Ok my mistake. They're on the disk and they were installed the first ever time I put OpenBSD on a computer. But the base install (note I didn't say base install but standard install) probably doesn't have XFree86 let alone KDE included. If you want to get into details like this, I could argue that SnapIT shouldn't hold Aqua or any of the UI functionality against OS X so long as he just boots into the CLI.
Regardless, this doesn't take away from my point to SnapIT. BSD ports are not part of "standard UNIX". But they're a good thing and I'm glad FreeBSD, OpenBSD and the like have included them. They're a step in the right direction and hopefully Darwin ports will become standard on OS X (Apple has said as much too). Slagging an OS because it includes non-standard UNIX stuff, which many do these days is ridiculous. As i've pointed out, Apple's non-standard stuff was 19 times out of 20 built on top of the "standard UNIX" infrastructure anyways.
Regardless, this doesn't take away from my point to SnapIT. BSD ports are not part of "standard UNIX". But they're a good thing and I'm glad FreeBSD, OpenBSD and the like have included them. They're a step in the right direction and hopefully Darwin ports will become standard on OS X (Apple has said as much too). Slagging an OS because it includes non-standard UNIX stuff, which many do these days is ridiculous. As i've pointed out, Apple's non-standard stuff was 19 times out of 20 built on top of the "standard UNIX" infrastructure anyways.
