Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD) was an operating system developed at the University of California, Berkeley as a variant of Unix. BSD became widely adopted in the 1980s and was the basis for several commercial Unix variants as well as later open source operating systems like FreeBSD and NetBSD. Significant descendants of BSD include Apple's Mac OS X, several commercial operating systems from Sun and DEC, and the modern open source BSD variants of FreeBSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD.