Easy: -install kvm (or any other vm software, this should be already done since virtualization is the distro hopper's swiss knife) -download the matching freebsd vm image -run it
I took a computer repair class in high school in 2004 or 2005. We had to pair up and build computers from scratch, and then choose a Linux/Unix distro to install. This was my very first time building a computer and installing an OS, and my partner and I went with FreeBSD. It was no where as straightforward as what the other teams had picked, and the teacher warned us he had never had anyone successfully get FreeBSD working. It took a lot of time and was very painful, but we got there, and learned a hell of a lot in the process. FreeBSD will always have a place in my heart.
I installed FreeBSD around the same time, with almost no linux experience, and found it no problem at all. I liked the packages and ports, I liked the ee text editor. Then after using FreeBSD for a few months I tried to install Gentoo and after 2 full days of compiling finished I had a brick and had to start again.
I honestly did not think this would ever come true.. for some reason, it was kind off like LLMs, its kinda like a secret you don't want others to know but you know it'll catch on when more people check it out
I’ve set up FreeBSD local network server out of junk parts to run a PHP 4 script managing warehouse stock (using text files as DB). Recently I found out it still runs. I left that place in 2001.
0:07 The Switch's operating system is built around a custom microkernel. Only the networking stack was taken from FreeBSD. Nintendo have been developing it since the DSi.
@@redstone0234 I think you're thinking about the drivers which are from Nvidia and based off the work Nvidia did developing drivers for the Nvidia shield. In addition to OpenGL and Vulkan drivers, they also made a custom graphics API for the switch called NVN.
They also use a distinct Display driver for every game you run on the system, so convoluted and is a pain in the ass for them to emulate on the upcoming switch successor
1:59 Actually, there's one more unique thing to note. In Linux, most of the configuration files are stored in the `/etc/` directory, regardless of whether they are system or user-related. However, in FreeBSD, there's a distinction: system configuration files are located in `/etc/`, while configurations for user-installed applications are typically stored in `/usr/local/etc/`. This separation helps keep the system's core configurations isolated from those of additional software, which can make managing and troubleshooting easier in certain scenarios.
On NixOS there is just a single configuration, that you can separate yourself however you want that lives in a single directory and could be in a git repo if you want.
Why does that sound so ridiculously useful and logical I mean, _sometimes_ the "user local" configs are in the "~/.config/" directory But it entirely depends on the aplication, to do that or just create another dot directory in the home directory At this point I'm not even sure where the bashrc or bash profile or bash idk file are or what was the difference
My favorite OS with the caveat that the user cross-reference FreeBSD with the hardware they intend to use it on. A smaller user base means a smaller developer pool that supports a narrower hardware selection, particularly WiFi. GhostBSD is a user friendly desktop variant aimed at users who want a modern installation experience and working system. After installing, it provides an excellent template for how to configure FreeBSD if a user wants to be more hands on. For those considering sampling it, take time to read the manual, the FreeBSD community is happy to help but resents reinventing the wheel. A prospective user doesn't have to read the whole manual but should pay attention to the intro, installation, storage management, system management, desktop, audio and video chapters. Robonuggie YT channel provides excellent FreeBSD tutorials, demonstrations, and wisdom appropriate for both noobs and seasoned users looking for software suggestions.
Bsd and unix family is related bsd is even certified and approved as unix compliant and bsd is dependant of unix since its based from the original/traditional code of unx
I ran sibling OS OpenBSD as my primary firewall around the turn of the century. At one point it ran without a reboot for over 1,200 days. The HP PC it ran on never had a hardware fault, despite accumulated dust, and was 10 years old when I finally switched it off. Robust, reliable, and secure.
BSD is an awesome network platform for servers, but it blows for Desktop. Same with Linux... BSD makes for a rocksolid ipfw/pf firewall and router. I've used BSD for the last 12 years as a DNS server base and ipfw/pf with virtually little to no downtime
@@fjs1111I'm a programmer that has exclusively worked and gamed on Linux since 2018, what are you talking about, it sure might not be for everyone, but there is probably a large part of the world population that would do just fine on Linux, everyone else uses adobe programs or plays games with kernel level anti cheat
@@joestr_ maybe freeBSD is so fully assed that it doesn't need constant updating and patching like other half-assed products used by the majority on a serious note, I worked at a place where freeBSD crashed once, turned out it ran out of disk space, nobody checked it for years, it just worked...
15 years ago I made some mmo game servers that where pretty profitable with FreeBSD, it was a beast with mysql and php with 128mb ram. I did not understand a single thing of it at that time, now, with this video, I will add it to my CV.
@@achraf6803 Do something cool, show it to people, and get one of them to pay you to do something else that's kind of similar. Congrats, you've learned how to get a job.
@@yesh420 Free BSD but even more BaSeD (aka it's harder to use and it's more targeted towards servers so people who can use it as a daily driver are considered higher beings)
freebsd is really underrated. it is awesome on servers and some desktops. but hardware compatability is bit of an issue while installing to a desktop. this is why i use gentoo btw
one thing to note which is really cool ! is that the ports collection is automagically built and that is where the binary packages come from. So if you contribute a port witgin a few days you can just install the binary, no more building !
Weird that Mac is higher than Windows when it's worse for dev in every single way lol. Maybe if all you do is use VSCode to write JS and watch Netflix in your spare time it's better but otherwise it's just bad.
its funny since I have been using FreeBSD for nearly a decade, but not because I am some Unix elitist, but my college courses on systems programming and OS was entirely Unix based. Not even the college lab had any actual Unix machines to practice on(I setup the entire lab next year), and I needed something thats 1:1 from the book. Ended up learning a fuck ton about OS, networks, etc just by having FreeBSD. For example, the entire DHCP cycle plays out on the screen when you boot. I'd change the network settings on Virtualbox and see things change! Also learned how many seconds in 24hrs
nice. good to hear more people talk about fbsd. i still consider nbsd's pkgsrc as being friendlier than ports, tho. the nice thing about the bsds is that configuration backup literally consists of tarballing your /etc directories, and extracting them for deployment. most output in fbsd is also well-formed..making nearly everything customizable with scripts (even the loader, which has been switched from forth to lua for some reason). upgrades are also pretty seamless (other than that lua transition). essentially, i've been using it to handle all my networking since the 6 or 7.x. series. the default dhcpd kind of sucks tho, with obsd's variation being a little bit friendlier for scripting events (and supporting arbitrary dhcp options).
It isn't ready, because it is not desktop OS. So It's not worth waiting, for something FBSD that will never be. I mean, even OpenBSD and NetBSD are more desktop, because they come with X11 preinstalled.
@@mba2808 some FreeBSD distros comes with DE, but this is not the issue, and never be, the real issue is hardware support are total crap, I tried it on VM, and it was never able to recognize my thumb drive at all like it didn't attached to my USB port.
@@mba2808 I use it as desktop. Its easy to install packages, very easily. In FreeBSD, I can choose what packages I can install. I tried Void Linux, for example, and I couldnt remove "sudo", also I could not disable permissions with the command "visudo". Linux does not give the sense of security. In 5 years, Linux will not exist anymore, you all will call it "SystemD".
He really doesn't get enough appreciation. Between Vi, BSD, the Berkeley/Unix Sockets, and everything he worked on with Sun, basically everyone watching this channel has been effected by his work
@@matei9k Because this way you truly commit to freedom. Copyleft is a disease and a shame for everyone that don't want to be as tyrant as proprietary software in a distorted way.
Wow, who knew FreeBSD was connected to so many cool things? 😄 I always thought it was just a nerd's playground. This video makes me wanna explore more! I mean, if Nintendo and Apple are in the mix, there's gotta be something special about it, right? 🎮🍏
Horizon OS on the Switch is a microkernel and is not based FreeBSD and is derived from the work they did developing the 3ds OS. Common misconception. Sony's PlayStation OS is though.
ew, debian? what a noob, guys, check it out, we have a noob here.. doesn't run backtrack on debian, doesn't run arch, isn't even on nix and thinks he can handle FBSD, pufff
The Switch Operating System is not based of FreeBSD, it just uses its Network-Stack, and by that definition Windows would be BSD based since Windows NT 3.1
My company has hundreds of FreeBSD machines still in production serving customers all around the world 24/7 365 days a year! It’s a great operating! Very stable, tightly integrated, and remarkably simple. Unfortunately, it’s going the way of the dodo and has been for a long time. The projects maintainers don’t get things patched quickly enough. The patches for specter and meltdown took years to come out which meant we had to disable multithreading on tons of systems. And while I really enjoy FreeBSD unfortunately with people only ever growing older and Linux only growing ever stronger, I’m not sure if there’s much of a future for good old FreeBSD :(
Not to mention the fact that the Linux kernel development community is currently imploding.. as it’s been infiltrated by Rust fanatics who want to cancel everything
Wait a minute, so the fact that I discovered BSD on my own, without any mention from any place or person shows that I have the potential of being the top 1% of programmers!? 🤯
I've always admired BSD, but with the kernel lagging behind linux and applications like wayland not being quite there on bsd. I found Void linux fills my hunger for BSD-like operating systems while also having the linux kernel as a bonus.
@@byailen Try to run any modern hardware on BSD and you will know. Besides that, the worst part is probably wifi drivers, and proprietary drivers in general not being readily available on BSD. Not the fault of the BSD team of course, just an unfortunate side effect of being niche of the niche.
I am waiting for the point FreeBSD is a valuable tool to use as a recording studio workstation and audio/video production. Currently I am on Linux, as it is almost as efficient as MacOS for that.
I can imagine the "I am not following the crowd" marginals will adopt this faster than light speed, or even faster than the clipped nails (which is the only known substance that can travel faster than the light).
BSD was super popular as a server OS at one point, yahoo at their peak notoriously ran on it, parts of netflix networking stack used it, and it’s still super common networking gear. It’s not that much less popular than linux in certain domains. You are more likely to encounter someone using it because they have been doing so for 25 years than someone who does it to be hipster, since BSD is way too conservative for that crowd.
True especially for iOS. On MacOS you still have access to the terminal but no root unless sudo. As for BSD in MacOS these days it is now mainly a subsystem running alongside the Mach VM/subsystem. Only few parts of the BSD userland are in actual use.
No systemd, only 1 single package format and manager, no arch btw, no grub and supports almost everything that runs on Linux *THIS IS WHAT LINUX IDEOLOGY DREAMS TO BE*
@@alok.01tried looking into it and what I’ve found so far is that the hardware support is not as great as in Linux . That may be a dealbreaker. Probably won’t be daily driving FreeBSD but just use it for fun and learn stuff about it . That should be reason enough.
Never tried bsd, but it always sounded cool. And in a way, whenever I hear people talking about bsd, I have a feeling that this is exactly what people are expecting from Linux, but it's not there. Anyway, since Linux and arch gone mainstream, I think it's time for neck beards to migrate to bsd.
nope but that's very possible lol like if i was a bot i could be like "@TH-camr has to be one of the best channels I wish I had known existed sooner" but I'm sadly a human being, sorry for disappointing you
i've used debian for server applications and Ubuntu for desktop. I always assumed BSD was likle Gentoo or Arch, for people who care too much, but it actually looks like it has a use case
I have used Linux since 1999 starting with Slackware and now I use Mint. I love it. However, it doesn't mean that I've never been curious about BSD. I've just never been able to install it. If I can install and use Slackware, I shouldn't have a problem with BSD. Next time I order something from Framework, I'll add an expansion drive and try again.
I'd like to use FreeBSD once they will support my wifi driver to allow me to use the internet, call me spoiled but I need a working internet on my laptop.
free BSD he did nothing wrong
Lol
That was corny asf
LMAOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
@@nanonkay5669 Nah it was actually funny, u just wieerd
@@nanonkay5669 It was corny AND hillarious!
I need a "Installing FreeBSD While Parents are Arguing" video
Easy:
-install kvm (or any other vm software, this should be already done since virtualization is the distro hopper's swiss knife)
-download the matching freebsd vm image
-run it
You mean Archguing btw?
the real CS001 class colleges need to offer.
You'll have to specify if month long argument or 30 seconds microaggressions intervals
One of your parents uses Windows and the other Linux? If so, just show them the superiority of FreeBSD. Now there will be no more arguments.
I took a computer repair class in high school in 2004 or 2005. We had to pair up and build computers from scratch, and then choose a Linux/Unix distro to install. This was my very first time building a computer and installing an OS, and my partner and I went with FreeBSD. It was no where as straightforward as what the other teams had picked, and the teacher warned us he had never had anyone successfully get FreeBSD working. It took a lot of time and was very painful, but we got there, and learned a hell of a lot in the process. FreeBSD will always have a place in my heart.
Same. It formed a clot that lodged itself in my left ventricle and has left me in precarious health. Prayers to you ❤
@@grantcivyt Lmao this is Linux
He should've known that BSD isn't Linux
So how did you end up working nights at a bowling alley? You'd think your life was MIT or Stanford or bust...was the girls, drugs, or all the above?
I installed FreeBSD around the same time, with almost no linux experience, and found it no problem at all. I liked the packages and ports, I liked the ee text editor.
Then after using FreeBSD for a few months I tried to install Gentoo and after 2 full days of compiling finished I had a brick and had to start again.
FreeBSD already has .01% desktop market dominance. 2025 will be the year of the FreeBSD desktop!
@@leeminusminus Stop it. Get some help.
Please stop hurting me and my GNU Hurd microkernel
So True(OS)
Stop it. Get some help.
LMAOOOOOO
@TH-camd-jv5oiI believe the other dude was replying to the parent comment
Amazing! The three users of FreeBSD are extremely happy after watching this video!
I was happy before and I am still happy.
Netflix, NetApp, and Dell must be the 3 you're talking about.
I honestly did not think this would ever come true.. for some reason, it was kind off like LLMs, its kinda like a secret you don't want others to know but you know it'll catch on when more people check it out
I work in a pretty large company and half the VMs are FreeBSD, the others are Linux.
its what i had to use in my operating systems class lol
2:14 daemons mentioned, freeBSD's logo is a demon, and this is the 666th video.
ok that's a crazy notice
This is actually the 666th video lol
Holy sh*t
Gematria type beat
how did you know this is the 666th video?
I’ve set up FreeBSD local network server out of junk parts to run a PHP 4 script managing warehouse stock (using text files as DB). Recently I found out it still runs. I left that place in 2001.
...
why
@@goeland4585 well because it works :).
Thats amazing
The sub will glaze the reliability even more now.
@@goeland4585 there isn't anything as permanent as a temporary solution
I've gained clinical depression, it was infact, not 100 seconds
It's only 50s on 2x speed
@@adamk.7177ahhhhh, an optimist i see
Akshually it was 208 seconds
@@AleksanderDudek Video ends at 2:31 so total 120+31 seconds or 151 seconds and when you divide it by 1.5 (Playback speed) you get 100seconds!
NO!
0:07 The Switch's operating system is built around a custom microkernel. Only the networking stack was taken from FreeBSD. Nintendo have been developing it since the DSi.
and the display server is the one from android
@@redstone0234 that's not true
@@redstone0234 I think you're thinking about the drivers which are from Nvidia and based off the work Nvidia did developing drivers for the Nvidia shield. In addition to OpenGL and Vulkan drivers, they also made a custom graphics API for the switch called NVN.
@@redstone0234 probably some code from nvidia since it runs on nvidia shield hardware
They also use a distinct Display driver for every game you run on the system, so convoluted and is a pain in the ass for them to emulate on the upcoming switch successor
1:59 Actually, there's one more unique thing to note. In Linux, most of the configuration files are stored in the `/etc/` directory, regardless of whether they are system or user-related. However, in FreeBSD, there's a distinction: system configuration files are located in `/etc/`, while configurations for user-installed applications are typically stored in `/usr/local/etc/`. This separation helps keep the system's core configurations isolated from those of additional software, which can make managing and troubleshooting easier in certain scenarios.
On NixOS there is just a single configuration, that you can separate yourself however you want that lives in a single directory and could be in a git repo if you want.
Why does that sound so ridiculously useful and logical
I mean, _sometimes_ the "user local" configs are in the "~/.config/" directory
But it entirely depends on the aplication, to do that or just create another dot directory in the home directory
At this point I'm not even sure where the bashrc or bash profile or bash idk file are or what was the difference
@@noisetidewhy do nix users always feel the need to mention nix everywhere 😂
@@hoardingapples7083 Yex
@@hoardingapples7083we Linux users base our personalities over our distro of choice.
My favorite OS with the caveat that the user cross-reference FreeBSD with the hardware they intend to use it on. A smaller user base means a smaller developer pool that supports a narrower hardware selection, particularly WiFi.
GhostBSD is a user friendly desktop variant aimed at users who want a modern installation experience and working system. After installing, it provides an excellent template for how to configure FreeBSD if a user wants to be more hands on.
For those considering sampling it, take time to read the manual, the FreeBSD community is happy to help but resents reinventing the wheel. A prospective user doesn't have to read the whole manual but should pay attention to the intro, installation, storage management, system management, desktop, audio and video chapters.
Robonuggie YT channel provides excellent FreeBSD tutorials, demonstrations, and wisdom appropriate for both noobs and seasoned users looking for software suggestions.
Thank you for this
BSD was originally made in a very academic exploration kind of project way and its really nice to see how far it has progressed.
Bsd and unix family is related bsd is even certified and approved as unix compliant and bsd is dependant of unix since its based from the original/traditional code of unx
LOVE LOVE LOVE FreeBSD as a server OS. Way less BS to deal with and it's rock solid. I wish it was more widely adopted.
I’ve been using BSD since Bill Joy personally sent out the tapes, and FreeBSD keeps the spirit alive!
I ran sibling OS OpenBSD as my primary firewall around the turn of the century. At one point it ran without a reboot for over 1,200 days. The HP PC it ran on never had a hardware fault, despite accumulated dust, and was 10 years old when I finally switched it off. Robust, reliable, and secure.
YEAR OF THE FREEBSD DESKTOP!
This year is the year!
FREEBSD USAGE UP BY 0.0001%
BSD is an awesome network platform for servers, but it blows for Desktop. Same with Linux... BSD makes for a rocksolid ipfw/pf firewall and router. I've used BSD for the last 12 years as a DNS server base and ipfw/pf with virtually little to no downtime
@@fjs1111I'm a programmer that has exclusively worked and gamed on Linux since 2018, what are you talking about, it sure might not be for everyone, but there is probably a large part of the world population that would do just fine on Linux, everyone else uses adobe programs or plays games with kernel level anti cheat
@@fjs1111 i've been told the audio stack was quite good on freebsd, not sure how it compares with pipewire/jack tho
I used FreeBSD for a long time rock solid, had machines running for years without an unscheduled reboot or a single crash.
so no updates for years?
@@joestr_good question
"updates are for the fainthearted"
- Jobless Sysadmin
@@joestr_ without "unscheduled" reboots
@@joestr_ maybe freeBSD is so fully assed that it doesn't need constant updating and patching like other half-assed products used by the majority
on a serious note, I worked at a place where freeBSD crashed once, turned out it ran out of disk space, nobody checked it for years, it just worked...
15 years ago I made some mmo game servers that where pretty profitable with FreeBSD, it was a beast with mysql and php with 128mb ram. I did not understand a single thing of it at that time, now, with this video, I will add it to my CV.
make me wonder what do you do now? Spaceships?
@@ExTorvo saas ai business and light show game rooms 😂😂
@@OproDarius any tips on where to start to make money?
@@achraf6803 Do something cool, show it to people, and get one of them to pay you to do something else that's kind of similar. Congrats, you've learned how to get a job.
@@achraf6803 first step is getting a job
I personally use FreeBSD with jails for my Git server and it gave me more happiness than anything else ever has
so FreeBSD did not increase your happiness?
@@averestless I can't be happier max happiness
So it will solve all problems?
if you jail freeBSD it will become just BSD
@@utkarsh5667 that's fkn funny, I'll steal that and make it my default ssh banner for my jails.
Do OpenBSD next or puffy will personally come to your house at 2 am and do terrible things that will haunt you for the rest of your life
did you mean openbased?
whats the difference?
meanwhile openbsd people are too high up to even be mentioned
@@yesh420 Free BSD but even more BaSeD (aka it's harder to use and it's more targeted towards servers so people who can use it as a daily driver are considered higher beings)
I saw the Pepe Puffy so much I've started thinking it's the normal one, that makes this comment funnier
freebsd is really underrated. it is awesome on servers and some desktops. but hardware compatability is bit of an issue while installing to a desktop. this is why i use gentoo btw
🤣 You know an OS has limited uses when the alternative is Gentoo.
@@aaronfleisher4694 no i just prefer gentoo, you could use debian. Its a really good all purpose distro
one thing to note which is really cool ! is that the ports collection is automagically built and that is where the binary packages come from. So if you contribute a port witgin a few days you can just
install the binary, no more building !
As an OpenBSD user, I celebrate that the BSDs are being talked about now.
Do you know the other 2 users?
@@Jacob-bm6wbYou're confusing the user count with GhostBSD. OpenBSD has way more users, almost 10!
What are the differences with FreeBSD now
1:41 - sh is a default, but not the only shell. Alternatives in the OS (without using the ports collection) comprise csh and tcsh.
I'm an architect, I don't understand sh!t of what you say. yet your YT is one of my favorites.
😂
That's such an architect thing to say.
True🥲it makes me feel stupid
Oh man. This is a throw back and a half. I haven't used FreeBSD since 1996. LOL.
Never forget that temple OS is floating above the OS hierarchy
it is ascended
Nintendo Switch's HorizonOS uses FreeBSD components but the kernel is actually, technically, custom.
1:28 "Thumb drive."
Perfect.
If there is a thumb drive then there is a nail drive. Which is just an sd card lol. Really why sd cards are not called nail drive???
@@noisetide I'd buy that card reader just for the sight gag. USB stick shaped like a thumb, and the SD card goes where the nail is.
Only BSD I ever used, was Nomad OS, the only really persistent portable OS, that actually works.
I wasn't aware, that it is still widely used.
Fun fact: the title says "FreeBSD in 100 Seconds"
Actually it must be: "FreeBSD in 208 Seconds"
love to see nix user are only second to freebsd in the hierarchy
makes me very happy to see that as a nixos user
nix mentioned
Weird that Mac is higher than Windows when it's worse for dev in every single way lol. Maybe if all you do is use VSCode to write JS and watch Netflix in your spare time it's better but otherwise it's just bad.
i use nixOS btw
He forgot nixbsd
I've had pictures of the BSD daemon on my computer since childhood and only now found out what it was. I guess it just looked cute.
I think this is the best summary explanation I've seen so far.
its funny since I have been using FreeBSD for nearly a decade, but not because I am some Unix elitist, but my college courses on systems programming and OS was entirely Unix based. Not even the college lab had any actual Unix machines to practice on(I setup the entire lab next year), and I needed something thats 1:1 from the book. Ended up learning a fuck ton about OS, networks, etc just by having FreeBSD.
For example, the entire DHCP cycle plays out on the screen when you boot. I'd change the network settings on Virtualbox and see things change! Also learned how many seconds in 24hrs
86400 for anyone who doesn't want to do a simple google search.
I use FreeBSD, btw! Thanks for bringing awareness to it!
My First Choice When it's come to NAS, FreeNAS, TrueNAS.
nice. good to hear more people talk about fbsd. i still consider nbsd's pkgsrc as being friendlier than ports, tho. the nice thing about the bsds is that configuration backup literally consists of tarballing your /etc directories, and extracting them for deployment. most output in fbsd is also well-formed..making nearly everything customizable with scripts (even the loader, which has been switched from forth to lua for some reason). upgrades are also pretty seamless (other than that lua transition).
essentially, i've been using it to handle all my networking since the 6 or 7.x. series. the default dhcpd kind of sucks tho, with obsd's variation being a little bit friendlier for scripting events (and supporting arbitrary dhcp options).
FreeBSD isn't as ready for daily driving as Linux is, but it's so nice. Where it's there, it's just beautiful.
It isn't ready, because it is not desktop OS. So It's not worth waiting, for something FBSD that will never be. I mean, even OpenBSD and NetBSD are more desktop, because they come with X11 preinstalled.
@@mba2808FreeBSD is absolutely a desktop OS if you want it to be, I use it on my desktop every day. Why do you think it's 'not ready'?
@@mba2808 pkg install xorg, pkg install whatever DE, really hard.
@@mba2808 some FreeBSD distros comes with DE, but this is not the issue, and never be, the real issue is hardware support are total crap, I tried it on VM, and it was never able to recognize my thumb drive at all like it didn't attached to my USB port.
@@mba2808 I use it as desktop. Its easy to install packages, very easily. In FreeBSD, I can choose what packages I can install. I tried Void Linux, for example, and I couldnt remove "sudo", also I could not disable permissions with the command "visudo". Linux does not give the sense of security. In 5 years, Linux will not exist anymore, you all will call it "SystemD".
Bill joy is the most f*cking badass programmer
He really doesn't get enough appreciation. Between Vi, BSD, the Berkeley/Unix Sockets, and everything he worked on with Sun, basically everyone watching this channel has been effected by his work
Fun fact: ken Thompson and bill joy is best friends
I've gained cynical depression, it was in fact, not 100 seconds
Its just clickbait for the brain rot generation
@@computeroid6162 what
@@idkwhattoget 100 secs long on thumbnail: 208 secs in reality
@@computeroid6162 158 without sponsor
@@computeroid6162 Damn
My first job was a firmware engineer for an embedded computer with MIPS processor running FreeBSD. Had a Tundra chip to plug-in to a VME bus.
My favorite unix based OS
It's just based OS. It's in the name BSD = Based 😂
@@matei9k anyone can use it, there's place for non profit too, the community keeps it alive
@@matei9k
Because this way you truly commit to freedom. Copyleft is a disease and a shame for everyone that don't want to be as tyrant as proprietary software in a distorted way.
@@matei9k and who said that the GPL is the universal truth?
Now I can add 5 years+ of BSD experience in my resume
Awesome, thanks! Will keep FreeBSD in mind next time I start an early-stage FAANG!
Funny that this showed up while I was setting up a FreeBSD system
Wow, who knew FreeBSD was connected to so many cool things? 😄 I always thought it was just a nerd's playground. This video makes me wanna explore more! I mean, if Nintendo and Apple are in the mix, there's gotta be something special about it, right? 🎮🍏
True!
So many big companies use it because they could do ANYTHING with it! a very permissive license.
FreeBSD is actually Goated tbh
I use OPNSense on an old pc and it works as a wonderful router solution!!!
I used FreeBSD a my daily driver for 2 years. I regret nothing and everything at the same time.
Same here! But I'll be damned if I didn't learn an insane amount getting it setup to run on my funky laptop.
it was a fun and games until shit wasn't working
Really good OS for a NAS in my experience, ZFS does have some good upsides.
Yeah it is, there's also ZFS for Linux which I use for my distros
No one use ports anymore. And the shell can be switched to improved shells such as zsh or csh.
True, however it's recommended to _not_ use zsh (or other shells from the ports collection) as the default for the root user.
@@grahamperrin Great advice
My 3rd Fav operating system. I use it as a vm and a study device! I like your videos very much! Thanks for looking at it. I also contribute to it
Horizon OS on the Switch is a microkernel and is not based FreeBSD and is derived from the work they did developing the 3ds OS. Common misconception. Sony's PlayStation OS is though.
I’ve been waiting for this one!
BSD also underpins Juniper Routing Devices 😎
As well as pfSense and OPNSense.
NGL, this made me interested in trying this as a daily driver. I always kinda knew about it but never treid it.
GhostBSD is better as a daily driver.
Same kernel but more tweaked to be a daily driver instead of a server.
@@igorthelight I’ll check it out. Thanks!
adding FreeBSD experience to my CV
Thanks man, love your videos 🙏
You could literally make a video called 100 seconds of freeBS and i would literally sit there just shaking my head as if i understand
The shhhhh terminal killed me lmao
Reminds me of how you pronounce that "docker ps" command on the docker video
I'm intrigued. Should I switch from Debian to FreeBSD? I always wanted to be a smart-ass, I don't want to feel left behind
ew, debian? what a noob, guys, check it out, we have a noob here.. doesn't run backtrack on debian, doesn't run arch, isn't even on nix and thinks he can handle FBSD, pufff
;-)
I gotta say I love Tux but I kinda prefer the demon for FreeBSD as a mascot. He's cute and also devious.
The Switch Operating System is not based of FreeBSD, it just uses its Network-Stack, and by that definition Windows would be BSD based since Windows NT 3.1
Exactly this the switch uses its own custom micro kernel known as Horizon which was also used on the 3DS
Where should i stick it? 1:29
1:13 what's that under Free BSD, Snow OS?
It's Nix OS.
😂 Snow OS
I mean, Nix means Snow in Latin, you're not wrong lol
I’d actually enjoy a more in-depth video about this or Linux vs Unix in general because I find this topic very interesting.
0:22 that "forgetting" about DrangonFly BSD
Fun fact: Risc-V had started development in berkley
My company has hundreds of FreeBSD machines still in production serving customers all around the world 24/7 365 days a year! It’s a great operating! Very stable, tightly integrated, and remarkably simple.
Unfortunately, it’s going the way of the dodo and has been for a long time. The projects maintainers don’t get things patched quickly enough. The patches for specter and meltdown took years to come out which meant we had to disable multithreading on tons of systems. And while I really enjoy FreeBSD unfortunately with people only ever growing older and Linux only growing ever stronger, I’m not sure if there’s much of a future for good old FreeBSD :(
That is not true. Spectre and Meltdown got patches the next week.
What about openbsd? Why not switch to that
Not to mention the fact that the Linux kernel development community is currently imploding.. as it’s been infiltrated by Rust fanatics who want to cancel everything
actually it uses the almquist shell, or ash
Wait a minute, so the fact that I discovered BSD on my own, without any mention from any place or person shows that I have the potential of being the top 1% of programmers!? 🤯
yes
No
That's not why you have potential, your latent potential comes from your own skill and knowledge. Your hand is what blankets a shadow over success.
And why do you think you heard about bsd and became curious about it, other than trying to find the one tech to Beat The Average ?
0.01%. since you got the number wrong, it conclusively proves that you're not one of the elite programmers. I use Ubuntu BTW
...the terminal is NOT the shell, they are different appliances still, great video!
So out of the 208 second video, 44 seconds was just an add
That is 21.15% of the video was just add. Brilliant !
Are you convincing me to use SponsorBlock? ;-)
Excellent video 👍 Thank you 💜
FreeBSD since 2001. Great system. My current server at 601 days uptime running 20 or so sites with dbs. Just love it and donate every year I can!
whats the specs of ur machine?
The batman (2022) reference 1:27
I've always admired BSD, but with the kernel lagging behind linux and applications like wayland not being quite there on bsd. I found Void linux fills my hunger for BSD-like operating systems while also having the linux kernel as a bonus.
Chimera Linux is a Linux distro with FreeBSD userland, without GNU. That's also a interesting project.
what do you mean by kernel lagging?
@@byailen Try to run any modern hardware on BSD and you will know. Besides that, the worst part is probably wifi drivers, and proprietary drivers in general not being readily available on BSD. Not the fault of the BSD team of course, just an unfortunate side effect of being niche of the niche.
I am waiting for the point FreeBSD is a valuable tool to use as a recording studio workstation and audio/video production. Currently I am on Linux, as it is almost as efficient as MacOS for that.
I can imagine the "I am not following the crowd" marginals will adopt this faster than light speed, or even faster than the clipped nails (which is the only known substance that can travel faster than the light).
BSD was super popular as a server OS at one point, yahoo at their peak notoriously ran on it, parts of netflix networking stack used it, and it’s still super common networking gear. It’s not that much less popular than linux in certain domains. You are more likely to encounter someone using it because they have been doing so for 25 years than someone who does it to be hipster, since BSD is way too conservative for that crowd.
I worked at a company that used FreeBSD for NAS’s
Apple be like, LockedDownBSD
True especially for iOS. On MacOS you still have access to the terminal but no root unless sudo.
As for BSD in MacOS these days it is now mainly a subsystem running alongside the Mach VM/subsystem. Only few parts of the BSD userland are in actual use.
thanks for the amazing information you provide man
No systemd, only 1 single package format and manager, no arch btw, no grub and supports almost everything that runs on Linux
*THIS IS WHAT LINUX IDEOLOGY DREAMS TO BE*
Man I never knew all this. Holy crap. I just might start daily driving FreeBSD.
So all mainstream Linux apps are supported?
@@alok.01tried looking into it and what I’ve found so far is that the hardware support is not as great as in Linux . That may be a dealbreaker. Probably won’t be daily driving FreeBSD but just use it for fun and learn stuff about it . That should be reason enough.
Never tried bsd, but it always sounded cool.
And in a way, whenever I hear people talking about bsd, I have a feeling that this is exactly what people are expecting from Linux, but it's not there.
Anyway, since Linux and arch gone mainstream, I think it's time for neck beards to migrate to bsd.
systemd is amazing, shell scripts suck major ass (and aren't portable!)
damn, looks amazing
In the 2020s the BSDs are what Linux Distros were during the 90s and 2000s.
based
You are right… and these days Linux is what Windows was during the 90s and 2000s xD
1:45 most accurate pronunciation of the sh terminal
Facts
fireship has to be one of the best channels I wish I had known existed sooner
Bot
nope
but that's very possible lol
like if i was a bot i could be like "@TH-camr has to be one of the best channels I wish I had known existed sooner"
but I'm sadly a human being, sorry for disappointing you
@@Belomoh6NPC
@@CD3MISSION lol
Greatest os of All Time
If only freebsd had the software and driver support than linux did... (and if only linux had the software support that windows does!)
now i'm really tempted to try it as a main OS for development
2:50 Thinking about it
forgot manpages and the very slept on (especially with zfs) difference btw /etc and /usr/local/etc
You failed to put TempleOS at the top of the pyramid. Don't worry, god'll forgive you, but let not that mistake happen again
No, it's accurate, TempleOS users ascend above the pyramid
Yeah, they are an eye hovering above the pyramid
Came here looking for this comment. Am not disappointed.
TempleOS is the pyramid.
1:24 - Is there a visual flicker happening on the header of FreeBSD?
i've used debian for server applications and Ubuntu for desktop. I always assumed BSD was likle Gentoo or Arch, for people who care too much, but it actually looks like it has a use case
I have used Linux since 1999 starting with Slackware and now I use Mint. I love it. However, it doesn't mean that I've never been curious about BSD. I've just never been able to install it. If I can install and use Slackware, I shouldn't have a problem with BSD. Next time I order something from Framework, I'll add an expansion drive and try again.
Didn’t mention Netflix, one of the larger users of FreeBSD.
What they've done with FreeBSD for content delivery is insane!
As well as it is used in network firewalls - OPNSense and pfSense.
Не плохая связка. Процесс использования, такой же легкий, как у предыдущих
I'd like to use FreeBSD once they will support my wifi driver to allow me to use the internet, call me spoiled but I need a working internet on my laptop.
lol
it happens the reverse for me, my wifi works but the ethernet doesn't (just need to download the driver)