For many . vendors, the BSD license is very important compared to the GPL
Tim Anderson Wed 10 Mar 2021 // 11:03 UTC Share
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It s not as well known as Linux, but FreeBSD has plenty of hardcore fans. In a wide-ranging chat covering licensing, architectures including RISC-V, and a development model that s free of a dictator ,
The Reg spoke to members of the project about new release features and more.
FreeBSD 13.0 has just reached release candidate 1 and is scheduled to come out at the end of March – with key new features including a complete LLVM toolchain, faster networking, and improved ZFS file system.
Major new releases come every two years or so: 12.0 was pushed out in December 2018, and 12.2 in October 2020. We spoke to kernel developer John Baldwin and Ed Maste, who is a FreeBSD committer and director of Project Development for the FreeBSD Foundation.
Rethinking the desktop with reference to Apple s early UI guidelines
Tim Anderson Fri 12 Feb 2021 // 10:29 UTC Share
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Updated A pre-alpha project to make a new FreeBSD-based desktop operating system has adopted a minimalist design intended to appeal to Mac defectors.
FreeBSD is a Unix-like operating system first released in 1993 based on the Berkeley Software Distribution. The core of Apple s macOS, called Darwin, uses some code from FreeBSD. Despite its high quality, running FreeBSD as a desktop operating system has some challenges, mainly because it is less well supported by third-party vendors than Linux, which in turn is not as well supported as Windows.