-28 14:34 UTC
Specialty third party applications?
I've been on Linux/BSD for a few years now, and I don't think I've installed anything from outside the archives in 2 years. (Well, some old video games, but that's just data files in my home directory, using engines from the archives...)
Again, I just get curious when someone who's seriously into *nix tools and programming uses OS X as their primary OS. It's really common in the Common Lisp world, but that's largely a historical oddity (there were/are a number of very good commercial/free implementations for Mac OS/OS X).
There are too many proprietary apps not available for Linux/BSD to use it as a main desktop for me. You'll never get around that, until the major software developers recognize Linux or BSD as worthwhile.





Member since:
2006-05-09
If they not drop their "UNIX-ness" and they still provide me all tools I like in the same open way (as it is until now), I will welcome any eye-candy feature on top of this.