Paul Lussier wrote: > Coleman Kane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > >> Indeed it did. This is one of the predominant reasons why Linux >> implemented their own TCP/IP stack and filtering, rather than bringing >> in the widely-accepted-as-superior-at-the-time Berkeley stack and BPF. >> > > echo $above | sed 's/\(Berkeley\)/(and still) \1/' > > Linux's TCP/IP stack still has lots of problems fixed by the Berekely > code many years ago. And the new OpenBSD pf code is light-years > better than anything Linux has ever had. > I agree with the above, I was just avoiding a flamewar (/me ducks!). I've used FreeBSD since 1999 on most what I can get my hands on (including my daily-use laptop/workstation). So far, I have not seen a GNU/Linux distro that offers as good a solution as FreeBSD for my desktop needs. Although I may be biased, since I am a committer and all ;).
-- Coleman Kane _______________________________________________ gnhlug-discuss mailing list gnhlug-discuss@mail.gnhlug.org http://mail.gnhlug.org/mailman/listinfo/gnhlug-discuss/