• @just_another_person@lemmy.world
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    1110 months ago

    BSD will always be faster. That’s a given. It is not flexible, however. It has a very specific purpose. This is why Apple chose this as the origin for OS X, which has now been bastardized to an unrecognizable variation, but if you check the main kernel, will still read as DragonFlyBSD.

  • AbsentBird
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    10 months ago

    Love the analogy of visiting Canada as an American to explain how BSD is different from Linux.

    • @eldavi@lemmy.ml
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      110 months ago

      i’ve had to use netapp ontap’s freebsd and solaris 9 & 10 professionally and going to canada is exactly how it felt; one is vancouver (compared to california) and the other was new foundland.

  • @Pacmanlives@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Very excited to see the rest of this series. I still run some BSD box’s. I really really enjoy it. I really wish they would support Docker at this point but it’s complex and I get it with the developers they have. Jails still work so so well. I am on a box I think I installed end of FreeBSD 9 or 10 on and just keep upgrading. That’s probably get to the 10 year mark at this point. I will have to go and check. It’s such a smooth system to run really a dream. Wish more people tried it especially

    • Duży Szef [he/him]
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      10 months ago

      All of politics information technology is sexual pathology.

      Edit: bruh wtf its a real thing what, als o i cant read im leaving this as proof of me being a debil

  • I tried FreeBSD for several months about 15-20 years ago. I really liked how clean the filesystem and environment felt, and have suggested it for many people over the years. In the end I couldn’t get around their license vs GPL.