nostr:npub1t7dmr2xue8zaxsxhy2xkdja0nx6f8cu8y8l7hfksw98y773djkgquzpqpp Hope you don't mind me asking but most of what I've heard about NetBSD so far just boils down to "it is portable", though I'm sure there are more things to it, then it just being a backup plan in case the hardware isn't compatible with FreeBSD or DragonFlyBSD. Red pill me on why and when NetBSD is a great choice ^^

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nostr:npub1pcd4zcqqvnaqfpz5295yp7569mle5687euqunma3vskx2ycdg2mqmx8fzy nostr:npub1t7dmr2xue8zaxsxhy2xkdja0nx6f8cu8y8l7hfksw98y773djkgquzpqpp mostly it’s small. So if you’re doing embedded stuff there’s rationale. It’d be hard to sell it as a daily driver OS given the alternatives. https://netbsd.org/about/#why-use

nostr:npub1pcd4zcqqvnaqfpz5295yp7569mle5687euqunma3vskx2ycdg2mqmx8fzy Nowadays, I'm still using NetBSD but less than in 2010. At that time, Xen compatibilty was one of the main reasons that led me to NetBSD. At a certain point, I started using mainly FreeBSD (and OpenBSD) because of hardware compatibility, but I've still nice NetBSD servers around. (while I was writing, I see they already pointed you to https://netbsd.org/about/#why-use ).