Oh, I'll step up with a 2 minute overview of radiation systems.
Traditional FSR was 25 to 30 days of treatment, with about a 1-2 Gy dose per day. (1 Gy = 100 rad, except all the fine print...). It is delivered using a linear accelerator on a robotic arm.
Gammaknife is a single treatment, for the last decade or so about 12-13 Gy. Historically it was higher, around 25 Gy. Your head is clamped in a metal halo for the treatment, and the radiation source is cobalt, not a linear accelerator like the others.
Cyberknife is also a robotic arm, which is connected up with real time x-ray machines, so that it can position with higher accuracy. The treatment is typically 3-5 days, with 5-6 Gy per day. Your head is held to the table with a plastic mesh mask.
The latest trend in FSR is hypo-fractionation, meaning fewer fractions, and more use of head restraint. Linac, Trilogy, Novalis, and other brands are now doing this shorter version of FSR (maybe it should be called HFSR), with 5 days of treatment, and doses in the 4-6 Gy range.
I think it is fair to say that hypo-FSR is very similar to CK, except that I believe Cyberknife has a patent on the real-time x-ray connection, so that the others can't duplicate that feature.
Okay, overview done.
Steve