On Wed, Feb 22, 2017 at 10:36:08AM -0500, Clem Cole wrote:
I think your counter point is that while I believe
folks like yourselves or
Linus could have gotten BSD UNIX if you had tried to find it it was
available and folks like Keith and Bill were trying to get it out the door,
but have suggest that you don't think so. You think the walls were too
high, the access was only for the "chosen few" and a difference was the
Linux really was available to what Larry referred to as the great unwashed.
The way it felt to me at the time was yes, you could, maybe, get access
but it was proprietary source code. If you put it up for FTP you were
going to get sued or something. It was not freely available.
You keep saying that 386BSD was up for FTP as a poorly kept secret.
Why was it secret? Because it wasn't legal to get it.
A lot of us were pretty sick of that legal bullshit. Linux didn't
have that problem.
To that I say, fair enough. You could be right, I do
hope you are not. I
don't think that was the intention/theory - but in practice, it seems
different.
I think most hackers wanted it to be free, though even there it was
sort of hit and miss. The BSDi guys thought they saw a market
opportunity so they weren't so excited about free.