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Diffstat (limited to 'en_US.ISO8859-1/captions/2007/nycbsdcon/dixon-bsdisdying.sbv')
-rw-r--r--en_US.ISO8859-1/captions/2007/nycbsdcon/dixon-bsdisdying.sbv116
1 files changed, 60 insertions, 56 deletions
diff --git a/en_US.ISO8859-1/captions/2007/nycbsdcon/dixon-bsdisdying.sbv b/en_US.ISO8859-1/captions/2007/nycbsdcon/dixon-bsdisdying.sbv
index e3ff5ee343..55d933cd40 100644
--- a/en_US.ISO8859-1/captions/2007/nycbsdcon/dixon-bsdisdying.sbv
+++ b/en_US.ISO8859-1/captions/2007/nycbsdcon/dixon-bsdisdying.sbv
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ we're getting there.
Anybody out here last year?
0:00:18.949,0:00:24.939
-Okay. I gave a really bad talk on pf, so and I
+Okay. I gave a really bad talk on pf, and I
appreciate Bob coming out and correcting me this year.
0:00:24.939,0:00:28.550
@@ -49,10 +49,10 @@ But, what is a computer?
0:00:56.610,0:01:03.610
It helps users accomplish tasks. What is a user?
-A user is somebody biped like
+A user is somebody biped
0:01:07.409,0:01:10.600
-biped that stands up right sort of like me.
+that stands up right sort of like me.
0:01:10.600,0:01:14.280
Who am I? My name is Jason Dixon.
@@ -94,7 +94,7 @@ That’s the question I've been asking myself all along.
To talk about why BSD is dying.
0:01:48.630,0:01:52.380
-Sex, and greed.
+Sex and greed.
0:01:52.380,0:01:59.380
Someone kick these guys out.
@@ -122,7 +122,8 @@ This is a computer. This is also known as a
computer. This is a really big computer.
0:02:22.459,0:02:28.309
-This is a fake computer, and sometimes, just can, well, compute
+This is a big big computer, and sometimes,
+it just can, well, compute
0:02:28.309,0:02:31.339
But what does a computer really do?
@@ -132,7 +133,7 @@ All right, it helps us write documents,
0:02:33.729,0:02:40.729
shopping lists. Sometimes, it can even delete documents.
-It helps us work with emails,
+It helps us work with email,
0:02:42.050,0:02:46.749
surf the Web, movies,
@@ -158,7 +159,7 @@ that is the foundation
0:03:01.489,0:03:07.999
for kernel, libraries, userland applications,
-otherwise known as operating system.
+otherwise known as an operating system.
0:03:07.999,0:03:10.659
like BSD.
@@ -170,12 +171,12 @@ What is a kernel?
It's a wonderful thing, it allows
0:03:16.439,0:03:23.439
-The management and processes of memory, peripheral devices,
+The management of processes memory, peripheral devices,
and by extension, allows us to do networking, security,
0:03:23.540,0:03:26.639
work with disks and file systems, user interfaces,
-userland applications,
+userland applications, like
0:03:26.639,0:03:33.619
people can write documents, check email, surf the Web,
@@ -231,10 +232,10 @@ wasn’t. The Multics was a commercial
0:04:24.970,0:04:29.690
failure. So, a couple of gentlemen like Ken Thompson and
-Dennis Ritchie
+Dennis Ritchie were not
0:04:29.690,0:04:34.539
-[xx] support, like to play games. They worked at Bell Labs
+[xx] support, liked to play games. They worked at Bell Labs
and they had this game called
0:04:34.539,0:04:36.470
@@ -248,7 +249,7 @@ it ran on a PDP-7.
0:04:43.639,0:04:48.989
What is an assembly programmer to do when a game
-doesn’t work properly on the star board? He moves
+doesn’t work properly on the star board? He mauls
0:04:48.989,0:04:53.240
it. So, in 1969, Ken Thompson
@@ -272,7 +273,7 @@ up to two.
And by
0:05:07.100,0:05:11.949
-1970, UNIX was officially known as U-N-I-X
+1970, UNIX was officially known as U-N-I-X Unix
0:05:11.949,0:05:14.759
It ran on a PDP1145
@@ -346,7 +347,7 @@ precursor to sendmail, curses, libraries. 1981,
4.1BSD, this one, we are recorded through VAX
0:06:24.750,0:06:30.539
-4.1BSD addressed memory performance issues with UNIX on VAX
+addressed a number of memory performance issues with UNIX on VAX
0:06:30.539,0:06:34.159
1983, 4.2BSD uses TCP/IP from BBN,
@@ -358,7 +359,7 @@ and also the Berkeley Fast File System from the
gentleman, Kirk McKusick,
0:06:39.219,0:06:44.100
-who also brought us the original BSD mascot.
+who also brought us the original Beastie today.
0:06:44.100,0:06:49.280
In 1986, 4.3BSD introduced performance improvements
@@ -375,7 +376,7 @@ originally intended to run on the Power 6/32
That platform actually never came to fruition
0:07:00.160,0:07:04.280
-but it did allow us to extract some of the
+but it did allow us to abstract some of the
machine-independent
0:07:04.280,0:07:07.240
@@ -444,7 +445,7 @@ BSD3, I'm sorry, the 386BSD, which later on became
BSD/OS by BSDI
0:08:09.659,0:08:14.599
-Exodus. Back in 1992, a wholly own subsidiary of
+Exodus. Back in 1992, a wholly owned subsidiary of
0:08:14.599,0:08:18.699
AT&T called Unix System Laboratories
@@ -472,7 +473,7 @@ code in the
BSD.
0:08:35.960,0:08:40.200
-This was one of their advertising and again, they used
+This was one of their advertising things again, they used
this as the basis for the
0:08:40.200,0:08:42.150
@@ -517,7 +518,7 @@ for BSD is that he hinted,
that…actually by this
0:09:21.829,0:09:25.770
-point, the lawsuit with California Berkeley had been
+point, the University of California Berkeley had been
also added into the
0:09:25.770,0:09:29.030
@@ -565,16 +566,16 @@ the lawsuit was settled out of court
in secret for ten years.
0:10:07.150,0:10:08.870
-In 2004,
+In 2004, a site Groklaw primarily got
0:10:11.490,0:10:14.990
-done with the actual settlement
+what the actual settlement
0:10:14.990,0:10:16.120
-was and really sit.
+was released.
0:10:16.120,0:10:17.910
-And,
+And, well
0:10:17.910,0:10:19.560
USL, AT&T and
@@ -602,10 +603,10 @@ and became the
foundation for
0:10:40.600,0:10:43.470
-a FreeBSD.
+ FreeBSD.
0:10:43.470,0:10:47.500
-NetBSD, I'm sorry, FreeBSD
+NetBSD, I'm sorry, FreeBSD, it ends right there
0:10:49.150,0:10:55.670
FreeBSD, people with background, only different BSDs
@@ -639,13 +640,13 @@ and that’s pretty much what it's known for. To be honest
0:11:25.520,0:11:31.790
I mean, I got to admit I'm an Open BSD guy, I was looking for
-a really cool and innovative features in NetBSD and I really
+a really cool and innovative features for NetBSD and I really
0:11:31.790,0:11:32.329
couldn’t find any.
0:11:32.329,0:11:34.940
-Why am I hanging on this.
+so let them hang their head on this.
0:11:34.940,0:11:37.160
Sorry,
@@ -654,15 +655,16 @@ Sorry,
I know people are going to…
0:11:39.650,0:11:46.650
-I know the NetBSD is going to get me…I can
+I know the NetBSDers is going to jump me…I can
handle two of you. Okay? And this is
0:11:48.680,0:11:51.490
-a list of the platforms that probably
+a list of the hardware platforms that currently supported on
0:11:51.490,0:11:53.820
including a toaster.
+
0:11:53.820,0:11:55.000
@@ -688,7 +690,7 @@ And it comes out with a new release every six months,
generally, in May and November
0:12:17.570,0:12:20.810
-1st, so if you haven’t already, pick a copy, it just came
+1st, so if you haven’t already, pick a copy, that just came
0:12:20.810,0:12:24.880
out of the foil. It's unofficial model is secure by default
@@ -714,7 +716,7 @@ the most obvious example. ProPolice
0:12:52.180,0:12:58.070
Some other features that they’d given us through
-the years – PF, authpf, CARP, fsyncd,
+the years – PF, authpf, CARP, pfsyncd,
0:12:58.070,0:13:01.380
which I think some of these are probably in the
@@ -727,11 +729,11 @@ FreeBSD 4.8. Again,
DragonFlyBSD was
0:13:11.160,0:13:15.640
-FreeBSD 4.8 and was intended to basically
+forked with FreeBSD 4.8 and was intended to basically
0:13:15.640,0:13:21.580
overhaul the SMP features in FreeBSD 6
-and 7,5,6, and 7.
+and 7..5,6, and 7.
0:13:21.580,0:13:25.690
DragonFly is another example. If you look at their goals,
@@ -750,13 +752,13 @@ Of course,
Tiger is an old I'm sorry, OSX
0:13:36.890,0:13:43.890
-It started from the Jolitz project, but it's sort of a inbred
+It started from the Jolitz project, but it's sort of an inbred
0:13:48.870,0:13:53.800
-
+and then various others spearBSD, ecoBSD
0:13:53.800,0:13:58.350
-
+and other minor BSDs
0:13:58.350,0:14:04.130
That is all about, I wanted to cover kind of the present of
@@ -772,7 +774,7 @@ of the project and topic is.
Well, first, because IDC said so.
0:14:16.270,0:14:21.480
-Market share for BSD is, right now, all time low, under 1%
+Market share for BSD is, right now, at an all time low, under 1%
0:14:21.480,0:14:28.480
And, of course, Netcraft confirms these findings.
@@ -789,24 +791,25 @@ I mean, we can't possibly make
money, so that, obviously, means that
0:14:39.310,0:14:46.310
-we're dying. And free software is…
+we're dying. And free software is terrible
0:14:46.390,0:14:53.390
-We know how to say this, when we came out.
-Free software equals terrorism.
+We know the insane let me get out.
+Free software equals terrism.
0:14:55.120,0:14:57.910
0:14:57.910,0:15:04.910
-Our inability to adapt. As you can see by this graph
+Our inability to adapt. As you can see by this graph
0:15:09.630,0:15:15.980
Let's be serious here, people.
+As per FreeBSD network pages per hour search
0:15:15.980,0:15:20.520
-We see Windows, I mean, the way people. Come on,
-they’ve been doing this for a number of what? 15,
+We see Windows, obviously I mean, they are way ahead people.
+Come on, they’ve been doing this for a number of what? 15,
0:15:20.520,0:15:22.180
20 years. Linux is second.
@@ -815,17 +818,18 @@ they’ve been doing this for a number of what? 15,
They actually are showing some.
0:15:24.349,0:15:29.259
-We presume that someone is doing office by doing
+We presume that someone is doing authentication
+by reading user pages
0:15:29.259,0:15:35.450
The BSD is only for register, so we've got to work
on that, of course
0:15:35.450,0:15:37.030
-Loss of talent. Free
+Loss of talent.
0:15:37.030,0:15:41.410
-BSD has lost 93% of their core developers.
+FreeBSD has lost 93% of their core developers.
0:15:41.410,0:15:45.300
Okay, come on, guys, let's go.
@@ -851,12 +855,11 @@ sponsor, and some other company that didn’t sponsor us
0:16:16.070,0:16:17.560
-
0:16:17.560,0:16:20.070
I should just end right there.
0:16:20.070,0:16:21.870
-
+because we're the nearest to them
0:16:21.870,0:16:28.130
Seriously, though, the technological challenge that we
@@ -870,13 +873,13 @@ Of course, developers are in the market, so,
if that happens, that
0:16:33.230,0:16:35.370
-happens. The end is really, really cool.
+happens. Although the end is really, really cool.
0:16:35.370,0:16:40.150
DRM, is obviously evil, yes, I know, I don’t care about
0:16:40.150,0:16:41.690
-DRM. Ran out.
+DRM. Run Dell.
0:16:41.690,0:16:43.980
Right?
@@ -885,10 +888,11 @@ Right?
Political challenges
0:16:45.310,0:16:48.710
-No, this has been hard to admit, but I can't beat
+Now, this has been hard to entertain,
+but I can't read this out in front of
0:16:48.710,0:16:50.530
-people, blobs,
+people. Blobs,
0:16:50.530,0:16:52.140
binary is bad,
@@ -897,10 +901,10 @@ binary is bad,
don’t do it
0:16:53.140,0:16:56.180
-just smoke in the same crack
+just smoke in the same crap
0:16:56.180,0:16:57.540
-
+when it says
0:16:57.540,0:16:59.590
NDAs
@@ -922,7 +926,7 @@ out
okay
0:17:10.120,0:17:12.000
-get your files with your supplier,
+get in touch with your supplier,
0:17:12.000,0:17:16.740
let's get some documentation to these guys.
@@ -931,7 +935,7 @@ let's get some documentation to these guys.
Because without the
0:17:18.159,0:17:20.100
-diversity, we'll have
+diversity, we have
0:17:20.100,0:17:22.220
unity