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101 points

The movie came out in 1999. In the movie, they state that it’s 1999 (in the Matrix anyway). Neo is pretty tech savvy and a renowned hacker.

My assumption is he would’ve used FreeBSD. Or, maybe, Slackware. But I’m leaning more towards BSD.

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28 points

Nah. It is DOS with Norton Commander.

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8 points

I just can’t believe I just read the words Norton Commander.

It’s like the Proust story where he smells a macaroon and all of a sudden he’s remembering an avalanche of things long forgotten.

My brain defragging

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2 points

Dos Navigator

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2 points

Bwahahahahah

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14 points

Man I wish FreeBSD hadn’t fallen to the wayside. It’s really cohesive and feels put together in a way not Linux distro ever has.

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10 points

Except it uses push over licensing

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5 points

That’s a GPL point of view. Most BSD users I’ve talked to prefer a more permissive license. Theo said: “GPL fans said the great problem we would face is that companies would take our BSD code, modify it, and not give back. Nope – the great problem we face is that people would wrap the GPL around our code, and lock us out in the same way that these supposed companies would lock us out. Just like the Linux community, we have many companies giving us code back, all the time. But once the code is GPL’d, we cannot get it back. Ironic.”

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3 points

Is it still worth using? Say, for a web dev? Or is it less supported?

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4 points

Honestly it isn’t. Support for anything front-end related is way more sparse compared to Linux.

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4 points

It’s usually used for storage servers these days. ZFS is most stable there.

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3 points

You know, I’ve never used it. Maybe I’ll install it in a VM tonight and give it a whirl.

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1 point

I mean, it’s decades older with a history of being used in business critical applications…

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10 points

In 1999, I bet he was running Gentoo.

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23 points

The first release was in 2002.

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9 points
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0 points

Definitely Gentoo

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5 points

I’d argue that he’d use OpenBSD and be running his own firewall, web server, email server, and ftp server.

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4 points

PC-BSD

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4 points

Or SuSE Linux, the non-slackware or jurix version was bleeding edge at the time.

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3 points

Maybe both? BSD for his server, Slackware for his desktop. Or something.

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2 points

Remember he presses Ctrl+x to try to get rid of the message on his screen. That’s Unix, right?

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