Date: Tue, 26 Oct 2004 22:46:18 -0600 From: "W. D." <WD@US-Webmasters.com> To: Jian Guang Xu <jianguang.xu@gmail.com> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: some advice needed to considering to move my w2k machine into a freebsd workstation. Message-ID: <5.1.0.14.2.20041026223824.04617c70@209.152.117.178> In-Reply-To: <274e8bdc041026133120a464ff@mail.gmail.com>
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At 14:31 10/26/2004, Jian Guang Xu wrote: >My current system follows: >AMD Athlon 1600+, 1 Gigabytes RAM, 40 Giga harddrive, GeForce 2 with >32 Mb, AC97 Onboard Audio Adaptor, D-Link DFE-538TX. > >The system got follow applications: >W2K Workstation Professional runs very smooth right now. >Firefox 1.0 for most of the web surfing. IE occasionally but nessary >for some of the website I need to go to due to personally reason. >Thunderbird for me email and newsgroup reading. >VMWare to testing FreeBSD. >ACT! 2005 as a CRM software(personal organizor as well) but I'm trying >to move to a internet application via www.freecrm.com >OpenOffice currently runs in my system with MS Office removed. >Acrobat 5.0 for form editing(Occasionally) >MusicMatch for online radio (all the time) >Realplayer for DVD/Movie(Occasionally) >I have online conference calls using MS Media Player Plugin which is >very important for me. >Zonealarm as my firewall, Norton Antirus. >I'm using a home network connected to Rogers High Speed via DHCP >protocol, another machine is a XP laptop. > >My job is in Marketing field so I do need the system to be robust and >more productivity. At the same time, I have the dream to play OS >around and hack into the system at my spare time. To be honest, I'm >pretty happy with my current system with all the feature I specified. > >Is there anybody could point out a way to play FreeBSD around and at >the same time, I could perform my job easily? As I said, I need the >Media Player plug in a lot, and any suggestion for a CRM software >under BSD would be much appreciated. > >I gotta be very careful to change a system. > >I thank you for reading my nonsense post and hoping that if somebody >could give me some advice. > >JX Hi JX, It sounds like you have a nice Windows system. My advice would be to leave it exactly as it is. For probably around $100, you can buy a computer that's a few years old for a FreeBSD 'experimental' system. I don't recommend dual booting because there is a positive probability that you will hose your current system. If you use a KVM switch, you can avoid duplicating the Keyboard, Video monitor, and Mouse. There is a lot of documentation out there about FreeBSD, but I've compiled my notes into step-by-step procedures that can get you up and running fairly quickly: http://www.US-Webmasters.com/FreeBSD/Install/ Good luck. Welcome to FreeBSD! Start Here to Find It Fast!=99 ->= http://www.US-Webmasters.com/best-start-page/ $8.77 Domain Names -> http://domains.us-webmasters.com/
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