On Thursday, 7 March 2024 at 19:42:59 -0800, Larry McVoy wrote:
On Thu, Mar 07, 2024 at 08:15:43PM -0500, Jeffry R.
Abramson wrote:
On Thu, 2024-03-07 at 13:08 +0000, Ben Kallus
wrote:
FreeBSD and me got reconnected when Netflix wanted to hire me a
while back. While the kernel may be OK (it's not, ask me how I
know, I walked the code)
OK, I'm asking. I've been there too, and I don't see any obvious and
serious deficiencies.
FreeBSD is stuck in the 1980s. Raise your hand if you
have
installed FreeBSD in the last 20 years.
/me raises.
That "UI" for partitioning the disks, so
arcane. The whole install
experience is _awful_.
Agreed, some of the installation tools could do with improvement. But
how often do you install FreeBSD? As I have already noted, I've been
using it for 25 years or so, and in the early days I held classes on
installing FreeBSD. By about 2000 they seemed a little pointless. In
general, once it's there, it's there. You seem to be emphasizing the
wrong part of the system.
SunOS was a bug fixed BSD, so I really loved BSD. But
BSD is so
dead it is not even funny. Linux is light years ahead. Here is an
example from more than 20 years ago. I was installing RedHat Linux
and the machine I was installing on didn't have a mouse. The
installer was graphical and it was just easier to tab through the
options than go find a mouse.
Again, installation. How about *using* the system? And why should
you need a *mouse* to install software?
Greg
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