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Date:      Sat, 14 Sep 2002 12:11:02 -0700
From:      Kevin Stevens <Kevin_Stevens@pursued-with.net>
To:        "Anthony Atkielski" <anthony@freebie.atkielski.com>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Windows as opposed to Other OS's
Message-ID:  <B6004B02-C815-11D6-8217-003065715DA8@pursued-with.net>
In-Reply-To: <013e01c25c1f$32162990$0a00000a@atkielski.com>

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On Saturday, Sep 14, 2002, at 11:47 US/Pacific, Anthony Atkielski wrote:

> Kevin writes:
>
>> OS X.
>
> OS X is a proprietary, pre-packaged version of UNIX with a huge amount 
> of
> specialized code.  In fact, it's essentially like a version of Windows,
> except that Apple didn't write a lot of the code (presumably because 
> Apple
> can no longer afford to develop complete operating systems).  The way 
> I see
> it, OS X has all the advantages and disadvantages of any other 
> proprietary
> OS, such as Windows or the old Mac OS.  I'd expect the borrowed part 
> to be
> as stable as any vanilla version of UNIX, but I suspect that all of 
> Apple's
> code will destabilize the OS overall in any but the most predictable
> roles--that is pretty much inevitable.  Still, I'd also expect it to 
> run a
> lot more reliably than the old Mac OS, which was badly outdated (it 
> predated
> the old 16-bit Windows 3.1, IIRC).

(shrug)  I disagree with much of what you say above, but it's beside 
the point so I won't respond.  The OP posted:

>> However, I would not run any
>> flavor of UNIX on the desktop.  I tried that for a short time and it 
>> was a
>> joke. Clearly, people who run UNIX on the desktop have little else to 
>> do
>> but play with their computers; I could never afford to dedicate that 
>> much
>> time to just getting a system to work.

I appreciate his position - I was in it myself.  OS X is indisputably a 
flavor of Unix.  OS X offers a solution to most of the desktop/UI 
issues.  I sold an Ultra 60 and bought an Apple PowerBook expressly to 
run it.  I now have a full Unix environment with commercial software 
available, and a GUI that provides a reasonably consistent user 
interface.

KeS

OB-FreeBSD:  I'm on this list because I converted my server from 
Solaris to FreeBSD in order to gain better mind-share with OS X. 


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