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Date:      Tue, 28 Aug 2001 09:24:21 -0700
From:      "Joel M. Fulton" <jfulton@e3tech.net>
To:        "Brian Raynes" <brian_raynes@dnr.state.ak.us>, "freebsd newbies" <freebsd-newbies@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Would like comments and opinions regarding desktop OS switch
Message-ID:  <046d01c12fdd$e59dda90$0801a8c0@corp.trigeo.com>
References:  <03d201c12fcc$ce04a7d0$0801a8c0@corp.trigeo.com> <3B8BC040.8D50C36E@dnr.state.ak.us>

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Interesting (to me) side note - I grew up in Anchorage...  any how...  Thank
you for the information - I've performed many OpenBSD install/setups (only
as firewall/vpn/router, but I really like its simplicity and resultant
management ease) and used Redhat for about a year and a half (desktop) - I'm
just sick of all the unnecessary RH garbage they throw at me.  Their package
manager is obtuse and unwieldy -> and that's the main reason I'm looking at
Debian with their apt-get/dselect tool.  I've not used CVS a great deal -
any thoughts on that? - particularly with regard to updating ports/os?   I
am expecting to have to work and learn - anything of value requires effort -
but ceaseless, frustrating toil is why I'm in the middle of the pack of rats
deserting the MS ship.

What you describe fits my needs well - I don't have huge requirements, bleed
plenty at work, and would prefer simplicity, but I want the damn thing to
work and work well.

thank you for your opinions.

joel
----- Original Message -----
From: "Brian Raynes" <brian_raynes@dnr.state.ak.us>
To: "Joel M. Fulton" <jfulton@e3tech.net>; "freebsd newbies"
<freebsd-newbies@freebsd.org>
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2001 9:01 AM
Subject: Re: Would like comments and opinions regarding desktop OS switch


> Well Joel,
>
> I decided on Freebsd based on the best hardware support of the bsd's.
> Things like parallel zip drive support are useful to me.  Openbsd was
> one of the nicest, cleanest installs, once you figure out how to use the
> OS, but freebsd has these little extras that are useful to me.
>
> I've installed Debian, but haven't used it extensively.  I liked it for
> a linux, and apt has a good reputation as a package system.  BSD ports
> system is very nice though.  My favorite Linux is Slackware.  But I've
> become biased toward BSD-style init systems.  For a home computer,
> especially a workstation, leaving out all the complexity of the Sys-V
> runlevels is nice.  I'm not as rabidly against Sys-V init as some in the
> BSD camps, but I generally prefer the BSD one.
>
> Other than that, I like the Debian distribution's conservative
> approach.  That's not as good if you like living on the "cutting edge",
> though.
>
> That reminds me of one other thing I appreciate about FreeBSD.  The
> different stable branches that are maintained.  You mentioned stability
> as important - well, I think that FreeBSD has one of the best systems
> for easily maintaining a stable, but up-to-date platform in the free-OS
> world right now.
>
>
> my two cents,
>
> Brian Raynes
>


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