all of that is true, but you are missing the point. Having two versions of pf on the bsd's at the user level, is a bad thing. It confuses people, which puts them off. Its a classic case of divide an conquer for other platforms. I really like the idea of the openpf version, that has been mentioned in this thread. It would be awesome if it ended up as a supported linux thing as well, so the world could be rid of iptables. However i guess thats just an unrealistic dream On 19 July 2014 09:32, Stephen Hurd <shurd_at_sasktel.net> wrote: > krad wrote: > > that is true and I have not problem using man pages, however thats not > the > > way most of the world work and search engines arent exactly new either. > We > > should be trying to engage more people not less, and part of that is > > reaching out. > > One of FreeBSD's historic strengths has been the handbook and generally > good quality documentation. There is no way that the FreeBSD project > can ensure that all Google results for everyone in the world are FreeBSD > related "good" documentation, but it can ensure that the documentation > included with FreeBSD is accurate and usable, and it can ensure that the > FreeBSD documentation is available via the internet. > > Aside from blindly following whatever generates the most Google results > (an obviously broken solution), what exactly can the FreeBSD project do > to ensure that when someone "Googles" a problem they will end up with a > correct FreeBSD solution? >Received on Sun Jul 20 2014 - 09:18:55 UTC
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