116 lines
9.2 KiB
Plaintext
116 lines
9.2 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3671
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Title: HPR3671: Response to Episode 3655, "BSD for Linux Users"
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3671/hpr3671.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 03:20:41
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,671 from Monday the 29th of August 2022.
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Today's show is entitled, Response to Episode 3,655, the SD for Linux users.
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It is hosted by Claudio Miranda and is about 11 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is Claudio responds to binarcees, episode on the SD for Linux users and rambles,
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on about other BSD stuff.
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Hey everyone, this is Claudio M. I'm recording this episode as a response to episode HPR 3655
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BSD for Linux users, which was submitted by binarcee.
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I actually enjoyed that episode, it was really good, it pretty much nailed it on introducing
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BSD for Linux users, in my opinion.
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I thought it was a great episode and now I was going to write a comments, my original
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comment for that episode.
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I actually ended up putting a comment on there, but my original comment ended up being
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so long that I figured I might as well just record a show as a response to it, so here
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it is.
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Yeah, Ken, he says, if your comment is longer than a few sentences, it's a show, so here
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it is.
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Anyway, it was a great episode about BSD and the descendants.
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I personally use open BSD mainly, but I do also use free BSD and net BSD.
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I have free BSD actually running on my desktop, which also runs for Dora, I have each operating
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system in its own hard drive, so I just use the BIOS boot into whichever one I pick.
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And then I have net BSD running on my Raspberry Pi Model B, the first generation, but this
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one has the 512 megabytes of RAM.
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And it runs like a champ, I just recently upgraded it to net BSD 9.3, and it runs very well.
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As I prior to that, I was messing around with 9.0, one of the daily snapshots, so I may
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eventually go to that, but for now I think I'm okay with the 9.3 on there.
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But yeah, it's been fun tinkering around with the BSDs.
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I actually did use free BSD at work when at my previous work locations where I had,
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I think I've mentioned it before, I've set up a server at each site running free BSD
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to replace the old Windows Server 2003 boxes that were running there and they were in
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the life already, so I needed to pull those because of obvious security issues, so I went
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ahead and I said, well, I need to provide
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something for my users, so I went ahead and I created a Samba box using free BSD as
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the operating system, and let me tell you, they both were rock solid, no one noticed
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the difference, everybody was still able to access their file like before and it was wonderful.
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I had thought about using Linux, but I just seemed more straightforward for me using
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free BSD as the base operating system, so that was a fun learning experience, and lately
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I've actually been playing around with Beehive, which is free BSD's virtualization software,
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it's kind of like a QEMU or something like that, but this one's more in line with free BSD,
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so it runs on free BSD, and I've got Windows running on it, I've played around with other
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free BSD derivatives or distributions, and that sounds actually, such as Hello System,
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which emulates a macOS desktop environment of sorts, and it's pretty neat, it's pretty neat,
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I got that going, I've been trying to get Haiku running on that, but I haven't been as successful
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with that one, so if anyone knows how to get Haiku running on Beehive, please record a show,
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and put that up, because it would be really nice to hear and get that going, but I've also,
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I did get Windows, I think I was playing around with trying to get Slackware running on Beehive,
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but I couldn't put too much time on that one, so, but it's been fun, it's definitely been fun,
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so regarding, as far as my usage, I just use it as a desktop OS, aside from that time I
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use it as a sombre server, but just as a desktop OS, so on free BSD and Open BSD, I've run
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Mate desktop, I've always run it, I've run it on Linux, on my Fedora installs, it's
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my go-to desktop environment, and it runs very well, it runs very well, it's pretty quick,
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it runs real nice, it gets out of the way, I do like CWando, so since that comes with Open BSD,
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I got to think around with that, and it was kind of neat playing around with it, but I don't use
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it much anymore, what I really use now is FluxBox, I've always used FluxBox as a window manager,
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especially on the more resource limited machines like my old ASUS EPC 901, which I actually
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blogged about, and I think I've talked the idea, I've done the my geeky experiments episodes on that,
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and yeah, it runs Open BSD, and it runs super well, FluxBox, and everything is supported on that
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out of the box, well, except for Bluetooth, since Bluetooth support isn't available on Open BSD,
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but if I were to run Free BSD on, I'm sure Bluetooth would work without a problem.
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As far as hardware support, I know that, as mentioned, the BSD may not have as good a support
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as Linux does, but it's getting better. Free BSD for sure has a lot of support for hardware,
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and that was definitely improving, but Open BSD actually is catching up. They've got a lot of
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hardware support, as a matter of fact, their IWX wireless driver is actually really well done,
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and it's actually working, it's been actually supported the Intel X200 series Wi-Fi network cards for
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a good while now, and just recently with Free BSD 13.1 is that they got support going,
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for those type of cards, but for a while, with 13.0, they did not have it, so I actually just
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upgraded over the weekend the hard drive because it was stuck on 13.0, and I hadn't really
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booted into it much, so yeah, I upgraded that to 13.1, it was super easy to do, very simple,
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if you follow the Free BSD handbook on doing an upgrade from one version to another, it is just
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straightforward, so yeah, but that's actually working right now, and it's running very well,
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and actually I just recently got a new laptop, which I also blogged about, I'll put the links in
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the show notes for the blog, this one is an EVU, EVC 141-12bK laptop, and the BK is because it's
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black, there's another model that actually is silver, and I think it's SL or something like that,
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so they come with, you won't find them, they're very hard to find, especially because they came with
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decent components, and for a very cheap price, this is actually a warmer branded laptop,
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you might also see it under the name Motile, it's the same design, so this one comes with a
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Ryzen 5 3500U CPU from AMD, it has the Vega GPU, it comes with eight gigabytes of RAM, and it has
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a 256GB SSD, but that one, it comes with Windows, so I left Windows on that, but it does have an
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available NVMe slot, so I was able to purchase a SSD for that slot, and I put Open BSD on that,
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and it runs very well, there's a couple little things here, and I may want to go ahead and
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and post it on the bugs, Open BSD bugs mailing list, but we'll see, we'll see, but for
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what I paid for it, $275 US refurbished, it really is a nice machine, and it's very hard to find out,
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the only problem is that it only has one RAM slot, so your RAM is going to be single channel no
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matter what, so it's going to be a performance spot, but otherwise it's a great beta laptop,
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runs Open BSD well, as a matter of fact, I'm actually recording this on this on this laptop,
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running Open BSD using Audacity, and I actually wrote a little script to make some changes,
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which I'll probably do an episode about a short little episode, so be on the lookout for that one,
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anyway, I just want to say thank you again to BNRC, wonderful episode, you really nailed it on
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the head, and yes, the BSDs are not called distros, they are actually referred to as flavors,
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they're BSD flavors, so net BSD, Open BSD, free BSD, Dragonfly BSD, all those major BSDs
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are flavors, because they are a flavor of BSD, they are based on BSD, and they are not
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compatible with one another, now Ghost BSD, which is actually a desktop focused and user focused
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distribution of free BSD, is a distribution of free BSD because it is based on free BSD,
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so if you compiled something on vanilla free BSD and wanted to run that on Ghost BSD,
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it theoretically will work, however, it will not run on Open BSD, you'd have to recompile it,
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because they are different, they are different, even though their lineage points back to BSD,
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so yeah, I just wanted to kind of expand a little on that, so yeah, definitely nailed everything,
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I'm looking at the show notes here for the BNRC's episode, and yeah, pretty much nailed it on the
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head, so thank you so much for this great episode, I really enjoyed it, and hope to hear more
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from you about the BSDs in the future, BNRC, if you're listening to this, anyway, it's going to
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do it for me, I've rambled along enough, so hope you enjoyed this, and if you didn't, well,
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you know, whether you did or didn't, just put it in the comments, I guess, all right, y'all,
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you have a good one, bye-bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org, today's show was
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contributed by a HBR listener like yourself, if you ever thought of recording a podcast,
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and click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hosting for HBR has been
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kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive, and our sings.net. On the
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SLDI status, today's show is released on their creative comments, attribution, 4.0 international
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