NetBSD is a derivative of BSD created in 1993. It is best known for being highly stable and being easily portable across multiple architectures.
NetBSD was created in 1993.
Yes.
NetBSD is a free, open-source, unix like, multi-platform operating system descended from Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD) and based on 4.4BSD Lite.
http://www.tux.org/~bball/z50/
Contiki eCos Linux LynxOS NetBSD QNX VxWorks Windows CE
Linux NetBSD FreeBSD OpenBSD Plan 9 LUnix Darwin
NetBSD, Windows, and Linux each support both FAT and NTFS file systems.
Windows 2000/XP/2003/Vista/7Linux (kernel 2.2 and higher)Mac OS XFreeBSD/NetBSD/OpenBSD
Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, and Darwin can run a limited number of Windows programs using Wine.
There are a number of free operating systems for personal computers. They include Linux, NetBSD, GNU, Open Solaris, Darwin, Free DOS, AROS, eCOS and Haiku.
Unix versions are the biggest competitors of Microsoft OS. Few of them are:SCO UnixRed Hat Linux & Red Hat Enterprise Linux (Red Hat)Suse Linux (Novell)HP-Unix (HP)AIX (IBM)Solaris (Sun MicroSystems)BSD/OS (Wind River)CLIX (Intergraph Corporation)True 64 Unix (Compaq)SPAEC 64/OS (HAL)MacOS X Server (Apple)NetBSD (NetBSD)OpenBSD (OpenBSD)OpenLinux (Caldera Systems)
Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD, sometimes called Berkeley Unix) is a Unix operating system derivative developed and distributed by the Computer Systems Research Group (CSRG) of the University of California, Berkeley, from 1977 to 1995.NOTE:Today, there are several popular distributions of 'BSD', among them are FreeBSD, OpenBSD and NetBSD.FreeBSD is perhaps most widely used today as a web server platform.OpenBSD is perhaps best known for it's focus on security.And NetBSD is most renowned for it's ability to be run on nearly everything from a coffee pot to a mars rover (if anyone ever travels there with a NetBSD gumstick).