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CitationIt would seem, in my opinion at least, that this does not have many citations or reliable sources mention in the article. I would add them myself, but I'm really not much of an BSD guy and would not know where to look. Just delete this message if it is unneeded or useless. Zen Clark (talk) 00:24, 3 November 2008 (UTC) Older discussionAm not sure why this was entered under "Berkeley_System_Distribution" but the NetBSD documentation 1 has the S standing for Software, and that seems to be the predominate usage (even in the article itself, leading to the odd situation in which the article and article title don't match). --JoeAnderson In the early days it was called "Berkeley Source Distribution". This was certainly the case still in 1984. It has changed at some stage since then, but i don't know why or when. the /usr/share/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/bsdl-gpl/unix-license.html file ("Unix from a BSD Licensing Perspective") on FreeBSD 6.3 (on the 6.3-RELEASE-i386-docs.iso ISO at [1]) says "Berkeley Standard Distribution":
It goes on to mention enhancements such as the TCP/IP stack and then licensing issues with AT&T. The file is also available under ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/doc/
—Preceding unsigned comment added by Ramorum (talk • contribs) 06:52, 13 February 2008 (UTC) Trivial BSD's shouldn't be listed at the same precedence as the 3 major ones. Relevance. I'd be suprised if more than a few hundred (or in some cases, dozen) people run the smaller ones.
"BSD"I've changed the BSD page from a redirect to a disambig, including the Birsa Seva Dal expansion recently mistakenly added to this page. yes —Preceding unsigned comment added by 220.149.93.122 (talk) 07:17, 13 March 2008 (UTC) FOSS licensesIsn't there a FOSS Licenses called BSD?
HistoryThe current history section is extremely skimpy and mostly ignores the actual historic bits (1BSD, 2BSD, 3BSD, 4BSD, 4.1BSD, 4.2BSD, and 4.3BSD). A capsule summary of the history is available in the intro to McKusick et al, The Design and Implementation of (insert flavor here). I may write this some day, but anyone else out there should feel free to preempt me. 18.26.0.18 03:44, 26 Feb 2005 (UTC) standards compliance is untruthfulUser:Taxman writes, "if you have something that shows standards compliance is untruthful bring it to talk", so... Just how many years have BSD systems been intentionally failing to support the "ps -ef" command? This is not merely a bug. This is willful violation of the POSIX and UNIX standards.
Yet another willful violation: "ps -u root" There are many more... those are just the most glaring ones. It's not right to claim that "the BSD operating systems are notable for their standards conformance" when they are notable for their lack of standards conformance.
The article could say "the BSD operating systems might someday be notable for their standards conformance", but it seemed more polite to just quietly delete that section. If you want to air the dirty laundry though, be my guest.
PortsI wanted to read about tha famous BSD-style ports and was amazed that I haven't found any, only a short paragraph under FreeBSD. Would someone please create an article? Helix84 18:20, 29 Mar 2005 (UTC)
history confusion about 4.1BSD"(The release was not called 5BSD to avoid confusion with AT&T's UNIX System V release.)" This is bunk. SysV wasn't on the roadmap in 1981. Who is claiming this? I've never heard that about 4.1, but I have heard that was a reason with 4.2 (however, I can't track down a solid ref). However, Don Libes' "Life with UNIX" says on pg. 18 says 4.2 was originally slated to be 5 BSD, but they would have had to relicense it with AT&T according to university rules.--Agarvin 23:25, 16 October 2006 (UTC) "Linux comparison section should be reworked"The prose is awful and I feel the content favors a loyalty perspective to informative facts. Furthermore, it completely re-lists the bulleted summaries of the major goals of each distro.—The preceding unsigned comment was added by 24.136.239.88 (talk • contribs) 13:05, Jun 20, 2005.
Timeline mistake?There is a mistake in timeline. FreeBSD was forked after NetBSD. First NetBSD release was in 1993 April, FreeBSD was in 1993 December. Probably need to fix it?
Why is Mac OS X not included in the timeline? It definitely is a Unix system. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Mijter (talk • contribs) 20:16, 11 November 2007 (UTC) DevilettesDevilette is a keen glance brunette woman dressed like BSD Daemon:
Somebody please contact copyright owners and upload these pictures to WikiCommons :-) Vugluskr 15:23, 14 January 2006 (UTC)
On Portal:Free software, BSD is currently the featured articleJust to let you know. The purpose of featuring an article is both to point readers to the article and to highlight it to potential contributors. It will remain the feature for a week or so. The previous feature was MySQL. Gronky 10:31, 24 February 2006 (UTC) Unix_history-simple.pngit goes 1986 1988 1987
EuroBSDCon is not mentionedThis conference seems worth mentioning, but I don't know much about it. Gronky 13:10, 31 August 2006 (UTC) add Prof. Bob Fabry to BSD HistoryProf. Bob Fabry should be added to the BSD history on this page. Peter Salus has some info on him in A Quarter Century of UNIX. Fabry secured the grants that allowed Unix development to occur at Berkeley, and supervised it. He had the vision that UCB could make a big difference in Unix. He was responsible for getting Bill Joy involved. Bill Joy lucked into the environment that Prof. Fabry set up. Without Fabry therw ould have been no BSD Unix. - Lentower 21:38, 6 October 2006 (UTC) |
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