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Date:      Thu, 09 Dec 1999 17:55:46 +1100
From:      Danny <dannyh@idx.com.au>
To:        "Richard E. Hawkins" <hawk@hawkins.cba.uni.edu>, wonko@entropy.tmok.com
Cc:        cweimann@wallnet.com, freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Why is FreeBSD better than Linux? 
Message-ID:  <3.0.32.19991209175541.006999b0@idx.com.au>

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At 15:18 8/12/99 -0600, Richard E. Hawkins wrote:

I justed went and purchased Freebsd 3.3 and then taken down Linux RH6.
Because RH6  requires half of my time fixing the problems.

People, please don't ever use RH6. 


>
>
>wonko wobbled,
>
> 
>> well, danny's list is a good start.  but let's look at what you said chris.
>> how would you have done that in FreeBSD?  easily.  not a lot of
problems, but
>> let's look at my favorite difference.  let's say you want to update your
Linux
>> system to a newer version of the OS (kernel+userland).  under Linux such an
>> undertaking is quite a bother due to the fact that it is almost 100% 
>> interactive, and i have never been able to make in non-interactive.
(remember
>> i haven't touched Linux is several years now, but i don't really think
it has
>> changed in this respect anyway)
>
>I can't speak for the others, but for debian it's trivial.  There were 
>some glitches going to glibc for people that wouldn't read the 10 lines 
>of directiosn, but even that they've worked around.  However, you deal 
>entirely with prepackaged binaries.  Debian's dependencies also work 
>without a hitch.
>
>On the other hand, debian belongs to the High Church of Emacs, with the 
>ever-popular hymn "GPL uber alles" . . . There's a lot of reasonable 
>folks there, but the politics get to be a bit much.
>
>> with Linux you have to do 'make config' and then load your configuration
into
>> the config program so it can build a real config file for building the
kernel.
>
>> it's just plain messy.
>
>ehh.  menuconfig/xconfig are really no messier then bsd.  It may be 
>ugly, but it's hidden.
>
>> let's face it, NOBODY has great documentation.  i've run across some
extremely
>> out of date man pages in both NetBSD and FreeBSD distros.  but the BSD
people
>> seem to be making a harder effort to update their man pages.  (the BSD 4.4
>> man pages you can occasioanlly find not-withstanding, hee hee)
>
>And there's so much they get from the gnu folks that the hostility to 
>man pages gets to be a problem.  Whoever developed info should be 
>sentenced to using microsoft products.
>
>
>> > >If I have a problem with FreeBSD the answer is either in the handbook
>> > >or in the mailing list archives.  I have never needed to look at source 
>> > >except out of curiosity.
>
>Once you figure out what you're looking for, yes.   If you don't find 
>it, you have a much better chance of getting an answer on the debian or 
>redhat mailing lists than this one.
>
>
>rick
>
>-- 
>Prof. Richard E. Hawkins, Esq.   
>                                               hawk@hawkins.cba.uni.edu
>(319) 266-7114                        http://eyry.econ.iastate.edu/hawk
>These opinions will not be those of UNI until it pays my retainer.
>
>


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