@@himanshu-zu9li no, I only followed the instructions in the pkg_readmes (for the services) that was prompted right after installation. I found that some things are not well integrated with settings and the shell in general
>OpenBSD guy >FreeBSD If you like retro computing, maybe cover some of the old computer emulators that are available for BSD? The Sharp X68000 is an interesting computer to emulate. Many good games, and it still runs NetBSD to this day.
For retro computing I have some plans in mind. I don't want to spoil anything yet. It is just matter of having enough time to tinker and make some related videos. NetBSD is something that I am very tempted to try. It is in bucket list
@chrisfromgreece NetBSD is a much smaller code base, it can run on a VAX, for example, Linux could never dream of running on that. NetBSD is used in embedded applications a lot for this reason
I thought you were fully freebsd not half linuxian. You should try void instead of arch There are two freebse youtubers one who shows games running on freebsd and one who explains how to play on freebsd
For some stuff I need Linux and also Linux does a better job in those areas. I use OpenBSD and Fressbsd for almost any other cases. Both BSD and Linux ecosystems have their own merits. What's important is that they are free/opensource software.
I'm not sure whether I understood you entirely. Did you mean showing different programs and the custom configurations I use? Or doing a complete setup from A to Z on a freshly installed FreeBSD?
Cool setup. Yesterday that openBSD 7.5 was released, I made a clean install with gnome(45) genuine surprise of how good it works with that OS!
do u make any script changes or add something to run it smooth??
@@himanshu-zu9li no, I only followed the instructions in the pkg_readmes (for the services) that was prompted right after installation. I found that some things are not well integrated with settings and the shell in general
Very cool setup.
>OpenBSD guy
>FreeBSD
If you like retro computing, maybe cover some of the old computer emulators that are available for BSD? The Sharp X68000 is an interesting computer to emulate. Many good games, and it still runs NetBSD to this day.
For retro computing I have some plans in mind. I don't want to spoil anything yet. It is just matter of having enough time to tinker and make some related videos. NetBSD is something that I am very tempted to try. It is in bucket list
@@TheOpenBSDguy if you like old school UNIX, give NsCDE a try, it installs easy on FreeBSD, and gives you those 90's UNIX feels
@chrisfromgreece NetBSD is a much smaller code base, it can run on a VAX, for example, Linux could never dream of running on that. NetBSD is used in embedded applications a lot for this reason
Welcome back.
Thanks
I thought you were fully freebsd not half linuxian.
You should try void instead of arch
There are two freebse youtubers one who shows games running on freebsd and one who explains how to play on freebsd
For some stuff I need Linux and also Linux does a better job in those areas. I use OpenBSD and Fressbsd for almost any other cases. Both BSD and Linux ecosystems have their own merits. What's important is that they are free/opensource software.
i actually tried void but i prefer freeBSD a lot more than void or artix tbh
I am a bit disappointed...expected a show-and-tell run through of your FreeBSD setup...not a text-based slide show...smh.
I'm not sure whether I understood you entirely. Did you mean showing different programs and the custom configurations I use? Or doing a complete setup from A to Z on a freshly installed FreeBSD?
@@TheOpenBSDguy Yip,you hit the nail on the head.