About Applications for FreeBSD
Experience the possibilities with FreeBSD
FreeBSD can handle nearly any task you would expect
of a UNIX® workstation, as well as many you might
not expect:
FreeBSD is a true open system with full source
code.
There is no doubt that so-called open systems are
the requirement for today's computing
applications. But no commercial vendor-supplied
solution is more open than one which includes full
source code to the entire operating system, including
the kernel and all of the system daemons, programs, and
utilities. You can modify any part of FreeBSD to suit
your personal, organizational, or corporate needs.
With its generous licensing
policy, you can use FreeBSD as the basis for any
number of free or commercial applications.
FreeBSD runs thousands of applications.
Because FreeBSD is based on 4.4BSD, an
industry-standard version of UNIX, it is easy to
compile and run programs. FreeBSD also includes an
extensive packages
collection and ports
collection that bring precompiled and easy-to-build
software right to your desktop or enterprise server.
There is also a growing number of commercial
applications written for FreeBSD.
Here are some examples of the environments in which
FreeBSD is used:
- Internet services. Many Internet Service
Providers (ISPs) find FreeBSD ideal, running WWW,
Usenet news, FTP, Email, and other services.
Ready-to-run software like the Apache web server
or the ProFTPD FTP server make it easy to set up
a business or community-centered ISP. Of course, with
FreeBSD's unbeatable networking, your users
will enjoy high speed, reliable services.
- X Window workstation. From an inexpensive
X terminal to an advanced X display, FreeBSD works
quite well. Free X software (X.Org™) comes with the
system. nVidia
offers native drivers for their high-performance
graphics hardware, and the industry standard
Motif® and OpenGL® libraries are supported.
Both the KDE and GNOME desktop
environments enjoy full support and provide office
suite functionality, with further good functionality
available in the OpenOffice.Org
and TextMaker
products.
- Networking. From packet filtering to
routing to name service, FreeBSD can turn any PC into
a Internet firewall, email host, print server, PC/NFS
server, and more.
- Software development. A suite of
development tools comes with FreeBSD, including the
GNU C/C++ compiler and debugger and the Perl
scripting language. Java™ and Tcl/Tk
development are also possible. Popular editors like
XEmacs and more esoteric programming languages like
Icon work just fine, too. And FreeBSD's shared
libraries have always been easy to make and use.
- Net surfing. A real UNIX workstation makes
a great Internet surfboard. FreeBSD versions of Firefox
and Opera are
available for serious web users. Surf the web,
publish your own web pages, read Usenet news, and
send and receive email with a FreeBSD system on your
desktop.
- Education and research. FreeBSD
makes an excellent research platform because it
includes complete source code. Students and
researchers of operating systems or other computer
science fields can benefit greatly from such an open
and well-documented system.
- And much more. Accounting, action games,
MIS databases, scientific visualization, video
conferencing, Internet relay chat (IRC), home
automation, multiuser dungeons, bulletin board
systems, image scanning, and more are all real uses
for FreeBSD today.
FreeBSD is an operating system that will grow with
your needs.
Though FreeBSD is free software, it is also user
supported software. Any questions you have can be
posted to hundreds of FreeBSD developers and users
simply by e-mailing the freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.org
mailing list.
FreeBSD also has a worldwide group of programmers
and writers who fix bugs, add new features and document
the system. Support for new devices or special features
is an almost constant development process, and the team
keeps a special eye out for problems which affect
system stability. FreeBSD users are quite proud of not
only how fast but how reliable their systems are.
What experts have to say . . .
``FreeBSD handles [our] heavy load quite well and
it is nothing short of amazing. Salutations to the
FreeBSD team.''
---Mark Hittinger, administrator of WinNet
Communications, Inc.