I noticed undeadly.org has removed the big picture of 'Puffy' they used to have on their front page too. There's still a little puffy at the top left. Hmm, maybe I'm getting mixed up with openbsd.org though.
<meta name="description" content=" ">
<meta name="keywords" content="">
<meta property="og:description" content=" " >
" (inch sign), ' (typewriter apostrophe) or © if Unicode ❤️ is supported. <p>© 1994-2026 The FreeBSD Project. All rights reserved</p>
<span>Made with <span class="heart">❤️</span> by the FreeBSD Community</span>
alt text:<img src="/images/beastie-right.svg" width="160" height="250" alt="FreeBSD logo" />
The footer links are important for screen readers. If they no longer have the header menu and only the hamburger it would seriously limit accessibility.
Plausbile Analtics – the JavaScript. Do I need to write more? Not even ArchLinux.org or Debian.org do this. Keyboard‑only navigation partially fails (in graphical webbrowser). Try navigating the site just by hitting tab (and pressing enter). Ralphbsz already mentioned it, repetition of menu in the footer. Why? Very helpful metadata.HTML:<meta name="description" content=" "> <meta name="keywords" content="">HTML:<meta property="og:description" content=" " > It’s a bit embarrassing that validator.W3.org and Jigsaw.W3.org show errors. This doesn’t look professional. It is valid but really strange to use any character entities like"(inch sign),'(typewriter apostrophe) or©if Unicode❤️is supported.HTML:<p>© 1994-2026 The FreeBSD Project. All rights reserved</p> <span>Made with <span class="heart">❤️</span> by the FreeBSD Community</span>Anyway, made with heart? How do you make something with heart? Did they put Beastie through the meat grinder? – It’s a completely useless statement is what I’m saying. Today I learned that Beastie was the FreeBSD logo. – Wrongalttext:HTML:<img src="/images/beastie-right.svg" width="160" height="250" alt="FreeBSD logo" />
That actitude of "for all you haters, why dont you write your own web page?" sorry..but is a child reactionI had no idea that opinion is useless (my bad). I will inform "open source" to ignore the need to 'put up' -- but retain 'or shut up' -- right away!
I did, and I moved on to the "Made with love by the FreeBSD Community" portion (I'm working on my suggestions as we speak).
It can be constructive, if properly worded or, if properly implemented, as vermaden has done.That actitude of "for all you haters, why dont you write your own web page?" sorry..but is a child reaction
Since the org owns the freebsd.org TLD, that has to be a different OS release with website. But I think keeping that ad-network association is a bad idea. Did this exist on the previous page? I never noticed. I Use the page to check available releases and downloading official images.That actitude of "for all you haters, why dont you write your own web page?" sorry..but is a child reaction
<meta name="generator" content="Hugo 0.161.1">Hugo is one of the most popular open-source static site generators. With its amazing speed and flexibility, Hugo makes building websites fun again.
nah, it was more like me saying 'put up or shut up' which is kinda/sorta what the entire open source development model/concept is. meaning, it's easy for people to criticize without actually offering anything of substance (but it's more fun to actually try and help).That actitude of "for all you haters, why dont you write your own web page?" sorry..but is a child reaction
i'd guess soIs that ChatGPT design?
agree, god the more i think about this the worse it gets··· i really hope they at least improve this if they wanna change it so badWhy is the top of the page wasted on advertising copy explaining how great FreeBSD is? Is this some sort of advertising? Who is the target audience of the ads?
Why is there both a hamburger menu (at the top right) and a bottom set of links that go mostly to the same content?
Why is there only a download link to version 15? Version 14 continues to be supported and downloadable. Matter-of-fact, I happen to think that for many users and applications, older and more stable versions are a better choice. Why would I run 14.4 if 14.3 does everything I need? And 15.x is right out. The old information about currently supported versions and legacy versions is buried behind a link, it used to be at the top.
Why is "About" the first thing (in both the hamburger menu and the links at the bottom)? The important thing is the product, the downloadable installers and code. Not introduction, features, stuff the foundation does, and disclaimers.
It seems to me that the foundation ... the less said here the better.
you couldn't have put it any betterIt looks like somebody living under a rock discovered Bootstrap, decided to get funky with it and failed.
i do think it's good to have it short, it's a slogan after all so it kinda has to be easy to rememberHere is what I have so far (but my thoughts are still very generic at the moment). If you/anyone is thinking the same thing as me, here is what I have so far. If it helps, great.
This is almost exactly what NetBSD says. o.0
As I typed this, someone posed. ... AlfredoLlaquet I think I see where you're going. I want to noodle with your version a bit (nice!).
less is more, really··· i personally would wanna redesign it to be pretty dense, almost like one of those CJK websites but less flashy, close to how it was before but a little "tighter"I personally wouldn't mind if they project page were text only with hyperlinks. The information remains the same and accessible.
gotta agree with that one too, you don't need to be a chef to say that a certain meal tastes assThat actitude of "for all you haters, why dont you write your own web page?" sorry..but is a child reaction
And chef says "your taste palette sucks"gotta agree with that one too, you don't need to be a chef to say that a certain meal tastes ass
Typical design trends regarding the hamburger are only visible at resolutions that would be considered phone/tablet and you would use a media query in css or JavaScript to detect the device OS.yeah, the hamburger menu is definitely better for mobile, otherwise just keep the useful stuff at the top
Sounds like there may be some additional testing in the CSS or JavaScript that is being used to determine the conditions for displaying the hamburger.I don't see a hamburger menu (using waterfox on a desktop computer).
nah, like i said the denser the better to me, really saves a few clicks and if done right it's not confusingBut a full time hamburger isn't that bad as long as the page can still comply with the majority of accessibility recommendations from the WC3, in my opinion.
Has John Lasseter paid for his transgressions? He has never had anything to do with BSD more significant than the original sketch AFAIK. Maybe we need to make a statement that it belongs to the community and doesn't make any statement about the morality of the artist.I do too, the sorts of people that took issue with the older character aren't the sort that have ever contributed positively to a project.