Date: Tue, 21 Nov 2000 06:49:41 -0500 From: "J. D. Kent" <boris@froggernet.com> To: "freebsd-newbies@FreeBSD.ORG" <freebsd-newbies@FreeBSD.ORG> Subject: RE: slow is beautiful [was: FreeBSD on Macintosh] Message-ID: <01C05387.3DD2F620.boris@froggernet.com>
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Thank you Sue! I just joined this list, don't even have a system up and running yet, and can't decide between FreeBSD or Linux. But what I wanted to say is that your outlook and encouragement are a welcome portal in a strange and brave new [computer] world. ========================================== J. David Kent Applying computer technology is simple. Just find the right wrench to pound in the correct screw. ========================================== On Tuesday, November 21, 2000 4:13 AM, Sue Blake [SMTP:sue@welearn.com.au] wrote: > On Tue, Nov 21, 2000 at 12:49:11AM +0100, Heiko Recktenwald wrote: > > > > run a FreeBSD system on a 486 PC? > > > > Yes, easily. I think Sue Blake is an expert in running it on 386 ;-) > > > > Within limits, yes. I don't recommend it, though, unless you are > willing and able to spend hours giving it TLC and already have the > skills to do so without outside help. > > It runs better with very old versions of FreeBSD, which requires a > lot > of hand-updating to keep up with security, and means you can't > install > recent versions of software packages, only what came on the CD, and > that too has security implications. So "don't try this at home kids" > unless you just want to learn a bit of unix on a system that will > never > be networked (no modem or ethernet connection etc). > > Running a recent FreeBSD version on a 486 is probably something like > running earlier versions on a 386. With some care in the setting up > it'll make a fine router/nameserver machine, and with ongoing > maintenance it can also be a great little mail and web server for a > home or small business network. If it's in your bedroom it's a > versatile alarm clock as well. Make cron your friend and add the PC > speaker to the kernel some time when you're going out so that it gets > a > chance to do the compiling without you there watching the clock. > > If you're running on small ancient hardware, ditch all thoughts of > GUI, > have as much memory as you can and a ridiculously large amount of > swap, > I guess 50 megs more than RAM (I've got 100 and that's more than I > need). > Avoid running majordomo or anything that causes perl to flog the disk, > > don't bother trying to compile stuff, put the radio on to entertain > you during the wait for man pages to format for display, and clear > out of there just before 2am or you'll be deaf by morning. > > Once you get in the swing of it, running a slow machine is like > meditating. You might even start to enjoy the change of pace. Think > of > it as your country house where there is time to relax and enjoy the > essence of unadorned unix. Remember that the machine is not there to > amuse you; you are there to support the machine and to delight in > each > new puppy-dog achievement. Once you've been a contented 386 or 486 > user > for a while, your friends will start to notice. > > When you upgrade to a very low end pentium you'll be able to do > just about anything your heart desires, GUI and all. Just don't > neglect RAM and never never skimp on swap space. > > If you're using FreeBSD to learn unix and you have a very old machine, > > it will be good for your education. It's interesting to see how much > more time some things take than others, without having to run a > separate program to measure the small differences that you could not > perceive on a faster computer. This makes a slow machine a good place > to learn shell scripting, for example. I've been running a 386 at > home > since when they were fashionable, but at work I look after huge alpha > servers. I'm sure I run these powerful monsters well because of > having > spent years forced to listen to what the heart of each machine is > saying just to make the bloody thing run. It's a whole different > approach, and you can apply it anywhere, even to people. > > -- > > Regards, > -*Sue*- > > > > > To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org > with "unsubscribe freebsd-newbies" in the body of the message > To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-newbies" in the body of the message
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