The FSF, founded by Richard Stallman, is a phenomenon that many
people might believe to be impossible if it did not exist. (The same
goes for Linux, in fact—15 years ago, who would have imagined a
robust operating system developed by collaborators over the Internet
and made freely redistributable?) One of the most popular editors on
Unix, GNU Emacs, comes from the FSF. So do gcc and g++
(C and C++ compilers), which for a while set the standard in the
industry for optimization and fast code. One of the largest projects
within GNU is the GNOME desktop, which encompasses several useful
general-purpose libraries and applications that use these libraries
to provide consistent behavior and interoperability.
Dedicated to the sharing of software, the FSF provides all its code
and documentation on the Internet and allows anyone with a whim for
enhancements to alter the source code. One of its projects is the
Debian distribution of Linux.
As we said earlier, many Linux tools come from BSD instead of GNU.
BSD is also free software. The license is significantly different,
but that probably don't concern you as a user. The
effect of the difference is that companies are permitted to
incorporate the software into their proprietary products, a practice
that is severely limited by the GNU license.