> On 11 Dec 2018, at 20:01, Rodney W. Grimes
> wrote:
>
> Glen,
> It is just a bit shy of 25 years and 1 month that I shipped
> the 1.0 Release. Its been a long road, but we are here now!
Great job!
I remember when I used my first FreeBSD release (2.0.5) in 1995. Aftter trying
Xenix
On 12/11/18 8:01 PM, Rodney W. Grimes wrote:
Glen,
It is just a bit shy of 25 years and 1 month that I shipped
the 1.0 Release. Its been a long road, but we are here now!
Good Job, hats off!
+1
Regards
--
Niclas Zeising
___
freebsd-stable@
> Glen,
> It is just a bit shy of 25 years and 1 month that I shipped
> the 1.0 Release. Its been a long road, but we are here now!
Its alwasy really nice to see poeple who have been with the project since
the start still around :-) So, time to start upgrading everything to 12.0!
well done
When attempting to build releng/11.2 (11.2-RELEASE-p6) via the
release.sh process, the build fails with the following message:
"mesa-libs-18.1.9 needs Python 2.7 at most, but 3.6 was specified"
I was attempting to build using PORTBRANCH="ports/branches/2018Q4".
Building with PORTBRANCH="ports/br
On Wed, Dec 12, 2018 at 01:05:18PM -0500, David Boyd wrote:
> When attempting to build releng/11.2 (11.2-RELEASE-p6) via the
> release.sh process, the build fails with the following message:
>
> "mesa-libs-18.1.9 needs Python 2.7 at most, but 3.6 was specified"
>
> I was attempting to build using
Of course, @MichelleObamas (https://twitter.com/MichelleObama) my wife, so Im a
little biased here. But she also happens to be brilliant, funny, wise one of a
kind. This book tells her quintessentially American story. I love it because it
faithfully reflects the woman I have loved for so long.
On 18. 12. 7., Jung-uk Kim wrote:
> On 18. 12. 7., Jeremy Chadwick wrote:
>> https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/3744/files#diff-e4eb329834da3d36278b1b7d943b3bc9
>>
>> *) Add devcrypto engine. This has been implemented against
>> cryptodev-linux,
>> then adjusted to work on FreeBSD 8.4
I worked with 4.2BSD and 4.3BSD back in the 70s and 80s. I moved to other
OSes (Digital RT, RSX and VMS an Varian Vortex) and returned in about 1999
to FreeBSD 3.0. I've been using FreeBSD ever since. It's been wonderful and
I am so grateful to all of the people who have keeping it going over the
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