Subj : *BSD To : Lawrence Garvin From : Roy J. Tellason Date : Sun Jun 15 2003 05:08 am Lawrence Garvin wrote in a message to Roy J. Tellason: LG> Roy wrote to Francois at 04:06 12 Jun: FT> FreeBSD comes from 386BSD, which was the project to make the BSD FT> code run on 386+ intel machines. NetBSD is an split of freeBSD, FT> whith the accent on portability. OpenBSD is an offshoot of NetBSD, FT> which focuses on security issues. According to the reviewer, FT> FreeBSD is the one with the easiest installer and the most FT> available packages (note: roughly same as Debian). Mention is also FT> made of PicoBSD, which is a one-floppy project available in 4 FT> different flavors (router/dialup/don't remember the rest). However, FT> PicoBSD hasn't been updated in a couple of years. RJT> Thanks, that's the sort of info I was looking for... RJT> Although it doesn't really touch on the differences between them, RJT> much. LG> Hang in there Roy. I'm not in any particular hurry. :-) LG> I'm getting very close to kicking off my "Compare the BSD flavors" LG> project. This past week I was able to identify a machine I'll be LG> able to use. I'm getting a replacement desktop machine for myself LG> (a PIII/733 Deskpro EN) that I'm buying from a friend. That'll LG> free up my PII/400 system, which I'll start by dedicating to this LG> BSD-comparision project. I just snagged a bit more ram to stick in the "test fixture" here (32M) so perhaps I can get the Slackware install to complete on that one and maybe even try some linux-to-linux networking stuff, things like NFS, etc. that I've not messed with yet, instead of linux-to-dos, linux-to-OS/2, linux-to-w98, etc. Maybe split the load with X running in two different places, too, if I can nail down how to do that. LG> Maybe, even, I'll get enough to write a book about it! :-) Maybe you'll hook up with O'Reilly and they'll come up with a nifty cover for it, too. :-) --- * Origin: TANSTAAFL BBS 717-838-8539 (1:270/615) .