<snip>

I've always been curious why "Linux" seemed to take off so fast when other FOSS 
/ non Winblow$ OS's were available for some time with not much traction; OS/2, 
BeOS, *nix with X11, etc.

Not just on the desktop, but servers as well.  "Supported" versions of Linux 
such as RHEL, Suse, etc. seem to have made more headway into the enterprise 
computing environment in the last ten years than *BSD did in the last 30.

>From my personal experience - which is relatively limited - it seems 
>applications just work on Linux?  When I need to compile an app, it takes a 
>few mins on Linux - but may take me a few weeks on FBSD.  Granted someone more 
>knowledgeable with FBSD, Compilers, etc. could do it much faster than I.

Anyway, if someone has a brief explanation of why Linux has apparently 
triumphed (in so far as installed base, desktop penetration, etc.) where so 
many others have failed (including IBM with OS/2) I'd be interested in hearing 
those thoughts.

TIA

Gary






<font size="1">
<div style='border:none;border-bottom:double windowtext 2.25pt;padding:0in 0in 
1.0pt 0in'>
</div>
"This email is intended to be reviewed by only the intended recipient
 and may contain information that is privileged and/or confidential.
 If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that
 any review, use, dissemination, disclosure or copying of this email
 and its attachments, if any, is strictly prohibited.  If you have
 received this email in error, please immediately notify the sender by
 return email and delete this email from your system."
</font>

_______________________________________________
[email protected] mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions
To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[email protected]"

Reply via email to