Linked by Trent Townsend on Wed 18th Jan 2006 22:03 UTC
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Member since:
2005-08-10
"DragonFly is an operating system and environment designed to be the logical continuation of the FreeBSD-4.x OS series."
(FreeBSD makes a damned fine desktop system)
http://www.dragonflybsd.org/main/
~*~*~*~
"The applications to which DragonFly can be put are truly limited only by your own imagination. From software development to factory automation, inventory control to azimuth correction of remote satellite antennae; if it can be done with a commercial UNIX product then it is more than likely that you can do it with DragonFly too! DragonFly also benefits significantly from literally thousands of high quality applications developed by research centers and universities around the world, often available at little to no cost. Commercial applications are also available and appearing in greater numbers every day."
(I imagine a desktop DragonFly system... )
http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/~justin/handbook/nutshell.html
~*~*~*~
"3. What is the primary goal of dragonfly, servers or desktops?
Matthew Dillon: Both. When it comes right down to it the idea of targeting a system to the 'server' is simply another word for 'reliability and scaleability', and the idea of targeting a system to the 'desktop' is simply another word for 'out of the box GUI'. It's not really an either-or deal. All UNIX systems, including Linux, the BSD's, DragonFly... basically use the same desktop components so supporting a desktop environment comes down to being able to provide integrated solutions that work out of the box."
(From the project founder himself, right here on OSNews... )
http://www.osnews.com/story.php?news_id=6338
~*~*~*~
Okay. Does anyone else here need some more examples? I've got many, many, bookmarked, a few of them Matt Dillon quotes. Desktops are every bit as important to DragonFly as clustering.
Edited 2006-01-19 11:39