Re: Greetings and salutaions..

From: Benjamin Walkenhorst (krylon_at_gmx.net)
Date: 02/23/04

  • Next message: John Martinez: "Re: Greetings and salutaions.."
    Date: Mon, 23 Feb 2004 18:37:58 +0100
    To: freebsd-newbies@FreeBSD.org
    
    

    On Sun, 22 Feb 2004 18:46:17 -0500
    "Mr_H" <Mr_H@comcast.net> wrote:

    > Howdy everyone,
    >
    > I have finally decided to send a post. It's been a few months
    > since I have sucessfully installed FreeBSD 4.8 using the boot
    > floppies and the ftp install method. It took several attempts to
    > do it correctly. Since that wonderfull day, I have met many great
    > people and, using a unix based IRC client has opened up a world of
    > possibilities. I too had no experience, except for MS products,

    When I first came to Unix-like systems, I found them very difficult to
    use, too. But I can be a tough customer. =) And all those wonderful
    things I could and can do with it made realize just how much windows
    sucks. =)

    > and have had an apparently tough time getting acquainted with the
    > 'CLI', which is why I decided to write. I see several people
    > having the same issue(s) I once had. All I can say to other
    > newbies is to simply stick with it. I spent approximately 2

    I decided to spend some money and get a good book to introduce me to the
    command-line and shell-scripting.
    And it still took me a lot of time. I just learnt what I needed to know
    to accomplish a given task, and so I learnt to use the system step by
    step.
    I've been using Linux for more than three years now, FreeBSD for about 7
    to 8 months, and I still learn a lot of things.
    Someone once said "Unix *is* simple - it just takes a genius to
    understand its simplicity". I'd rather say it takes a lot of time to
    understand its simplicity (not wanting to call myself a genius *g*).
    That goes for the command-line as well - once you got the basic
    vocabulary and the 'grammar', it's very simple and comfortable to use. I
    prefer the command-line for many tasks, since it's often faster. Or I am
    faster via command-line, anyway, since I'm a very good typist. =)

    > horribly frustrating weeks trying to set up a gateway. Without the
    > support of my IRC peers, and some much needed advice, I may have
    > fallen by the way side and resorted back to M$.

    I, too, was frustrated, and more than once. If I had started with
    FreeBSD instead of SuSE, I might have given up. But I spent 45 Euro on
    SuSE 7.0 back then, which was a lot of money for me at the time. I just
    don't wanted that money to be lost. =) Later, it became a question of
    honour - I just could not stand the thought of leaving the problem
    unsolved. Sometimes I would just let my machine stand around for weeks
    or just use windows (which I still keep installed for playing games),
    but sooner or later I would look at the problem again, and often to find
    the solution quite obvious. =)
    Frustration is something you have to learn to deal with if you're using
    Unix. But as you gain experience and skills in problem-solving, problems
    turn from annoyances to challenges. With each problem you overcome you
    know your system a little better, until one day you sit down at a
    windows-machine and make stupid mistakes like forgetting to copy marked
    text to the clipboard manually or try to roll up windows or use "/" as a
    directory delimiter on the command-line. I've had all of these
    already... =)

    > I now have a home
    > network, a personal webserver, and a new, clearer understanding of
    > computers in general. The best part of it all is that it was
    > free!! (minus the obligatory legwork) My understandings only
    > continue to improve each day.

    Eh, well... =) Just as I said. =) I hope you enjoy FreeBSD as much as I
    do. After using SuSE for about one year, I tried Debian for some time,
    but when I tried to set up my ISDN-card manually, I blew up my system,
    so I returned to SuSE (the only time I ever gave up on a problem like
    that). Then, in summer 2003 I tried out FreeBSD 5.0.
    Since I had gotten used to configure SuSE almost entirely manually, I
    liked FreeBSD a lot, since its configuration files are a lot tidier and
    ... reasonable than SuSE's.
    But some things did not work, my ISDN-card, my TV-card did not work
    entirely, I had to load third-party-modules for my soundcard... ;-/ So I
    stuck with SuSE.
    Then I tried Slackware and loved it immediately, mainly for being quite
    BSD-like, so it became my primary system.
    In december, I tried out FreeBSD 5.2, and now it is my primary system. I
    also use NetBSD on my second machine, which I use as an
    internet-gateway, NFS-server and some basic explorations of Unix'
    networking-capabilities, since I don't have much experience in that
    area.
    FreeBSD is a great system indeed, easy to use, easy to configure - once
    you know how it works - and all in all a lot of fun.

    If you run into more trouble you'll find the mailing-list to be very
    supportive and friendly. For technical questions you should turn to
    freebsd-questions.

    Kind regards,

    Benjamin

    -- 
    If you want to know what god thinks of money, just look at the people
    he gave it to.
                    -- Dorothy Parker
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  • Next message: John Martinez: "Re: Greetings and salutaions.."

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