They actually do. Graphics and WiFi is top priority at the moment on the technology roadmap of the FreeBSD Foundation: https://freebsdfoundation.org/blog/technology-roadmap/
Same for FreeBSD folks. Most of the FreeBSD developers I know develop on ThinkPads.
This is exactly what is happening right now: https://github.com/freebsd/drm-kmod
In Vim you can also hit Shift-k to open docs (I usually use it for manual pages).
That’s probably the only distribution that reached out to the RetroForth maintainers.
Well, I use FreeBSD on my personal laptop and work at a company which uses FreeBSD for its appliances. That’s true, FreeBSD’s market share is tiny in comparison to Linux, but it seems like there are still a number of…
I focus on technologies which have seen a steady growth over the years, like FreeBSD. The benefit is that the knowledge you obtain tends to stay relevant for a long time.
They actually do. Graphics and WiFi is top priority at the moment on the technology roadmap of the FreeBSD Foundation: https://freebsdfoundation.org/blog/technology-roadmap/
Same for FreeBSD folks. Most of the FreeBSD developers I know develop on ThinkPads.
This is exactly what is happening right now: https://github.com/freebsd/drm-kmod
In Vim you can also hit Shift-k to open docs (I usually use it for manual pages).
That’s probably the only distribution that reached out to the RetroForth maintainers.
Well, I use FreeBSD on my personal laptop and work at a company which uses FreeBSD for its appliances. That’s true, FreeBSD’s market share is tiny in comparison to Linux, but it seems like there are still a number of…
I focus on technologies which have seen a steady growth over the years, like FreeBSD. The benefit is that the knowledge you obtain tends to stay relevant for a long time.