(Emphasis is mine)Gomer_X wrote:Yes. I was only responding to one point, though. You said Linus' argument was completely unfounded. There IS a foundation for this argument. You have made an extreme exaggeration.Tsuroerusu wrote:Did you not read the rest of my post?
OK, fair enough, I just don't see it, please enlighten me.
That's actually not how the BSD community is organized, OpenBSD honestly doesn't care about competing with FreeBSD or NetBSD. They really don't, and neither are they trying to find a niche, they make the OS for themselves basically. If they are trying hard to compete, why do you think OpenBSD constantly makes decisions that totally contradict what most people might want. They have not had WPA support until recently, they still doesn't support 3D acceleration (Although that is now being worked on). FreeBSD has had both for years. OpenBSD doesn't include proprietary drivers, FreeBSD and NetBSD does. OpenBSD also performs poorly, to be frank and honest, compared to GNU/Linux and FreeBSD, and they deliberately do that, they don't do a lot of performance, they focus more on producing correct code and security.Gomer_X wrote:Again you miss the point. I don't think the BSDs compete with Linux so much as they compete with each other. The BSD market is pretty narrow and they're all trying to find a niche. I'm not arguing whether that's bad or good, but I do think it's happening. That could lead people to think they're ignoring the bigger picture.Tsuroerusu wrote:I don't know about FreeBSD, but if you think OpenBSD is "fighting so hard to differentiate themselves in a narrow market" you're seriously mistaken. If OpenBSD were really "competing" with GNU/Linux for market share, why do you think they have this big big focus on software freedom?

