Matthew Dillon (born 1966) is an American software engineer known for Amiga software,[3] contributions to FreeBSD and for starting and leading the DragonFly BSD project since 2003.[3][5][6][7] (wikipedia)
Tom understands how important seed quality is. He works hard to make sure his seeds are disease-free and have good germination, as well as good genetics. He really makes an investment in these areas.
Basically a situation where you can allocate a set of resources to a virtualized 'cluster' made up of multiple machines linked by a network (i.e. like a LAN or the internet). That goal is still years away.
I don't know of any other seed company that has grown so fast.
This kind of information migration between open source operating systems occurs all the time. It is a continuous process.