Why I Love FreeBSD - IT Notes:
Which is one of the reasons why every time I attend a BSD conference, I come home even more in love with the project: the vibe of the community, the dedication of the developers, the presence of a Foundation that is strong and effective without being domineering or self-important - which, compared to the foundations of other major Open Source projects, makes it genuinely remarkable. Faces that have been part of this project for over twenty years, and still light up the moment they find their friends and start talking about what they've been working on. That positivity is contagious - and it flows directly into the code, the project, the vision for what comes next. Because that's the heart of it. FreeBSD has always been an operating system written by humans, for humans: built to serve and to be useful, with a consistency, documentation, pragmatism, and craftsmanship that most other projects - particularly mainstream Linux distributions - simply don't have.
I too have been a fan of FreeBSD, and its cousin OpenBSD, for a long time. When I got my start in the tech industry back in the very early 2000's (after a few years working in radio communications and encryption in the Navy), one of the first things we did was start building web servers, firewalls, and proxies out of OpenBSD and FreeBSD. It was far more difficult to do back then, and we used to beg our boss, the Senior Chief, to let us use Linux. He wisely refused and insisted we learn the system from the ground up. I owe my career to those early decisions and the obsession it sparked in me to know the machine as much as I could from the inside out.
Unfortunately, Linux won the popularity contest, so it's Linux that runs every major cloud provider and service in the world. Linux is amazing, don't get me wrong, but it'll never hold the place in my heart that FreeBSD does.
In fact, one of the things that drew me to the Mac was knowing that underneath that beautiful and functional UI was a FreeBSD Unix core. So… maybe BSD did win the popularity contest after all.
I still day dream about leaving the cloud and running a datacenter again, with the host OS of every server is FreeBSD, and the guests are all running either in bhyve or hosted in jails. It'd be reliable, functional, and secure. Beautiful.