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Date:      Fri, 10 Sep 1999 10:42:43 -0700
From:      Sanjay Waghray <sw@home.com>
To:        freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org
Subject:   Wall Street Journal on Open source OS (9/10/99)
Message-ID:  <19990910104243.A1612@home.com>

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Attached is an article from the Wall Street Journal Online Edition.

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September 10, 1999 




               Beyond Linux, Free Systems
               Do Their Bit to Build Web

               By LEE GOMES 
               Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

               Here's a little-known fact about the world's busiest Web
               site: It runs on a piece of free software. And it isn't the
               free operating system called Linux.

               To serve nearly 80 million people each month, Yahoo!
               Inc. operates about 1,000 computers that run on
               FreeBSD, a program distributed without charge over the
               Internet. FreeBSD is the most popular in a trio of free
               operating systems -- all historically linked to the
               University of California at Berkeley -- that are quietly
               playing a major role in the evolution of the Internet.

               Among operating systems, the
               internal engines that run
               computers, Linux has stolen the
               spotlight lately, as supporters
               hope it will eventually challenge
               the dominance of Microsoft
               Corp.'s Windows. The initial
               public offering of Red Hat Inc., the Linux software
               vendor, was one of the hottest deals on Wall Street this
               summer.

               But the role of FreeBSD and its cousins shows how free
               programs keep changing the software world and creating
               headaches for big established players. Sun Microsystems
               Inc., a leader in managing big Web sites, is carefully
               watching the growth of Linux and other free programs.
               And Microsoft faces a particularly significant challenge,
               since the Redmond, Wash., company wants its
               forthcoming Windows 2000 to dominate the "dot-com"
               world where the freebies are strong.

               "With Linux capturing the public imagination, the BSDs
               have gotten lost in the noise," said International Data
               Corp. analyst Dan Kusnetzky. "But they are very
               sophisticated technologies that do a lot of work in the
               world, even if people don't know about them."

               The BSD programs and Linux actually share a common
               lineage, a collective development process and a
               rambunctious cast of characters.

               The free programs are all variants of the venerable Unix
               system invented by AT&T Corp. And they aren't just
               running Yahoo. While Microsoft almost never talks
               about it, its own Hotmail free e-mail service runs not on
               its flagship Windows NT but on FreeBSD.

               In fact, one recent survey showed that BSD accounted
               for nearly 15% of all server machines connected to the
               Internet. Linux leads the pack with 31%,and is the only
               major operating system making any gains. Windows had
               24%.

               The Linux saga is already
               the stuff of modern legend.
               In 1991, Linus Torvalds, a
               21-year-old student in
               Helsinki, began writing an
               operating system
               essentially from scratch so
               he could have something to
               use on his home computer.
               The programs FreeBSD,
               NetBSD and OpenBSD, by
               contrast, are the
               descendants of code
               written in the late 1970s
               and early 1980s at UC
               Berkeley.

               Factional battles and online fusillades between and
               among the various BSDs and Linux are common.
               OpenBSD was started in 1995 by Theo de Raadt, a
               mountain biking 31-year-old Canadian after being kicked
               out of the NetBSD movement.

               'Open Source'

               BSD buffs like to think of themselves as a slightly more
               grown-up version of the "open source" movement, which
               distributes underlying programming instructions so users
               can study and modify software. While Mr. Torvalds has
               full control of Linux, for example, FreeBSD is overseen
               by a 15-person group called the "Core." What's more,
               the various BSDs say that their software, by virtue of its
               head start on Linux, is more mature and stable.

               "We didn't write most of this code, so we don't have a
               lot of ego involved in getting people to use it," says
               Jordan K. Hubbard, 36 years old, an evangelist for
               FreeBSD who many people credit for its popularity.

               David Filo is one fan. The co-founder of Yahoo says he
               tried several operating systems before settling on
               FreeBSD. Now, Yahoo has become a major sponsor. At
               FreeBSD's first users' convention, to be held next month
               in Berkeley, Yahoo is paying to fly in some key
               developers. Mr. Filo said he would still use FreeBSD if
               he could do it over again, since his team now has so
               much experience with the software. But for someone
               starting out, he says, he might recommend Linux. "Right
               now, there seems to be more energy and resources
               behind it," he says.

               Such sentiments make some people wonder what the
               future is for the BSDs in a world where Linux is getting
               most of the "mindshare."

               Mr. Hubbard says the ranks of FreeBSD users continue
               to swell. One reason is that all BSDs are distributed
               under a license that lets users do almost anything with
               them -- including put the software into traditional
               commercial products. The Linux license, by contrast,
               requires users to make any use of the software -- such as
               a piece of specialized computer networking gear --
               freely available to everyone else. That restriction that
               keeps many companies from using Linux in key products.

               It might well make sense for the BSDs to put aside their
               differences and unite under a common set of specs. But
               peace may be too much to expect in the free software
               world. Two of the BSDs tried to merge a few years ago,
               recalls Charles M. Hannum, a programmer with the
               NetBSD project. But at a meeting between the two
               camps, "while everyone agreed it was a good idea," he
               says, "no one wanted to give anything up, and it just fell
               apart."



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