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by roninb
3383 days ago
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Distro is synonymous with OS at this point. No one is using it as a derogatory term for OSes that aren't different enough to give them the denotation of "OS". That said, you're going to have to come up with an argument stronger than "this was forked ages ago" to suggest Dragonfly and FreeBSD are different enough to warrant thought. Ubuntu forked before 2004 and you don't see anyone being called out for comparing it to Debian. |
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Possibly to the layman but the term "distro" (short for "distribution") deliberately exists to differentiate between different OS's and different distributions of the same OS but with a different software stack and default configurations.
While you do sometimes get differences between the Linuxes in terms of init daemons and slightly patched kernels etc, they are all generally GNU/Linux - ie generally share the same common Linux OS fundamentals (eg GNU coreutils). There will be exceptions to this rule (isn't there always?!) but we're talking about the common desktop / server platforms people automatically talk about when discussing "Linux".
However many of the BSDs are developed in insolation. While they may have a shared heritage, the kernels have matured into something quite different from one another. Often the core utilities and init daemons et al can vary noticeably as well.
So in essence, FreeBSD and Dragonfly are different but similar OSs, whereas Linux distributions are the same OS but differently configured. This is why we make the distinction between "distro" and "OS".