What is the future of FreeBSD?
I used to see FreeBSD as a base system much like Arch Linux—one that gives users all the choices but doesn't provide an official desktop environment. Recently, however, FreeBSD 15 announced (and subsequently delayed to 15.1) that it would ship with an official KDE desktop. On the other hand, the KDE project stated this year that it will be dropping support for FreeBSD.
So where does this leave FreeBSD going forward? Will it remain a foundational system that leaves everything to the user, or is it moving toward becoming a more standard, desktop-integrated system like Debian? Could it even evolve into something more akin to Ubuntu, Zorin, or Deepin, with official support for new technologies such as AI?
On a related note, I’d also like to clarify: does FreeBSD actually have a plan to officially support a KDE desktop, rather than leaving users to install or compile it themselves as is currently the case?
I used to see FreeBSD as a base system much like Arch Linux—one that gives users all the choices but doesn't provide an official desktop environment. Recently, however, FreeBSD 15 announced (and subsequently delayed to 15.1) that it would ship with an official KDE desktop. On the other hand, the KDE project stated this year that it will be dropping support for FreeBSD.
So where does this leave FreeBSD going forward? Will it remain a foundational system that leaves everything to the user, or is it moving toward becoming a more standard, desktop-integrated system like Debian? Could it even evolve into something more akin to Ubuntu, Zorin, or Deepin, with official support for new technologies such as AI?
On a related note, I’d also like to clarify: does FreeBSD actually have a plan to officially support a KDE desktop, rather than leaving users to install or compile it themselves as is currently the case?