• @whoamiOP
    link
    11 year ago

    I likely won’t be able to install it on bare metal until I get a desktop machine

    If you’re in the US, you can get a thinkpad like a T430 used for pretty cheap online. Everything for the BSD’s should work fine.

    Either way I think it’s at least worth trying it out however you can. FreeBSD is definitely the one with the most support, so it would be the one worth trying out. Each BSD has it’s own idiosyncrasies. Basically, using it for the first time will be like when you went from windows to Linux.

    The BSD community generally isn’t toxic. They can be, uh, weird or dismissive about what goes on in Linux for example. But there’s a lot less of the luke smith type.

    • @mrshll1001
      link
      21 year ago

      Ah I’m in the UK, so old Thinkpads are a little less accessible! Thanks though :-)

      I also have a personal policy of not replacing a device until it’s actually physically broken and beyond a reasonable ability to repair myself or via my local repair shop and my current machines are still quite strong and healthy! However, my partner wants a laptop soon so I might be able to wrangle repairing the keyboard on the machine I have folded up behind a monitor as a pseudo-desktop, and then grabbing some second hand parts to build a small desktop machine.

      Otherwise, I am quite keen to try FreeBSD relatively soon even just to learn.

      • @whoamiOP
        link
        11 year ago

        nothing wrong with having a spare machine to play around with. Any major vendor laptop that you can get used should run BSD, just have to check.

        Here’s a useful site:

        https://bsd-hardware.info/

        Like I said, any question feel free to ask.

        • @mrshll1001
          link
          11 year ago

          Thanks comrade! Much appreciated.

          I got FreeBSD up and running in a vm on the weekend, with i3dwm installed and started playing around. So I’m quietly confident that I’ll enjoy it.

          • @whoamiOP
            link
            21 year ago

            nice check out the official handbook, it’s pretty helpful

            One of the cool features of FreeBSD is ZFS boot environments, worth checking out imo.