| > Every item I've listed offers something unique. You then go on to characterize components grafted in from another OS as "unique". That is a laughably low bar, making every potential permutation of existing operating system components distinct offerings in competition for mindshare. > Honest question... Honest answer: you are running code I've written. I've been using ZFS in production for as long as one possibly can. My home file server has been SmartOS for many years, before that it was FreeBSD. > I really hope you at least have enough experience with BSD to realise... I'm keenly aware of their differences and commonality, having tracked the introduction of a terminal mode bug all they way back to a time when "Melbourne getty" was a thing. > There's no way on Earth we have less choice now than in the 90s. Well, I suppose that if you are including abandonware and dead product offerings in the list of competing operating systems... > We might have the industry largely standardising on... It seems like you are trying really hard to avoid using the more appropriate word for what has happened: "consolidating". |
That's literally no different to how Unix evolved. You talk about diversity in the 90s when most of the platforms were being trolled by SCO for containing the same code base. Don't you see the hypocrisy of your argument there?
> Honest answer: you are running code I've written. I've been using ZFS in production for as long as one possibly can. My home file server has been SmartOS for many years, before that it was FreeBSD.
Then it seems very strange that you don't acknowledge the differences in current platforms while proclaiming that Unix was more diversified in the 90s (if it was that clear cut SCO wouldn't have been trolling everyone).
> Well, I suppose that if you are including abandonware and dead product offerings in the list of competing operating systems...
You're overstating things once again. :)
> It seems like you are trying really hard to avoid using the more appropriate word for what has happened: "consolidating".
No. Consolidating means the removal of options. Those options still exist they're just not as commonly used. Thus term I used of "standardisation" is more apt.
Look, I do understand the rose tinted glasses you're wearing. There are aspects of 90s era systems administration and development that I miss too. But I still feel you're way off the mark with your opinions here. In some places you are exaggerating a nuanced point to such an extent that as much as I'd love to cheer on for the "good old days of computing", your comments simply don't represent my experiences then nor now.