Unix version developed at University of California at Berkeley, which dominated technical computing applications, but is being subsumed by System V implementations
Berkeley Software Distribution, or, sometimes, Berkeley System Distribution A series of software releases packaged together, first by Bill Joy, and later by the CSRG, that proved wildly popular with the Unix research community Today the BSD family includes FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, and BSDi As the joke goes, it's no coincidence that BSD and LSD both came out of Berkeley
UNIX software release of the Computer System Research Group of the University of California at Berkeley -- the basis for some features of the OSF/1 and ULTRIX versions of the UNIX system
Berkeley Software Distribution; here refers to any of several free UNIX®-compatible operating systems derived from BSD UNIX®
an advanced operating system that originated at U Cal, Berkley ("Berkley Systems Distribution") Currently, development is continued by 3 groups of 'user communities' - FreeBSD, OpenBSD, and NetBSD Taken as a whole, *BSD is one of the major branches of UNIX system development
Berkeley Software Distribution Formerly known as the Berkeley version of UNIX, BSD is now simply called the BSD operating system The BSD portion of Darwin is based on 4 4BSD Lite 2 and FreeBSD, a flavor of 4 4BSD
Berkeley Systems Distribution A variant of UNIX originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley The BSD TCP/IP stack is the model for most subsequent TCP/IP implementations
UNIX software release of the Computer System Research Group of the University of California at Berkeley -- the basis for some features of the Digital UNIX version of the UNIX system
Berkeley Software Distribution; here refers to any of several free UNIX®-compatible operating systems derived from BSD UNIX®
Berkeley Software Distribution Implementation of the UNIX operating system and its utilities developed and distributed by the University of California at Berkeley BSD is usually preceded by the version number of the distribution, e g , 4 3 BSD is version 4 3 of the Berkeley UNIX distribution Many Internet hosts run BSD software, and it is the ancestor of many commercial UNIX implementations
(1 Berkeley Software Distribution) (adj ) Characteristic of UNIX® versions developed at the University of California, Berkeley They bear names such as BSD 2 7 and BSD 4 2 (2 block schematic diagram) (n ) A circuit board flowchart
Berkeley Software Distribution Term used when describing different versions of the Berkeley UNIX software, as in "4 3BSD UNIX "
Berkeley Software Distribution/Design - a popular version of UNIX developed at University of California, Berkeley
The UNIX software release of the Computer System Research Group of the University of California at Berkeley -- the basis for some features of the Tru64 UNIX operating system
A popular and free version of the UNIX operating system that runs on Intel microprocessors Free BSD is distributed in both executable and source code form Source code is modified by developers to enhance the operating system