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Date:      Wed, 20 Dec 2000 23:03:30 -0600
From:      "Tyler K McGeorge" <treznor@sunflower.com>
To:        <questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: 
Message-ID:  <002401c06b0b$5ccb1800$103b7c18@treznor>
References:  <000601c06a67$72a0f220$1703a8c0@nirmitee> <000f01c06a68$137bd700$103b7c18@treznor> <20001221115427.A52062@wantadilla.lemis.com>

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I appologize for my ignorance. I'm still learning. :P I've only been on the
Unix scene for six months. :-( But I try soooo hard. :-P
----- Original Message -----
From: Greg Lehey <grog@lemis.com>
To: Tyler K McGeorge <treznor@sunflower.com>
Cc: Mr. Makarand Kulkarni <naveenpchandra@hotmail.com>;
<questions@FreeBSD.ORG>
Sent: Wednesday, December 20, 2000 7:24 PM
Subject: Re:


> [Format recovered--see http://www.lemis.com/email/email-format.html]
>
> Please don't write one line per paragraph.
>
> On Wednesday, 20 December 2000 at  3:34:39 -0600, Tyler K McGeorge wrote:
> > On  Tuesday, December 19, 2000 2:24 AM, Mr. Makarand Kulkarni wrote:
> >> Sir i want to know what is the meaning of FreeBSD, please let me
> >> know its fullform
> >
> > University of California at Berkeley at one point in time bought the
> > rights to work on UNIX from Bell Systems back in 1978.
>
> More like 1974/1975.
>
> > They shortly thereafter forged their own variant of UNIX which they
> > called BSD (Berkeley Software Distribution).
>
> The original BSD was released in 1977 and contained no kernel code.
>
> > Soon after came 2BSD (which shipped 75 copie, as opposed to the 30
> > shipped of BSD.) 2.8.1BSD gave way to many enhancements, and is more
> > important than 3BSD in that aspect.
>
> 2BSD, which is being developed today, only runs on PDP-11s.  3BSD ran
> on VAX, and was the first UNIX with virtual memory.  I can't think of
> anything in 2BSD which would rival that in importance.
>
> > 4BSD was released in 1980, 4.1BSD in 1981 (which has revisions made
> > between 82 and 83), 4.2 in 83,
>
> 4.3BSD in June 1986.
>
> > and finally 4.4BSD in 93. (I think some of those dates are
> > inaccurate, but I only have one source on this at the moment.))
>
> The year is right.  For more details, look at
> /usr/share/misc/bsd-family-tree.
>
> > After 4.4BSD, UCB was forced to become BSDI, which is now a major
> > non-free Unix.
>
> This is not correct.  BSDI was formed in 1981 by some ex-CSRG people.
> CSRG closed down in 1994, I think.  BSDI make BSD/OS.
>
> > Using 4.4BSD, there have been multiple offspring. OpenBSD, NetBSD,
> > FreeBSD and BSD Lite.
>
> NetBSD and FreeBSD originally started on a 4.3BSD Net/2 base.
>
> > Open referring to Open source, Net referring to Networking based and
> > Free being without cost.
>
> The names are relatively irrelevant.  The term "OpenBSD" was coined
> before the term "Open source", so your derivation is impossible.  All
> three are free open source operating systems with networking.
>
> > BSD Lite is a small version of BSD (never really had much experience
> > with anything but FBSD.)
>
> 4.4BSD contains AT&T code.  You need a UNIX source license (now
> available for free from SCO) to get it.  4.4BSD-Lite was an incomplete
> operating system created by removing the AT&T code from 4.4BSD.  It
> was the base for FreeBSD 2.0 and NetBSD 1.0.
>
> > And if the rumors I've heard have any validity, I hear FBSD 5.0 is
> > planning on united OBSD, NBSD and FBSD. Yay!
>
> The rumours you have heard have no validity whatsoever.
>
> Greg
> --
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