Keen to read more about these. Do you publish your work anywhere?Eponasoft said:I use FreeBSD for all of my robotics projects, including my incredibly large one, G.Project, which is to be a highly capable autonomous human-like robot.
Keen to read more about these. Do you publish your work anywhere?Eponasoft said:I use FreeBSD for all of my robotics projects, including my incredibly large one, G.Project, which is to be a highly capable autonomous human-like robot.
expl said:Darwin uses less BSD code than most people think. It's mostly VFS and network stack that have been directly taken from FreeBSD, rest of the system is quite different.
fonz said:Glad to have made you laugh. My point however is that Wikipedia is great if you understand a) what it can or cannot do and b) how to properly use it. When I see people ridiculing Wikipedia they usually do so out of ignorance, rarely do they actually truly understand Wikipedia's merits and/or shortcomings.
Fonz (FreeBSD afficionado and Wikipedian)
P.S. For example, the English version of Wikipedia is generally pretty anal about verifiability (that's the whole [citation needed] thing), which makes it a great "source of sources". Several of those cited sources are authoritative enough even for scientific research, go figure. Even if you don't trust Wikipedia itself directly, which is quite understandable if you actually know why you don't, you can often still find {{RS|reliable sources}} that are trustworthy.
Most browsers tell the server what operating system they are running on. There are ways around that, but ipfw(8) probably isn't one of them.fender0107401 said:Just ask, can it know I run FreeBSD if I run IPFW too?
vermaden said:Code:[U][B]Operating System Requests Percent[/B][/U] Windows 3,469,687 81.78% Mac 327,753 7.73% Linux 107,158 2.53% (including Android) FreeBSD 347 0.01% [U]OpenBSD 26 0.00%[/U]
SOURCE: http://stats.wikimedia.org/archive/squid_reports/2011-03/SquidReportOperatingSystems.htm
d_mon said:well...that's [a little bit] frustrating!
d_mon said:i do not understand why BSD is not the OS preferred by USA/canada people...why windows...why windows...why win...are people robotized?
I don't think USA/Canada is much different from the rest of the world (not regarding to this, at least). Some reasons why people stick with Windows:d_mon said:i do not understand why BSD [edit: color and bold face removed] is not the OS preferred by USA/canada people
You're probably right and I didn't intend on writing such a long post (which will indeed probably fall mostly on deaf ears anyway), but I guess I was just on a roll...DutchDaemon said:You should probably add a tl;dr to that, because someone doesn't like to read that much.
Eponasoft said:I use FreeBSD for all of my robotics projects, including my incredibly large one, G.Project, which is to be a highly capable autonomous human-like robot. However, I can't think of anything in the wild currently that uses it... the price scanners at the grocery stores here all run Windows CE, and the ATMs are either running OS/2 or Linux.
DutchDaemon said:You should probably add a tl;dr to that, because someone doesn't like to read that much.
fonz said:I don't think USA/Canada is much different from the rest of the world (not regarding to this, at least). Some reasons why people stick with Windows:Fonz
...- Application availability
There is some pretty impressive free and/or open source software out there, but there simply is a whole lot more software available for Windows than for most other systems, even including MacOS. For example, I'm pretty sure that Maplesoft could make a native FreeBSD version of Maple if they wanted to, but it's probably just not feasible from a business point of view due to the relatively small userbase. Fortunately I can use Maple on FreeBSD via the Linux emulation layer, but as much as I'd like it I don't see a native FreeBSD version coming out anytime soon.- Games
See the previous point, but multiplied by at least a factor 100. This is a bit of a vicious circle: since most people use Windows (or to a lesser extent MacOS) it often simply isn't profitable to release commercial-quality games for other platforms. It's simple economics, unfortunately. In fact, I vaguely remember the maker of Doom saying about the Linux version that he did it "because Linux gives me a woody. It doesn't generate revenue."
Heh. Although as I said I was just on a roll and churned out a bigger post than I intended, I did have the common sense to use a bullet list so it shouldn't be that hard to readBellum said:Heh, you'd think the big bold bullet points would be enough.![]()
I figured as muchDutchDaemon said:When I posted the tl;dr remark, I was thinking about a specific someone on the forums.