Bay Trail GPU support has died on FreeBSD...why?!??? Cruel world....But it also has more compromises. For example FreeBSD tends to support older hardware for longer than Linux. Similar in concept to Windows. FreeBSD supports way more hardware than Windows 11 for example. With all the industry backing in the world.
Big companies want people to consume, and it is affecting Linux quite negatively.
One of the best things about BSD is that it hasn't been rinsed and extorted by the "industry". It has very much remained true to the same goals as research operating systems it evolved from.
Wait 10 years and BSD will be the only one that still supports it.Bay Trail GPU support has died on FreeBSD...why?!??? Cruel world....
So as a for profit business, which is better?
I just want to know how we can bring it back. Right when they release the 32-bit efi for 64-bit cpus they drop bay trail support. I don't even know how all that works on FreeBSD. Is it just a single person mainntaining support for these things? Was support dropped upstream? :/Wait 10 years and BSD will be the only one that still supports it.
Admittedly FreeBSD's approach is different to OpenBSD. It goes straight for (almost) upstream Mesa / DRM, etc.I just want to know how we can bring it back. Right when they release the 32-bit efi for 64-bit cpus they drop bay trail support. I don't even know how all that works on FreeBSD. Is it just a single person mainntaining support for these things? Was support dropped upstream? :/
What are current relations between OpenBSD and FreeBSD - is OpenBSD using every new FreeBSD kernel adding their specific changes or they have separate clone from older FreeBSD and improve it separately?But last time I checked was still working fine on OpenBSD.
They have diverged quite a bit. OpenBSD forked from NetBSD in the early days.What are current relations between OpenBSD and FreeBSD - is OpenBSD using every new FreeBSD kernel adding their specific changes or they have separate clone from older FreeBSD and improve it separately?
To introduce 3rd party codes into proprietary products, especially there are some 2nd party codes requiring NDA to obtain and use, BSD is the safe license. Because introducing GPL'ed codes with static linking (or mixing up in single object) clearly forces disclosing the modified source codes, even if it include NDA'ed part in it. It's "fatal" for business.License. Always interesting always confusing. My opinions/understanding/very simplified:
BSD has always been (very simplified) you can take this modify it sell it but there is no support
GPL/LGPL has always been (again very very simplified) "all your modifications belong to us and there is no support"
So BSD (and similar MIT and a few others) have been more business friendly in that you can take BSD source modify it and sell products but there is no impetus to provide those modifications to the community as a whole.
GPL/LGPL: you can modify, you can sell, but you MUST provide your modifications to the community as a whole.
Yeah, I know very over simplified, but "close enough".
So as a for profit business, which is better?
Those sound like the best positions to introduce FreeBSD in!Here in Denmark and Europe, we rarely hear about FreeBSD anymore. The jobs are often about sorting out messy Windows or Linux infrastructures, that are in desperate need of proper system administration (by under-manned departments).
Same here in Italy. I've been professionally involved in IT for more than thirty years and it's been decades since I saw my last BSD machine in a production environment (unless embedded in a network appliance).Here in Denmark and Europe, we rarely hear about FreeBSD anymore. The jobs are often about sorting out messy Windows or Linux infrastructures, that are in desperate need of proper system administration (by under-manned departments).
It has been decades, since we had active user groups and conferences, that demonstrated and discussed FreeBSD, its amazing modern features and professional as well as personal application.
I wish, that this could be changed, so FreeBSD could become more commonly known, backed up by communities and user groups, and applied to professional and personal infrastructures.
Yes, last I checked it worked fine on OpenBSD as well. There should be increased sharing between OpenBSD and FreeBSD regarding these chips perhaps. :/Admittedly FreeBSD's approach is different to OpenBSD. It goes straight for (almost) upstream Mesa / DRM, etc.
OpenBSD however takes a more manual approach, so, whilst it often lags behind, can have a bit more control and stage things properly to prevent regressions.
For example my ancient Intel GMA915 broke on FreeBSD a number of years back. But last time I checked was still working fine on OpenBSD.