I used Linux most of the time for many years and I use it even today for a
lot of time,but from two years ago I've started studying and learning
FreeBSD and I should say that It satisfies me like linux.

Il giorno mar 22 nov 2022 alle ore 15:23 Bret Busby <b...@busby.net> ha
scritto:

> On 22/11/2022 21:44, hede wrote:
> >
> >>> Whilst I had mistakenly believed that CentOS was a freeware, open
> source
> >>> kind of MacOS clone,
> >
> > CentOS was derived from Red Hat Enterprise Linux and was mostly
> > compatible to RHEL.
> > "May God rest its soul."
> >
> >>> and found that it is not, when I searched for it, I
> >>> had understood that a freeware, open source kind of MacOS kind of
> clone,
> >>> is available, and, when I searched on  the three word combination -
> open
> >>> source macos - I found, in the results, the above URL.
> >>>
> >>> So, as an observer, I wonder whether licencing restrictions apply, to
> >>> running MacOS on Linux, as a virtual machine.
> >>
> >> If you click through the links on that page, it looks like Apple is
> >> just linking to the source code for open source components used in
> >> their operating systems (things like awk, bash, bind, bzip, etc.), but
> >> the operating systems themselves are certainly not open source, and
> >> cannot be legally used except in accordance with Apple's license terms
> >> and / or applicable law.
> >
> > Darwin is the core of modern Apple OSes. It is Open Source and POSIX
> > compatible.
> > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darwin_(operating_system)
> >
> > But there are plenty of Closed Source parts missing to form either macOS
> > or iOS from it. Both - macOS and iOS - are proprietary OSes where you
> > have strict license terms to fulfill to use it. One of them is  - AFAIK
> > - buying Apple Hardware and running the OS only on Apples Hardware.
> >
> > hede
> >
>
>
> All the more reason to run only Linux.
>
> :)
>
> ..
> Bret Busby
> Armadale
> West Australia
> (UTC+0800)
> ..............
>
>

-- 
Mario.

Reply via email to