BSD Developer Room
BSD developer room
The Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD) is a free open source version of the operating system Unix, which evolved at the University of Berkeley starting 1975. The name BSD is now used collectively for the modern descendants of these distributions. Most notable among these today are perhaps the major open source BSDs (FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, DragonFly BSD) which have themselves spawned a number of children. They are targeted at an array of systems for different purposes and are common in government facilities, universities and commercial use. A number of commercial operating systems are also partly or wholly based on BSD or its descendants, including Apple Computer's Mac OS X. The newest family member is Debian GNU/kFreeBSD which uses the FreeBSD kernel and a GNU userland.
When | Event | Speaker | Media |
---|---|---|---|
Sunday 2010-02-07 | |||
Sun 10:00-10:45 | Introduction to FreeBSD | Marius Nünnerich | |
Sun 11:00-11:45 | The Newcons Project | Ed Schouten | |
Sun 12:00-12:45 | Building systems with autotools and libtool | Benny Siegert | |
Sun 13:00-13:45 | Debugging the FreeBSD kernel for dummies | Shteryana Shopova | |
Sun 14:00-14:45 | Because the License Matters: BSD as the Foundation for Commercial Point of Sale Applications | Marc Balmer | |
Sun 15:00-15:45 | Debian GNU/kFreeBSD | Axel Beckert | |
Sun 16:00-16:45 | Tracking FreeBSD customizations with a local Mercurial branch | Giorgos Keramidas | |
Sun 17:00-17:30 | Beyond the historical group limit in FreeBSD | Brooks Davis |