FreeBSD has an interesting LVM project called Vinum, which allows for hotswapping, and for using non-homogenous disk sets in a logical volume, etc... I think it's also being ported to Linux.
Yes, I hear you about the benefits of some of the commercial Unix distributions. The problem with those is not one of cost, so much as consistency. With different Unixes for different hardware, and different software available on the different Unix distributions, etc... life was just a little more complicated, and harder to coordinate IT across organizations. With open source systems, you never feel restricted. (You won't paint yourself into a corner). There's a certain pleasure in knowing you can just slap together any standard commodity box and run FreeBSD on it, and you can do this from anywhere in the world, without worrying about licenses, complex hardware limitations, availability, etc...
I see the future of application development somewhat like cities and towns in a country: Operating systems and protocols such as HTTP, TCP/IP, etc... are analogous to the roads and streets, while specific software is like the stores where one can buy things. Thus, it is to the advantage of the shopkeepers for all the roads to be free, open, and connected, so shoppers can get from one store to the next. Yes, this promotes competition, so the shopkeepers have to hustle to provide comparatively good prices and quality. Some shortsighted shopkeepers might try to prevent this by barricading certain roads, but they will soon realize that it only costs them more in the end. Certain cities can get away with connecting their toll roads to the main system of free roads, but there is never a situation where a toll road is the
only way to get somewhere.
So, to re-explain my analogy, I think in the future free and open source operating systems will be the norm, since it just makes the most sense, while softare to solve specific problems will still most likely be commercially purchased or rented. -------------------------------------------
"Now, this might cause some discomfort..."
(