Copyright © Philip M. Parker, INSEAD. Terms of Use.

| Domain | Definition |
Computing | 386BSD |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Soon after the initial release of 386BSD, three groups developed off the existing source. BSD/386 came first, which was later to become the commercial BSD/OS. NetBSD developed off the 386BSD 0.1 release, and was the first free software organization founded on BSD. This was shortly followed by FreeBSD. While these systems were being developed, the Computer Science department at the University of California, Berkeley continued development, and had progressed to 4.4BSD.
Development on 386BSD sources would not continue for much longer. Due to licensing concerns with AT&T, some potentially so-called encumbered sources which existed within 386BSD were to be removed from all the derived systems, and the development of 386BSD was to be stopped. Berkeley subsequently removed the Net/2 tapes from distribution, and replaced them with 4.4BSD-Lite, which existed without the code that AT&T claimed patents on.
With the development of 386BSD halted, FreeBSD and NetBSD continued the free development of the BSD derived operating systems. NetBSD continued their development off of the NET/2 tapes with 4.4BSD-Lite filling in for most of the encumbered source. FreeBSD resynced nearly all their source with 4.4BSD-Lite and rebuilt what parts were missing themselves, keeping very little of the 386BSD code.
Work continues on these 386BSD derived operating systems today, along with several derivatives thereof (such as Apple's Darwin and OpenBSD).
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Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "386BSD."
Crosswords: 386BSD |
| Specialty definitions using "386BSD": BSD386 ♦ FreeBSD ♦ GNU assembler ♦ jolix ♦ m4 ♦ pdksh ♦ Use the Source Luke. (references) |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. |
| "386BSD" is generally used as an unclassified items -- approximately 100.00% of the time. "386BSD" is used about 12 times out of a sample of 100 million words spoken or written in English. Its rank is based on over 700,000 words used in the English language. Some parts-of-speech are not covered due to the samples used by the British National Corpus. (note: percents less than one-hundredth of one percent have been omitted) |
| Parts of Speech | Percent | Usage per 100 Million Words | Rank in English |
| Unclassified Items | 100% | 12 | 101,599 |
Source: compiled by the editor from several corpora; see credits.
Hexadecimal (or equivalents, 770AD-1900s) (references)33 38 36 42 53 44 |
| Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519; backwards) (references)
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Binary Code (1918-1938, probably earlier) (references)00110011 00111000 00110110 01000010 01010011 01000100 |
HTML Code (1990) (references)3 8 6 B S D |
ISO 10646 (1991-1993) (references)0033 0038 0036 0042 0053 0044 |
Encryption (beginner's substitution cypher): (references)212624365338 |
| 1. Crosswords 2. Usage Frequency 3. Orthography 4. Bibliography |
Copyright © Philip M. Parker, INSEAD. Terms of Use.